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{{Short description|1989 film by John Milius}}
{{Infobox_Film |
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2016}}
name = Farewell to the King |
{{Infobox film
image = FarewelltotheKingDVD.jpg |
caption = DVD cover for ''Farewell to the King'' |
| name = Farewell to the King
| image = Farewell to the king film poster.jpg
director = [[John Milius]] |
| caption = Theatrical release poster
writer = [[John Milius]] (screenplay)<br>Based on the book by [[Pierre Schoendoerffer]] |
| director = [[John Milius]]
starring = [[Nigel Havers]]<br>[[Frank McRae]]<br>[[Gerry Lopez]]<br>[[Nick Nolte]] |
producer = [[Andre Morgan]], [[Albert Ruddy|Albert S. Ruddy]] |
| producer = Andre Morgan<br/>[[Albert Ruddy]]
| screenplay = John Milius
music = [[Basil Poledouris]] |
| based_on = {{based on|''L'Adieu au Roi''|[[Pierre Schoendoerffer]]}}
cinematography = [[Dean Semler]] |
| starring = {{Plainlist|
editing = [[Anne V. Coates]], [[Carroll Timothy O'Meara]] |
* [[Nick Nolte]]
distributor = [[Orion Pictures]] |
* [[Nigel Havers]]
released = [[March 3]], [[1989]] (USA) |
* [[Marius Weyers]]
runtime = 115 min. |
* [[Frank McRae]]
country = [[United States]] |
* Elan Oberon
language = [[English language|English]] |
* Marilyn Tokuda
budget = Unknown |
amg_id = A16805 |
imdb_id = 0097334 |
}}
}}
| music = [[Basil Poledouris]]
| cinematography = [[Dean Semler]]
| editing = [[Anne V. Coates]]<br/>Carroll Timothy O'Meara
| studio = Ruddy Morgan Productions
| distributor = {{Plainlist|
* [[Orion Pictures]] (United States)
* [[Vestron Pictures|Vestron International Group]] (International)<ref>{{cite web|title=Farewell to the King (1989)|website=[[AFI Catalog of Feature Films]]|access-date=1 April 2023|url=https://catalog.afi.com/Film/58064-FAREWELL-TOTHEKING?sid=c65e3ffc-c40c-40c7-ab8f-99c2737a01f0&sr=11.894273&cp=1&pos=0}}</ref>
}}
| released = {{Start date|df=yes|1989|03|03|USA}}
| runtime = 115 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget = $16 million<ref name="la">Matthews, Jack. (8 November 1987). [http://articles.latimes.com/1987-11-08/entertainment/ca-21699_1_wild-man ''The Wild Man of Hollywood Meets the Wilds of Borneo''. ''Los Angeles Times''.] Times Mirror Company. p. K4 [https://web.archive.org/web/20220517040928/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-11-08-ca-21699-story.html Wayback Machine] {{ISSN|0458-3035}} {{OCLC|3638237}}</ref><ref name="notes"/>
| gross = $2,420,917
}}
'''''Farewell to the King''''' is a 1989 American [[action film|action]] [[adventure film|adventure]] [[drama (film and television)|drama film]] written and directed by [[John Milius]]. It stars [[Nick Nolte]], [[Nigel Havers]], [[Frank McRae]], and [[Gerry Lopez]] and is loosely based on the 1969 novel ''L'Adieu au Roi'' by [[Pierre Schoendoerffer]]. Longtime Milius collaborator [[Basil Poledouris]] composed the musical score.


==Plot==
'''''Farewell to the King''''' is a [[1989 in film|1989]] film directed by [[John Milius]]. It stars [[Nigel Havers]], [[Frank McRae]], [[Gerry Lopez]] and [[Nick Nolte]]. The screenplay by John Milius is based on the 1969 book ''L'Adieu au Roi'' by [[Pierre Schoendoerffer]]. Longtime Milius collaborator [[Basil Poledouris]] composed the musical score. The film is marketed with the tagline "In the midst of war, one man vanished into the jungle, and emerged as king."
During [[World War II]], American [[deserter]] Learoyd escapes a [[Japan]]ese firing squad. Hiding in the wilds of [[Borneo]], Learoyd is adopted by a head-hunting tribe of [[Dayak people|Dayaks]], who consider him divine because of his blue eyes. Before long, Learoyd is the reigning king of the Dayaks. When [[United Kingdom|British]] soldiers approach him to rejoin the war against the Japanese, Learoyd resists. When his own tribe is threatened by the invaders, Learoyd decides to fight for their rights and to protect their independence.

