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Adaptations
- form y Chopper ( dir. Andrew Dominik ) Australia : Pariah Films , 2000 Z1361008 2000 single work film/TV crime (taught in 5 units) Based on Mark 'Chopper' Read's autobiography, Chopper is an exploration of the life and complex psyche of a vicious thug who resorts to violence in an instant but can just as easily be filled with remorse. The narrative begins in 1991 with Read in gaol and then shifts back in time to Pentridge Prison in 1978. It was then that Read established his reputation in jail by stabbing Keithy George, a member of the much-feared criminal gang associated with the Victorian Painters and Dockers Union, and also by getting some fellow inmates to cut off his ears (why Read did this is unclear as he provides at two different reasons in his books). 'Chopper' is later stabbed by his best mate, Jimmy Loughnan, who is attempting to fulfil a contract to kill him. When 'Chopper' is eventually freed in 1985, he moves back home to live with his dad but becomes paranoid, not only because of the large quantities of speed he's consuming but also because he's become a police informant. He shoots a drug dealer called 'The Turk' outside a nightclub in St Kilda, but the police refuse to believe him, and later shoots an old drug-dealing associate, only to drive his victim to hospital. He also later threatens his old mate Jimmy Loughnan with a gun, then apologises. Although Read is eventually arrested for the murder of 'The Turk,' he is acquitted but given a five-year sentence for other offences. The narrative then returns to 1991, by which time Read has sold 250,000 copies of his first book, From the Inside, and become a celebrity.
Notes
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Book one in the author's Chopper series.
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Unholy Trinity of Sex, Drugs Money
2013
single work
column
— Appears in: The Advertiser , 20 October vol. 20 October no. 2013; (p. 20) -
Chopper 'Never Told' How Many Books Sold
2013
single work
column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 7-8 September 2013; (p. 6) -
Torn by Chopper's Inner Torment
2013
single work
review
— Appears in: Eureka Street , 23 August vol. 23 no. 16 2013;
— Review of Chopper 2 : Hits and Memories : More Confessions of Mark Brandon Read 1992 single work autobiography ; Chopper : From the Inside : The Confessions of Mark Brandon Read 1991 single work autobiography -
Chopper : From the Inside: Discourses of the 'Celebrity' Criminal Mark Brandon Read
2012
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Language and Literature : Journal of the Poetics and Linguistics Association , August vol. 21 no. 3 2012; (p. 260-273)'Popular culture has been inundated with stories and images of True Crime for a long time, which is testament to people’s enduring fascination with criminals and their deviant actions. In such stories, which present actual cases of notorious crimes in a style that often resembles fiction, criminals are either reviled as monsters or lauded as cultural icons. More recently, popular autobiographical accounts by criminals themselves have begun to emerge within this True Crime genre. Typically self-celebratory in nature, such representations construct a rather glamorized public image of the author. This article undertakes a multimodal analysis of what has been classed as one typical example of this True Crime sub-genre, Australian Mark Brandon Read’s autobiographical account Chopper: From the Inside. It thereby seeks to demonstrate that the book, while glamorizing and mythologizing its protagonist, simultaneously offers scope for a qualitative understanding of Read’s life of crime and the sensual dynamics of his violent offending. To this end, the analysis focuses on some of the linguistic and pictorial strategies Read employs in constructing a public image of himself that alternates between the dangerous ‘hardman’ and the ‘larrikin’ criminal hero. However, it is also shown that Read’s account reveals a degree of critical self-reflection. In addition to the multimodal analysis, the article also endeavours to explore the link between celebrity and crime, thereby engaging with the nature of popular culture’s fascination with celebrated criminals.' (Publication summary)
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They've Paid the Price, So Let the Old Lags Write Their Memoirs
2011
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 3 June 2011; (p. 11)
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Unapologetic
2003
single work
review
— Appears in: Dotlit : The Online Journal of Creative Writing , November vol. 4 no. 2 2003;
— Review of Chopper : From the Inside : The Confessions of Mark Brandon Read 1991 single work autobiography -
Torn by Chopper's Inner Torment
2013
single work
review
— Appears in: Eureka Street , 23 August vol. 23 no. 16 2013;
— Review of Chopper 2 : Hits and Memories : More Confessions of Mark Brandon Read 1992 single work autobiography ; Chopper : From the Inside : The Confessions of Mark Brandon Read 1991 single work autobiography -
They've Paid the Price, So Let the Old Lags Write Their Memoirs
2011
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 3 June 2011; (p. 11) -
Critical Mass : When Crime Pays...
2002
single work
column
— Appears in: The Sunday Age , 6 January 2002; (p. 18) -
Chopper 'Never Told' How Many Books Sold
2013
single work
column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 7-8 September 2013; (p. 6) -
Unholy Trinity of Sex, Drugs Money
2013
single work
column
— Appears in: The Advertiser , 20 October vol. 20 October no. 2013; (p. 20) -
Chopper : From the Inside: Discourses of the 'Celebrity' Criminal Mark Brandon Read
2012
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Language and Literature : Journal of the Poetics and Linguistics Association , August vol. 21 no. 3 2012; (p. 260-273)'Popular culture has been inundated with stories and images of True Crime for a long time, which is testament to people’s enduring fascination with criminals and their deviant actions. In such stories, which present actual cases of notorious crimes in a style that often resembles fiction, criminals are either reviled as monsters or lauded as cultural icons. More recently, popular autobiographical accounts by criminals themselves have begun to emerge within this True Crime genre. Typically self-celebratory in nature, such representations construct a rather glamorized public image of the author. This article undertakes a multimodal analysis of what has been classed as one typical example of this True Crime sub-genre, Australian Mark Brandon Read’s autobiographical account Chopper: From the Inside. It thereby seeks to demonstrate that the book, while glamorizing and mythologizing its protagonist, simultaneously offers scope for a qualitative understanding of Read’s life of crime and the sensual dynamics of his violent offending. To this end, the analysis focuses on some of the linguistic and pictorial strategies Read employs in constructing a public image of himself that alternates between the dangerous ‘hardman’ and the ‘larrikin’ criminal hero. However, it is also shown that Read’s account reveals a degree of critical self-reflection. In addition to the multimodal analysis, the article also endeavours to explore the link between celebrity and crime, thereby engaging with the nature of popular culture’s fascination with celebrated criminals.' (Publication summary)