I Live with Me Dad

1985 Australian film
  • 1985 (1985)
Running time
1h 30mCountryAustraliaLanguageEnglish

I Live with Me Dad is a 1985 TV movie, produced by Crawfords Australia. The film is about six-year-old Crispy who lives with his destitute father Sid (Hehir). Based on a true story, it follows the street adventures of a father and son and his unconventional upbringing. A heart warming film that explores the extraordinary bond between a father and his son, amidst the pressures and emotions of those who would separate them.

Plot

Sid McCall is down on his luck. His greatest friend is his son Crispy and together they share all the joys and disappointments that street life can bring. Although only 6 years old, Crispy mixes easily with the street people, who share a common fellowship that always unites them during times of trouble.[1]

Cast

  • Peter Hehir as Sid
  • Haydon Samuels as Crispy
  • Rebecca Gibney as Jill Harkness
  • Peter Cummins
  • Tommy Dysart as Griffin
  • Nigel Bradshaw as Mr Ross
  • Dennis Miller as Joe Kazzinak

Production

It was based on a true story.[2]

Reception

Sian Powell of the Sydney Morning Herald concludes "It reeks of sentimentality, but there are redeeming features. The adult acting is patchy, but young Haydon Samuel turns in a solid performance as the seven-year-old son of the alcoholic battler. Paul Kelly's music is superb, as always."[3] Reviewing the video release Graham Cooke wrote in The Canberra Times "The pair fall foul of the welfare serrvices and it is here that the film loses its way a little. Rebecca Gibney as Jill Harkness is a social worker out of another, less-enlightened age, mounting a virtual crusade to separate father from son. It gives the story a harder edge, at the same time making it seem more than a little contrived."[4] In a capsual review Doug Anderson of the Sydney Morning Herald says "It's a two-hankie job with golden redemption at the end but quite agreeable."[5]

References

  1. ^ Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p85
  2. ^ I Live with Me Dad at Eaton Films
  3. ^ Powell, Sian (15 August 1990), "I Live With Me Dad", The Sydney Morning Herald
  4. ^ Cooke, Graham (8 February 1988), "Atom bombs and ambition make intriguing tale", The Canberra Times, retrieved 17 May 2023
  5. ^ Anderson, Doug (22 January 1996), "I Live With Me Dad (1988)", The Sydney Morning Herald

[1]

External links

  • I Live with Me Dad at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata


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  1. ^ http://www.eatonfilms.co.uk/node/43