==Plot summary==


==Main cast==
During World War II, American POW Learoyd escapes a Japanese firing squad. Hiding himself in the wilds of [[Borneo]], Learoyd is adopted by a head-hunting tribe of Nyak Indians, who consider him "divine" because of his tattoos. Before long, Learoyd is the reigning king of the Nyaks. When British soldiers approach him to rejoin the war against the Japanese, Learoyd resists. When his own tribe is threatened by the invaders, however, the "king" deigns to fight for their rights.
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}

==Cast==
* [[Nick Nolte]] as Learoyd
* [[Nick Nolte]] as Learoyd
* [[Nigel Havers]] as Captain Fairbourne
* [[Nigel Havers]] as Captain Fairbourne
* [[James Fox]] as Colonel Ferguson
* [[James Fox]] as Colonel Ferguson
* [[Marilyn Tokuda]] as Yoo
* Marilyn Tokuda as Yoo
* [[Frank McRae]] as Sergeant Tenga
* [[Frank McRae]] as Sergeant Tenga
* [[Aki Aleong]] as Colonel Mitamura
* [[Aki Aleong]] as Colonel Mitamura
* [[Marius Weyers]] as Sergeant Conklin
* [[Marius Weyers]] as Sergeant Conklin
* [[William Wise]] as Dynamite Dave
* William Wise as Dynamite Dave
* [[Gerry Lopez]] as Gwai
* [[Gerry Lopez]] as Gwai
* [[Elan Oberon]] as Vivienne
* Elan Oberon as Vivienne
* [[Choy Chang Wing]] as Lian
* Choy Chang Wing as Lian
* [[Richard Morgan]] as Stretch Lewis
* [[Richard Morgan (actor)|Richard Morgan]] as Stretch Lewis
* [[John Bennett Perry]] as General MacArthur
* [[John Bennett Perry]] as [[General Douglas MacArthur]]
* [[Michael Nissman]] as General Sutherland
* Michael Nissman as General Sutherland
* [[Wayne Pygram]] as Bren Armstrong
* [[Wayne Pygram]] as Bren Armstrong
{{div col end}}

==Production==
===Original novel===
[[Pierre Schoendoerffer]] originally wrote the story as a film script. He then turned it into a novel, which was published in 1969 and became a best seller in France, selling over 300,000 copies in hardback. He made the lead character Irish because "the Irish are mad and I like mad people."<ref name="pierre">{{cite news|title=New Testament, uniform edition|last=McNay|first=Michael|newspaper=The Guardian |date=2 September 1970|page= 8}}</ref>

"I was wanting to make a great symphonic book on life and death: on how a man can struggle until the very end, without hope and without reason, just to be alive, even though half dead., even though suffering terribly, because life is so powerful. But on the other hand I was wanting to show that if suddenly a man discovers that he is not fulfilling his dream, then he does not want to live anymore."<ref name="pierre"/>

The story had some basis in historical fact. [[Tom Harrisson]]'s stay with the Dayaks during the Second World War was the inspiration for much of what happened in the novel along with the allied drop behind Japanese lines known as [[Operation Semut]].<ref name="la"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Rousseau |first1=Jérôme |title=Central Borneo: A Bibliography, Volume 38 Issue 5 of Special monograph |date=1988 |publisher= Sarawak Museum |page=135 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RbwEAAAAYAAJ| via= Google Books}}</ref>

