alr

Picnic at Hanging Rock

Screening on Film
Directed by Peter Weir.
With Rachel Roberts, Vivean Gray, Helen Morse.
Australia, 1975, 35mm, color, 107 min.

This moody and atmospheric film set in 1901 tells the story of three school-girls and their teacher from an exclusive Australian academy who mysteriously disappear during an outing one sunny day. The first great success of the Australian New Wave, Picnic at Hanging Rock is based on a novel by Joan Lindsay and given richly textured direction by Peter Weir. Evoking the Indian summer of the Victorian era, the film is dominated in turns by vague feelings of unease, barely controlled sexual hysteria, and a swooning lyricism. Rooted in the tradition of sci-fi and horror cinema, Weir depicts the school as a privileged elite gradually contaminated and destroyed from within by its inability to understand the mystery that confronts it.

Part of film series

Read more

Treasures from the Harvard Film Archive: Directors U–Z

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Museum Hours: Mati Diop’s Dahomey

Read more

Albert Serra, or Cinematic Time Regained

Read more

Wang Bing’s Youth Trilogy

Read more

The Shochiku Centennial Collection

Read more

Planet at 50

Read more

The Yugoslav Junction Continues!

Read more

Theo Anthony, Subject to Review

Read more

The Ideal Cinematheque of the Outskirts of the World

Read more

From the collection – Satyajit Ray