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Actor Garry McDonald said: "There's one moment in
the boardroom scene, where Jody (Jocelyn Betheras) reads her testimonial for
Rennie [Garry McDonald] - 'I love you...signed Jody' - and Jocelyn suddenly thrust the note into
my hand. We hadn't rehearsed it that way, so it was totally unexpected. You
see Rennie choke up on the screen, but it is me going all misty. They do that
to you, time and again, creating little moments that are totally surprising,
totally real."
Actor Garry McDonald said: "There's one moment in
the boardroom scene, where Jody (Jocelyn Betheras) reads her testimonial for
Rennie [Garry McDonald] - 'I love you...signed Jody' - and Jocelyn suddenly thrust the note into
my hand. We hadn't rehearsed it that way, so it was totally unexpected. You
see Rennie choke up on the screen, but it is me going all misty. They do that
to you, time and again, creating little moments that are totally surprising,
totally real."
This film was produced with the assistance of the South Australian Film and Television Financing Fund.
The meaning and relevance of the film's 'Struck by Lightning' title is outlined in the movie's press kit in a 'Writer's Note' by screenwriter Trevor Farrant entitled 'The Title'. It reads: "In many cultures, in medieval times, it was believed that, since babies literally came from heaven, a child who was born retarded must have been 'struck by lightning' en route. This reference is never explained in the film; we don't know why Cannizzaro [Brian Vriends] chooses the lightning bolt as the emblem for the soccer team, except that, in typical style, it is an outrageously macho, over-the-top symbol for such an inept rabble. 'Struck by Lightning', of course, is also the effect that Cannizzaro has on the lives of those around him - most of all Rennie, who serves in the story as
a kind of 'lightning conductor' for Cannizzaro's excesses of optimism and lunatic faith."
Director Jerzy Domaradzki said that this picture came to him "like most important things in my
life, by accident. I was working with Trevor Farrant on another script and he
gave this to me to read. When I started it, I couldn't stop, it was so moving
that I told him I would be ready anytime to direct it."
Jerzy Domaradzki, the film's director, said of what attracted him to this picture: "This is an issue film
about retarded people...what should we do with them?...but the approach in
the script is universal. The Down's Syndrome people are shown as 'normal
but different'. They are in some ways more happy, they don't have a past or a
future, but live in the present. Making this film might help us understand
not only these people, but also ourselves." He added: "It is also a film about friendship, about the quality of love, presented with
humor and humanity. There is a thread of dark comedy, or irony -
Cannizzaro [Brian Vriends] wants to change people's lives, Rennie [Garry McDonald] opposes him and thus the
life he changes most of all is Rennie's."