===Development===
The film was originally going to be made in 1972, directed by Schoendoerffer and produced by Robert Dorfman, starring [[Donald Sutherland]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Sutherland Signs for 'King'|newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date= 1 October 1971| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |page= f15}}</ref> However, it was not made. John Milius was interested in the themes of the book. In 1976, he said:
{{blockquote|My greatest fantasy is to go off to some foreign land and become a legend of some sort, like ''[[The Man Who Would Be King]]'' or ''[[Heart of Darkness]]''. One of my favorite movies is ''[[Return to Paradise (1953 film)|Return to Paradise]]'', [[Mark Robson (film director)|Mark Robson]]'s film with Gary Cooper. That film is my ultimate fantasy. ''Judge Roy Bean'' is very similar to it: the idea of a man going off to a primitive culture and becoming a legend and a god. As they say in ''[[Citizen Kane]]'', "Lording it over the monkeys."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Thompson |first1=Richard |date=July–August 1976 |title=Stoked |journal=Film Comment |volume=12 |issue=4 |pages=10–21}}</ref>}}

"I liked the story because it was such a wonderful [[Rudyard Kipling|Kipling]]esque adventure tale," Milius later said. "It was a theme I always respond to, a guy living free in the wild, and the world catching up to him. In many ways it's similar to ''Jeremiah Johnson''. I thought if I kept plugging away at it, sooner or later I'd get to do it."<ref name="anne"/>
Milius announced he would make the film in 1984.<ref>{{cite news|title=Milius Hopes to Profit From 'Red Dawn' Conflict |last=Vernon|first= Scott| agency = United Press International | newspaper=Philadelphia Daily News |date=11 August 1984| location = ProQuest document # 1817498602|page= 19}}</ref> Milius described the film as his "most ambitious work - something I've wanted to do for 15 years... It's a story that explores loyalties, concepts of freedom and justice. And contrasts a seemingly violent but also very innocent society with the most corrupt society of them all, the outside world.<ref name="notes">{{cite news|title= Outtakes: The Sequel Mob Mentality |last=Modderno|first =Craig|newspaper= Los Angeles Times|date= 21 June 1987|issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 | page= K84}}</ref>

"I have always wanted to write this story," Milius added. "Learoyd is a character who could have come out of one of those barbershop magazines of the '50s: 'I fought the (Japanese) with the headhunters in Borneo where I was king.' He's sitting on a throne with sloe-eyed beauties all around—a mai tai in one hand, a Thompson submachine gun in the other. There is some sort of primitive appeal in that to all of us. But the studios were never very excited about it. I don't know if they are now."<ref name="la"/> "You wouldn't call `Farewell to the King' a right-wing establishment movie, it's certainly not in favor of empire," said Milius. "I think this movie is the most honest depiction of my politics. It's also hopelessly romantic: I'm just a romantic fool."<ref name="anne"/>
Nick Nolte was cast in the lead for a fee of $3 million.<ref name="anne"/> "Thirty years ago it would have been [[Robert Mitchum]]," said Milius. "He was an average, proletarian man, not upper class. Leroyd was a slob in paradise. He was a deserter, troublemaker, a '30s labor organizer, the sort of loveable guy that had great ideals, much more than Nigel Havers, [who plays the botanist], who has all the refinement of culture and empire. He looks at this guy and realizes that he is a great man."<ref name="anne"/> "I would say it's a film about loyalty and trust, freedom and justice," said Nolte. "And it compares a savage but innocent society to the outside world which is the most corrupt society of all."<ref>{{cite news|title=At the Movies: Dawn Steel got an offer she couldn't, you know, refuse New site for Oscar night From jailbird to jungle king for Nick Nolte|first=Lawrence|last= Van Gelder|newspaper= The New York Times| url = https://www.nytimes.com/1987/10/30/movies/at-the-movies.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131212205311/https://www.nytimes.com/1987/10/30/movies/at-the-movies.html |archive-date = 12 December 2013 | issn =0362-4331 |oclc = 1645522 |date=30 October 1987|page= C8}}</ref>

