Rod Taylor plays Daddy-O in his return to Australian cinema, four decades
after leaving his native Sydney for Hollywood.
This was director Stephan Elliott's first effort since his campy cult
film, "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert," and
viewers seem to rate "Woop Woop" as either hilarious or vile.
Of course, it's both vile AND hilarious -- and that's the point.
BEHIND THE SCENES
"People will laugh and they will be offended," director Elliott
has said. "Ultimately, as upset as the politcally-corrected may stand,
it's very tongue-in-cheek. A silly, silly movie."
One newspaper proclaimed that "The heart and soul of 'Woop Woop'
is the sensational performance by Australian expat actor Rod Taylor"
and further explained:
Elliott believes the performance grew out of the fact
that Taylor, a genuine knockabout Aussie, has lived and worked in America
for so long that he has been forced to suppress his natural self for 40
years.
"The true base of what he was has been simmering
away under the surface -- like boiling to get out -- and this role came
along and he just explodes on screen," Elliott said. "I usually
tell the actors I am working with to turn it up a bit. Rod is the first
actor I have worked with where I had to keep telling him to turn it down
a bit. Once it was unleashed the energy coming out of the man was just
terrifying. I was there going 'down Rod, down, cool it baby.'"
-- Sunday Tasmanian, Aug. 16, 1998
Elliott sought out Taylor for the role of Daddy-O, the patriarch of warped
Woop Woop, based on his fond memories of "The Time Machine" and
"Picture Show Man."
When his name came up, I said he is such an American now,
I wonder if he could do it. I rang his agent and asked is he still working
[and] do you think he could pull off the accent. He said, "Why don't
you just go round to his house and knock on the door." So I did, he
threw it open and said, "G'day...how the f--- are you? Come in and
have a glass of red wine."
I said to him immediately, "You have the job."
It was that quick.
To make it even more perfect, his comic timing is so spot-on.
I hope this is a good film for him as it was with [Terence Stamp, in "Priscilla"],
an amazing resurrection. This shows ... that he is an amazing actor.
Rod accepted the role in a snap. "I fell off the sofa laughing when
I read the script," he said. "It was the most outrageous comedy
I had ever read and certainly the most outrageous comedy I'd ever acted
in. I usually do nice sophisticated comedies with Jane Fonda and people
like that -- gentlemanly roles. But here I am in Australia playing this
bloody dinosaur with tattoos. It is just fantastic."
REVIEWS
Several reviewers thought Rod was fantastic, too. An Australian reviewer
said:
In a stroke of inspired casting, Rod Taylor looms larger
than life as the lewd Daddy-O, and basically steals the film. His character
is vile and vulgar, yet Taylor manages to inject a dose of charm that is
hard to ignore. The scene in the bar when he tap dances on electric sparking
feet is quite sensational.
Especially notable is Rod Taylor's version of the blustery
autocrat, Daddy-O. ... Taylor seems to have gone through an acting rebirth
since his days as the square-jawed lover boy from the '60s action movies.
So did the Los Angeles Times:
There are many funny moments in "Woop Woop,"
and two very good performances. One is from ... a nearly unrecognizable
Rod Taylor, a former Hollywood leading man who returns to his native Australia
[as the] cruel, iron-fisted ruler of Woop Woop.
And finally, Rod's co-star -- Jonathan Schaech, in The Australian, Jan.
9, 1999:
HE is a sensational
actor. Charisma, balls, strength, power, emotion and great comedic timing.
Originally titled "The Big Red," the film was shown as a work-in-progress
at Cannes. "Woop Woop" had plenty of detractors, but what most
reviews of this movie agreed upon is that the point of "Woop Woop"
is not the plot, it's the bizarre characters.
ON THE SCREEN
Speaking of plot -- here's the outline: "Welcome to Woop Woop"
is the story of Teddy (Johnathon Schaech), a streetwise hood who hawks exotic
birds in New York City. In an alleyway shoot-out, Teddy's birds are released,
and as they swoop over the city, New Yorkers find a solution that perhaps
the good people of Bodega Bay should have considered in "The Birds."
Teddy flees to Australia and ends up shackled in the outback to a "girl
who cain't say no," Angie (Susie Porter). He tentatively meets and
then bonds with the weird folk of Woop Woop, which is run by Angie's father,
Daddy-O.
Daddy-O's rules? All money is pooled for the common good; nobody leaves,
and only Rodgers and Hammerstein show tunes are allowed (which, by the way,
makes for a wonderful soundtrack -- my favorite pick-me-up!).
Rod has magnificent moments in this film: His joyous dance upon the bar
(to "Shall We Dance," of course), his speech as he lays out the
rules, and another as he relates the history of Woop Woop after his authority
is challenged by Teddy. This is a great actor having a wonderful time.
Welcome To Woop Woop was filmed on location near Alice
Springs. Surrounded by towering red cliffs, the mythological town of Woop
Woop was created from the ground up with scrap metal and piles of junk in
one of cinema's most imaginative and surreal designs.
"The most exciting moment for me, having created the
town with the art department, was watching the actors walk into it,"
production designer Owen Paterson reflects. "I tried to create the
pub, for example, knowing Rod Taylor was going to play Daddy-O. I pictured
his face and had a photograph of him, and had a sense that the pub needed
to feel well established, almost coming out of the ground."
Director of photography Mike Molloy said, "Rod Taylor's
face was so wonderful in close up."
Molloy also described an action scene: "We did a truck
chase ... which is massive. It is hugely fun and completely over the top.
We had a 41-ton truck with Susie Porter and Rod Taylor trying to stop it
with an axe. The whole thing looked insane and dangerous, but we actually
did it stationary using effects. That is what is so fantastic about the
art of film."