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BLERTA Revisited

"Blerta — Bruno Lawrence’s Electric Revelation and Travelling Apparition — was a changing lineup of musicians, actors, technicians, filmmakers, friends, lovers and hangers-on who, between 1971 and 1976, toured New Zealand in a flower-powered bus, stirring the heartland from its slumber with their wild and crazy vaudeville show.

Blerta Revisited is Blerta alumnus Geoff Murphy’s 2001 compilation of film and tape of Blerta and associates, structured to resemble the format of their final shows. The film’s musical numbers, drawn largely from the 1976 TV series that was their swansong, range widely, from jazz, through lewd or satirical ditties to soul and rock & roll. The songs are interspersed with … clips, comedy sketches and the mixed media events (ie explosions) which showcase the group’s movie-making proclivities. Many of the films they made failed to survive the rigors of the road, but to see the excerpts here from Percy the Policeman, Dagg Day Afternoon, Wildman and the Blerta Kid Show is to watch the germination of the film industry that has been a vital force in our cultural lives ever since. The on-the-road antics in these films provided a glorious rude rebuttal to McCahon’s famous characterisation of New Zealand’s landscape with too few lovers.

The Blerta repertoire was an energetic, distinctively kiwi mix-up of overseas influences, mostly British — Monty Python, Not Only But Also, The Goon Show — but with generous samplings of Barnum & Bailey, Keystone Kops and Salvador Dali. A menagerie of florid stereotypes — gangsters, mad German scientists, British bankers and wild men of Borneo, snake-oil salesmen and Bible bashers — are impersonated most memorably by the mercurial Lawrence and the toffee-voiced Ian Watkin. Blerta associate John Clarke’s black-singleted Fred Dagg stands apart as the true comic original in this circus: the game, bewildered Kiwi.

Creative mayhem on this scale was as unprecedented at the time as Bruno Lawrence himself, and it’s impossible to think of a comparable convocation of multi-talents since. Though Lawrence has passed on, some have dropped out and others continue to entertain us, their musical ebullience, anarchic glee and flashes of lunatic genius can still illuminate our landscape 25 years on." – New Zealand International Film Festival

"Many of the sketches are of the slapstick Keystone Cops variety. Percy the Policeman flits in and out. Bruno Lawrence runs around like crazy. And many toilets and pianos are enjoyably desecrated or destroyed…. John Clarke contributes some memorable Fred Dagg sketches, and a short skit about an artist with a penchant for miniaturization is one for the ages. Musical treats include several free flowing jazz rock workouts. It’s mildly surprising to hear Murphy blowing a mean trumpet, and very surprising to hear him sing. He’s not bad!… One bit collides into the next without any attempt at context. This could prove unsettling for those new to this material but it feels appropriate to the DIY, manic vibe of the whole Blerta beast. Others looking for a massive nostalgia hit or for a dose of the anarchic spirit of the times won’t be disappointed." – Costa Botes, NZ On Screen

 

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New Zealand 2001

Director: Geoff Murphy
Producers: Geoff Murphy, Barrie Everard
Editors: Rongotai Lomas, Richard Rautjoki

With: Bruno Lawrence, Ian Watkin, Beaver, Martyn Sanderson, Bill Stalker, John Clarke, Tony Barry, Ian Mune, Geoff Murphy, Jan Finn, Roger Donaldson

81 mins, DV

M adult themes

Tauranga Film Society
Wednesday 11 July, 6.20pm

Canterbury Film Society
Monday 23 July, 6.30pm

Queenstown Film Society
Tuesday 14 August, 8.30pm

Pukekohe Film Society
Sunday 16 September, 8.00pm

Auckland Film Society
Monday 24 September, 6.30pm

Palmerston North Film Society
Wednesday 10 October, 5.30pm

Wellington Film Society
Monday 29 October, 6.15pm

Hamilton Film Society
Monday 5 November, 8.00pm

Waitati Film Society
Tuesday 11 December, 8.00pm