"I'm a story teller," said Milius. "I'm a modern technology version of the Borneo tribal storyteller who squats near the fire in the long house and tells his tale. We're all telling the same tale. It's about the struggle of people to survive and, more important, to be free. It's about the necessity of making moral choices - and their costs. But it seems more real when you see where it really happened - and the people it really happened to. It's set in the 1940s and many people lost their freedom in the 1940s and were taking action and having adventures to get it back. Human beings like to hear stories about how they've survived and stayed free."<ref name = Culhane>{{cite news |title= In Borneo's Wilds, Legend Takes Root: In 'Farewell to the King,' John Milius tells a tale of the struggle for freedom. |first= John |last= Culhane |work=The New York Times |date= 26 February 1989 | issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522|location = ProQuest Central document ID 427070896 |page= H15|quote=To John Milius, the kinds of stories we tell about ourselves, our own ongoing legends of ourselves, are actually how we measure the greatness of our aspirations. That's what Learoyd does for the tribe, he says. He takes them, he gives them a legend - all of them. He gives them a history; he makes them a strong people. Even though he's gone, they have the legend.}}</ref>

===Filming===
Filming started 24 August 1987. The film was shot on location in Borneo ([[Bau District, Sarawak|Bau District]], [[Sarawak]], Malaysia). Nolte arrived in Borneo a month before filming began.<ref name="la"/><ref name = "Culhane"/> "We could have shot this film in the Philippines for a lot less money", he says. "But this is where it happened. These are the real people. These are real Iban. This is the land of Rajah Brooke. You know, the older I get, the more I feel I am like a Viking."<ref name="la"/>

"This is a tough film, but you kind of like the toughness of it here", said Milius on location. "This is an adventure. If you're a romantic like me, you think of yourself out building the Panama Canal, or being the [[Rajah Brooke]]. You can't think of that if you're in a rainstorm in the San Fernando Valley."<ref name="la"/>

Milius' then-girlfriend played Haver's fiancée.<ref name="la"/>

===Editing===
Post-production was to be done in England but the falling US dollar meant that it was done in Los Angeles.<ref>{{cite news|title=Dollar's fall keeps filmmakers home|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date= 17 January 1988 | issn = 1085-6706 |oclc = 7960243 | page= F12B}}</ref> According to Milius, the film was his best movie but it was "completely cut to pieces" by executives at the studio.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ign.com/articles/2003/05/07/an-interview-with-john-milius?page=14|first=Ken|last=Plume|title=Interview with John Milius|website=IGN Film|date=7 May 2003|access-date=5 January 2013}}</ref> In February 1989 he said, "Orion isn't behind it. They don't think it is going to be big at the box office. You put all the sweat and blood you can into it, and the outcome is whatever happens."<ref name="anne"/>

Milius would have liked to have been able to exceed the two-hour running time limit by 10 minutes, and preferred his silent action sequences accompanied by Basil Poledouris music over the release print's realistic, percussive sound effects. "The music was played down," he said. "It was a beautiful score. The producers' attitude is: `We paid for the gunshot, let's hear it.'"<ref name="anne">{{cite news|title=A rebel adapts John Milius will meet Hollywood halfway|last=Thompson|first= Anne|newspaper= Chicago Tribune| location = ProQuest Central Document ID 282718567|date= 16 February 1989| issn = 1085-6706 |oclc = 7960243 |page= 12}}</ref> He was also unhappy the edit removed how Learoyd managed to unify the Dyak tribes by getting the women to hold a sex strike. He later said
<blockquote>[The film] was thrown away. I, as usual, was attacked viciously but in time it's come to be regarded as one of my best. In a way - I don't know why - I guess this film is more heartfelt than anything I've done since ''[[Big Wednesday]]''... The producers - Al Ruddy and Andre Morgan - who are friends of mine now - were lied to by Orion executives. They did a very careful divide-and-conquer and turned us against each other. They [Ruddy and Morgan] would love to recut it the way I wanted... We'd all love to recut that movie and rerelease it.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Segaloff |first1=Nat|last2 = Milius | first2 = John |editor1-last=McGilligan |editor1-first=Patrick |title=Backstory 4 : interviews with screenwriters of the 1970s and 1980s |date=2006 |publisher=University of Michigan, Scholarly Publishing Office. |location=Scholarly Publishing Office |chapter=John Milius : the good fights |oclc=758444323 | page = 305 }}</ref> </blockquote>
[[Mike Medavoy]], Milius' former agent who was head of Orion Pictures at the time, wrote in 2002 that:
<blockquote>Many things stopped ''Farewell to the King'' from being successful. There were endless arguments between Al and John, and between John and us over the cutting of the film. John ended up being mad at me for years, but we've become close friends again. In the end, the film just didn't play. Perhaps audiences weren't ready to see a white soldier become the king of an indigenous tribe in Borneo. It was one of a group of daring Orion movies that didn't make money but, in retrospect, is a movie we are all very proud to have been a part of.<ref>{{cite book | url = https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780743400541/page/175/mode/2up?q=borneo |last1=Medavoy |first1=Mike |title=You're Only as Good as Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films, and 100 for which I Should be Shot |date=2002 |publisher=Atria |isbn= 0743400542| pages =174–175 }}</ref></blockquote>

