Development Karel Reisz and Albert Finney In the early 1960s,
Karel Reisz and
Albert Finney announced plans to make a film about
Ned Kelly from a screenplay by
David Storey. Finney and Reisz flew to Australia in October 1962 and spent ten weeks picking locations and doing research. In January 1963, it was reported the film would star Finney and
Angela Lansbury. The movie was meant to be Finney's next project after
Tom Jones (1963) and filming was to start in March 1963. The British arm of
Columbia Pictures agreed to put up the entire budget. However, British labour union regulations required a mostly British crew, and the cost of putting them up in Australia put the budget beyond what Columbia were willing to pay. (
Tom Jones had yet to be released.) Finney and Reisz went on to make
Night Must Fall (1964) instead. Following this, Finney was still meant to make the film. However, he and Reisz eventually dropped out.
Tony Richardson and Mick Jagger The project passed on to
Tom Jones director
Tony Richardson, who wrote the script in collaboration with Ian Jones, a Melbourne writer and producer of TV drama and expert on Ned Kelly. "I am taking this film very seriously", said Jagger at the time. "Kelly won't look anything like me. You wait and you'll see what I look like. I want to concentrate on being a character actor." During
pre-production other filmmakers, including
Tim Burstall,
Gary Shead and
Dino de Laurentiis, announced their own Ned Kelly projects. She was hospitalised in a
coma, but recovered and was sent home. She was replaced by a then-unknown Australian actress,
Diane Craig, then studying at
NIDA.
Filming Shooting began on 12 July 1969 and took ten weeks. During production, Jagger was slightly injured by a
backfiring pistol, the cast and crew were dogged by illness, a number of costumes were destroyed by fire, and Jagger's co-star,
Mark McManus, narrowly escaped serious injury when a horse-drawn cart in which he was riding overturned during filming. ==Release==