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‘I know they’ve got them wrong’: Real reason Bryan Brown wants to play the villain

Ahead of his starring role in Boy Swallows Universe, Aussie actor Bryan Brown reflects on why he’s drawn to dark roles - and ‘funny bastards’.

Boy Swallows Universe (Official trailer)

Bryan Brown knows a thing or two about great Australian storytelling. In an acting career spanning almost 50 years, Brown has starred in some of Australia’s most beloved book adaptations, including iconic miniseries such as 1981’s A Town Like Alice and The Thorn Birds in 1983.

He also penned two books: Sweet Jimmy in 2021 and The Drowning, published in October.

But, as Brown is quick to point out, the best yarn spinners aren’t always the ones in entertainment or publishing. “The thing is, if you get caught in a pub with a crim, you never stop laughing,” Brown says with a mischievous twinkle in his eyes.

“They are funny bastards. They can also do nasty things, so don’t get on the wrong side of them! But they see life in a very funny way.”

That’s why Brown has always preferred TV villains who throw punchlines as well as punches. “If they don’t have any humour,” he explains, “I know they’ve got them wrong.”

Australian actor Bryan Brown has reflected on his career playing deeply flawed characters, including in Boy Swallows Universe. Picture: Richard Dobson
Australian actor Bryan Brown has reflected on his career playing deeply flawed characters, including in Boy Swallows Universe. Picture: Richard Dobson

Brown has rarely got it wrong when playing deeply flawed but ultimately loveable rogues in films like Two Hands opposite Heath Ledger (1999) and 2002’s Dirty Deeds with Toni Collette.

His new TV series, Boy Swallows Universe, brings Trent Dalton’s semi-autobiographical bestseller to the screen, and in it, Brown plays Slim Halliday, the sort of engaging criminal who has become the actor’s hallmark.

Slim, who spent years in prison for a crime he says he didn’t commit, now serves as a straight-shooting babysitter to Eli (Felix Cameron) and Gus (Lee Tiger Halley).

The dynamic between Slim and these two young boys reminded Brown of The Shiralee – the 1987 miniseries in which he played Macauley, a laconic swagman raising his young daughter Buster (Rebecca Smart).

“When we get to see an older person and a younger person together, and they actually enjoy being together because each is learning, we really value it,” he says.

Of all his many films and TV shows, Brown says The Shiralee is the series that people most often stop him to share how much it meant to them.

Bryan Brown in a scene from Boy Swallows Universe. Picture: Netflix
Bryan Brown in a scene from Boy Swallows Universe. Picture: Netflix

“To be honest, I’m surprised they haven’t [rebooted it], and I hope to Christ they don’t because we want it to stay ours,” he says protectively.

Brown is equally proud of A Town Like Alice, the series that made him a star and was based on the 1950 novel by Nevil Shute.

“It’s a wonderful love story and we didn’t screw it up,” he says. “You can screw it up by making it schmaltzy or missing the point. But people loved it all over the world.”

When he read the script for Boy Swallows Universe, Brown says he was instantly captivated. When he read Dalton’s book, he was even more impressed. “In the book, and this is how Trent writes, he walks around in this circle of people before it even starts to come out to where a plot develops,” he explains.

“And so, as I read it, the first thing I thought was, oh, my God, [scriptwriter] John Collee, how the hell did you go about pulling out these scripts to get this right? John found a ‘crime-line’ mystery to build the scripts around, because in the book it’s just dysfunction, dysfunction, dysfunction.”

Boy Swallows Universe works both on the page and on the screen because of the care taken in weaving together the vision of the author and the screenwriter.

“It is about hope,” Brown says of the story. “It’s about these kids and this is their life. “They’ve got to go forward like any of us, and that’s the great thing. There is no judgement in it. You can go, ‘I’m glad I’m not these characters – but I like them.’”

Boy Swallows Universe is streaming from Thursday on Netflix.

Listen to the summer series of Stellar’s podcast Something To Talk About below or wherever you get your podcasts:

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/lifestyle/stellar/i-know-theyve-got-them-wrong-real-reason-bryan-brown-wants-to-play-the-villain/news-story/bd892b64c2e5d83593c8c539383ae5b8