== Reception ==
Review aggregation website [[Rotten Tomatoes]] retrospectively collected reviews from 11 critics and gave the film a score of 55%, with an average rating of 5.5 out of 10.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/farewell_to_the_king/ |title= Farewell to the King| work= [[Rotten Tomatoes]] | publisher= [[Flixster]]| access-date= }}</ref>

[[Roger Ebert]] gave the film 3/4 stars. Ebert praised Nolte for his skill as actor, and his ability to inhabit a role rather than merely visit.<ref>{{cite web | date = 3 March 1989 | first= Roger| last= Ebert | title = Farewell to the King | url = http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/farewell-to-the-king-1989 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130424064915/http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/farewell-to-the-king-1989 | archive-date = 24 April 2013 }}</ref>

Milius later said he felt he had made a "great film".<ref>{{cite web | url= https://www.mandatory.com/fun/625751-exclusive-interview-john-milius-on-milius| title= Exclusive Interview: John Milius on ‘Milius’
| date= January 6, 2014| first= John| last= Milius| interviewer= Fred Topel |website= mandatory.com |publisher= CraveOnline |accessdate= November 1, 2023}}</ref>

==DVD==
''Farewell to the King'' was released to DVD by [[MGM Home Entertainment]] on 6 June 2006.

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}


==External links==
==External links==
* {{imdb title|id=0097334|title=Farewell to the King}}
* {{IMDb title|id=0097334|title=Farewell to the King}}
* {{amg title|id=A16805|title=Farewell to the King}}
* {{amg title|16805|title=Farewell to the King}}
*{{AFI film|id=58064|title=Farewell to the King}}
* {{rotten-tomatoes|id=farewell_to_the_king|title=Farewell to the King}}
* {{rotten-tomatoes|id=farewell_to_the_king|title=Farewell to the King}}
* {{Mojo title|farewelltotheking}}
*[https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=950DE5D71E3FF930A35750C0A96F948260 Review of film] at ''[[The New York Times]]''
*[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/farewelltothekingpg13hinson_a0a8e4.htm Review of film] at ''[[The Washington Post]]''
*[http://articles.latimes.com/1989-03-03/entertainment/ca-122_1_john-milius Review of film] at ''[[Los Angeles Times]]''
*[http://thequietus.com/articles/08786-farewell-to-the-king-john-milius-dvd Review of film] at the Quietus
{{John Milius}}


[[Category:1989 films]]
[[Category:1989 films]]
[[Category:Action films]]
[[Category:1980s action drama films]]
[[Category:Adventure films]]
[[Category:1980s action adventure films]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:1989 independent films]]
[[Category:Drama films]]
[[Category:1980s war films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:American adventure drama films]]
[[Category:Independent films]]
[[Category:Films based on French novels]]
[[Category:Films based on fiction books]]
[[Category:American independent films]]
[[Category:Orion Pictures films]]
[[Category:Orion Pictures films]]
[[Category:American World War II films]]
{{war-film-stub}}
[[Category:Films set in the 1940s]]

[[Category:War adventure films]]
[[ru:Прощание с королём (фильм)]]
[[Category:American war drama films]]
[[Category:Pacific War films]]
[[Category:Films scored by Basil Poledouris]]
[[Category:Films directed by John Milius]]
[[Category:Films with screenplays by John Milius]]
[[Category:Films set in Borneo]]
[[Category:Films about royalty]]
[[Category:1989 drama films]]
[[Category:Japan in non-Japanese culture]]
[[Category:Films about deserters]]
[[Category:1980s English-language films]]
[[Category:1980s American films]]
[[Category:Films based on works by Pierre Schoendoerffer]]

Latest revision as of 23:13, 1 November 2023

Farewell to the King
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Milius
Screenplay byJohn Milius
Based onL'Adieu au Roi
by Pierre Schoendoerffer
Produced byAndre Morgan
Albert Ruddy
Starring
CinematographyDean Semler
Edited byAnne V. Coates
Carroll Timothy O'Meara
Music byBasil Poledouris
Production
company
Ruddy Morgan Productions
Distributed by
Release date
3 March 1989 (1989-03-03TUSA)
Running time
115 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$16 million[2][3]
Box office$2,420,917

Farewell to the King is a 1989 American action adventure drama film written and directed by John Milius. It stars Nick Nolte, Nigel Havers, Frank McRae, and Gerry Lopez and is loosely based on the 1969 novel L'Adieu au Roi by Pierre Schoendoerffer. Longtime Milius collaborator Basil Poledouris composed the musical score.

Plot[edit]

During World War II, American deserter Learoyd escapes a Japanese firing squad. Hiding in the wilds of Borneo, Learoyd is adopted by a head-hunting tribe of Dayaks, who consider him divine because of his blue eyes. Before long, Learoyd is the reigning king of the Dayaks. When British soldiers approach him to rejoin the war against the Japanese, Learoyd resists. When his own tribe is threatened by the invaders, Learoyd decides to fight for their rights and to protect their independence.

Main cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Original novel[edit]

Pierre Schoendoerffer originally wrote the story as a film script. He then turned it into a novel, which was published in 1969 and became a best seller in France, selling over 300,000 copies in hardback. He made the lead character Irish because "the Irish are mad and I like mad people."[4]

"I was wanting to make a great symphonic book on life and death: on how a man can struggle until the very end, without hope and without reason, just to be alive, even though half dead., even though suffering terribly, because life is so powerful. But on the other hand I was wanting to show that if suddenly a man discovers that he is not fulfilling his dream, then he does not want to live anymore."[4]

The story had some basis in historical fact. Tom Harrisson's stay with the Dayaks during the Second World War was the inspiration for much of what happened in the novel along with the allied drop behind Japanese lines known as Operation Semut.[2][5]

Development[edit]

The film was originally going to be made in 1972, directed by Schoendoerffer and produced by Robert Dorfman, starring Donald Sutherland.[6] However, it was not made. John Milius was interested in the themes of the book. In 1976, he said:

My greatest fantasy is to go off to some foreign land and become a legend of some sort, like The Man Who Would Be King or Heart of Darkness. One of my favorite movies is Return to Paradise, Mark Robson's film with Gary Cooper. That film is my ultimate fantasy. Judge Roy Bean is very similar to it: the idea of a man going off to a primitive culture and becoming a legend and a god. As they say in Citizen Kane, "Lording it over the monkeys."[7]

"I liked the story because it was such a wonderful Kiplingesque adventure tale," Milius later said. "It was a theme I always respond to, a guy living free in the wild, and the world catching up to him. In many ways it's similar to Jeremiah Johnson. I thought if I kept plugging away at it, sooner or later I'd get to do it."[8]

Milius announced he would make the film in 1984.[9] Milius described the film as his "most ambitious work - something I've wanted to do for 15 years... It's a story that explores loyalties, concepts of freedom and justice. And contrasts a seemingly violent but also very innocent society with the most corrupt society of them all, the outside world.[3]

"I have always wanted to write this story," Milius added. "Learoyd is a character who could have come out of one of those barbershop magazines of the '50s: 'I fought the (Japanese) with the headhunters in Borneo where I was king.' He's sitting on a throne with sloe-eyed beauties all around—a mai tai in one hand, a Thompson submachine gun in the other. There is some sort of primitive appeal in that to all of us. But the studios were never very excited about it. I don't know if they are now."[2] "You wouldn't call `Farewell to the King' a right-wing establishment movie, it's certainly not in favor of empire," said Milius. "I think this movie is the most honest depiction of my politics. It's also hopelessly romantic: I'm just a romantic fool."[8]

Nick Nolte was cast in the lead for a fee of $3 million.[8] "Thirty years ago it would have been Robert Mitchum," said Milius. "He was an average, proletarian man, not upper class. Leroyd was a slob in paradise. He was a deserter, troublemaker, a '30s labor organizer, the sort of loveable guy that had great ideals, much more than Nigel Havers, [who plays the botanist], who has all the refinement of culture and empire. He looks at this guy and realizes that he is a great man."[8] "I would say it's a film about loyalty and trust, freedom and justice," said Nolte. "And it compares a savage but innocent society to the outside world which is the most corrupt society of all."[10]

"I'm a story teller," said Milius. "I'm a modern technology version of the Borneo tribal storyteller who squats near the fire in the long house and tells his tale. We're all telling the same tale. It's about the struggle of people to survive and, more important, to be free. It's about the necessity of making moral choices - and their costs. But it seems more real when you see where it really happened - and the people it really happened to. It's set in the 1940s and many people lost their freedom in the 1940s and were taking action and having adventures to get it back. Human beings like to hear stories about how they've survived and stayed free."[11]

Filming[edit]

Filming started 24 August 1987. The film was shot on location in Borneo (Bau District, Sarawak, Malaysia). Nolte arrived in Borneo a month before filming began.[2][11] "We could have shot this film in the Philippines for a lot less money", he says. "But this is where it happened. These are the real people. These are real Iban. This is the land of Rajah Brooke. You know, the older I get, the more I feel I am like a Viking."[2]

"This is a tough film, but you kind of like the toughness of it here", said Milius on location. "This is an adventure. If you're a romantic like me, you think of yourself out building the Panama Canal, or being the Rajah Brooke. You can't think of that if you're in a rainstorm in the San Fernando Valley."[2]

Milius' then-girlfriend played Haver's fiancée.[2]

Editing[edit]

Post-production was to be done in England but the falling US dollar meant that it was done in Los Angeles.[12] According to Milius, the film was his best movie but it was "completely cut to pieces" by executives at the studio.[13] In February 1989 he said, "Orion isn't behind it. They don't think it is going to be big at the box office. You put all the sweat and blood you can into it, and the outcome is whatever happens."[8]

Milius would have liked to have been able to exceed the two-hour running time limit by 10 minutes, and preferred his silent action sequences accompanied by Basil Poledouris music over the release print's realistic, percussive sound effects. "The music was played down," he said. "It was a beautiful score. The producers' attitude is: `We paid for the gunshot, let's hear it.'"[8] He was also unhappy the edit removed how Learoyd managed to unify the Dyak tribes by getting the women to hold a sex strike. He later said

[The film] was thrown away. I, as usual, was attacked viciously but in time it's come to be regarded as one of my best. In a way - I don't know why - I guess this film is more heartfelt than anything I've done since Big Wednesday... The producers - Al Ruddy and Andre Morgan - who are friends of mine now - were lied to by Orion executives. They did a very careful divide-and-conquer and turned us against each other. They [Ruddy and Morgan] would love to recut it the way I wanted... We'd all love to recut that movie and rerelease it.[14]

Mike Medavoy, Milius' former agent who was head of Orion Pictures at the time, wrote in 2002 that:

Many things stopped Farewell to the King from being successful. There were endless arguments between Al and John, and between John and us over the cutting of the film. John ended up being mad at me for years, but we've become close friends again. In the end, the film just didn't play. Perhaps audiences weren't ready to see a white soldier become the king of an indigenous tribe in Borneo. It was one of a group of daring Orion movies that didn't make money but, in retrospect, is a movie we are all very proud to have been a part of.[15]

Reception[edit]

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes retrospectively collected reviews from 11 critics and gave the film a score of 55%, with an average rating of 5.5 out of 10.[16]

Roger Ebert gave the film 3/4 stars. Ebert praised Nolte for his skill as actor, and his ability to inhabit a role rather than merely visit.[17]

Milius later said he felt he had made a "great film".[18]

DVD[edit]

Farewell to the King was released to DVD by MGM Home Entertainment on 6 June 2006.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Farewell to the King (1989)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Matthews, Jack. (8 November 1987). The Wild Man of Hollywood Meets the Wilds of Borneo. Los Angeles Times. Times Mirror Company. p. K4 Wayback Machine ISSN 0458-3035 OCLC 3638237
  3. ^ a b Modderno, Craig (21 June 1987). "Outtakes: The Sequel Mob Mentality". Los Angeles Times. p. K84. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
  4. ^ a b McNay, Michael (2 September 1970). "New Testament, uniform edition". The Guardian. p. 8.
  5. ^ Rousseau, Jérôme (1988). Central Borneo: A Bibliography, Volume 38 Issue 5 of Special monograph. Sarawak Museum. p. 135 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ "Sutherland Signs for 'King'". Los Angeles Times. 1 October 1971. p. f15. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
  7. ^ Thompson, Richard (July–August 1976). "Stoked". Film Comment. 12 (4): 10–21.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Thompson, Anne (16 February 1989). "A rebel adapts John Milius will meet Hollywood halfway". Chicago Tribune. ProQuest Central Document ID 282718567. p. 12. ISSN 1085-6706. OCLC 7960243.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  9. ^ Vernon, Scott (11 August 1984). "Milius Hopes to Profit From 'Red Dawn' Conflict". Philadelphia Daily News. ProQuest document # 1817498602. United Press International. p. 19.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  10. ^ Van Gelder, Lawrence (30 October 1987). "At the Movies: Dawn Steel got an offer she couldn't, you know, refuse New site for Oscar night From jailbird to jungle king for Nick Nolte". The New York Times. p. C8. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. Archived from the original on 12 December 2013.
  11. ^ a b Culhane, John (26 February 1989). "In Borneo's Wilds, Legend Takes Root: In 'Farewell to the King,' John Milius tells a tale of the struggle for freedom". The New York Times. ProQuest Central document ID 427070896. p. H15. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. To John Milius, the kinds of stories we tell about ourselves, our own ongoing legends of ourselves, are actually how we measure the greatness of our aspirations. That's what Learoyd does for the tribe, he says. He takes them, he gives them a legend - all of them. He gives them a history; he makes them a strong people. Even though he's gone, they have the legend.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  12. ^ "Dollar's fall keeps filmmakers home". Chicago Tribune. 17 January 1988. p. F12B. ISSN 1085-6706. OCLC 7960243.
  13. ^ Plume, Ken (7 May 2003). "Interview with John Milius". IGN Film. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
  14. ^ Segaloff, Nat; Milius, John (2006). "John Milius : the good fights". In McGilligan, Patrick (ed.). Backstory 4 : interviews with screenwriters of the 1970s and 1980s. Scholarly Publishing Office: University of Michigan, Scholarly Publishing Office. p. 305. OCLC 758444323.
  15. ^ Medavoy, Mike (2002). You're Only as Good as Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films, and 100 for which I Should be Shot. Atria. pp. 174–175. ISBN 0743400542.
  16. ^ "Farewell to the King". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster.
  17. ^ Ebert, Roger (3 March 1989). "Farewell to the King". Archived from the original on 24 April 2013.
  18. ^ Milius, John (6 January 2014). "Exclusive Interview: John Milius on 'Milius'". mandatory.com. Interviewed by Fred Topel. CraveOnline. Retrieved 1 November 2023.

External links[edit]