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Opinion
A night at the unintentionally amusing AACTAs
Encore managing editor Brooke Hemphill attends the inaugural AACTA awards and comes away cringing.
Last night the inaugural Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts awards were held at Sydney’s Opera House as the Australian film and television community gathered to celebrate the achievements of the past 12 months and those who went along for the ride left vaguely amused, with little thanks to the event’s producers. Read more »
Knocking the summer television model of old
This year’s non-ratings period could signal the dawning of a new era. Steve Molk considers the It’s a Knockout model.
Normally the minute the ratings period ends, viewers switch off the television in droves. There’s usually naught on they’ve not already seen, or some extremely poor sitcom from the US. But this year, Ten have been trying a different approach as they revive a retro favourite. Welcome back It’s A Knockout.
Niche versus mass market: big just isn’t better at the cinema
Chris Murray laments the demise of independent cinemas and the rise of generic shopping centre multiplexes with their get ‘em in, bang ‘em out culture.
Punters visit the cinema for an exciting communal experience, not the ease of parking.
As the multiplex struggles to keep the candy bar traffic flowing, automated cogs pump out digital images and the passionate few who strive to make their independent exhibition houses a cultural beacon (The Ritz, The Astor, Chauvel and so on) face impending doom. It’s an education problem, to be honest. Read more »Confessions of a two screening tragic
For today’s TV viewer, one screen isn’t enough. Steve Molk tells us why networks need to take notice of two screening.
My name is Steve Molk and I like to live tweet television shows. A lot. I get a kick from connecting with people who watch the same programs I do and together we discuss, joke, and in the blood sport that is ABC1’s Q&A, compete to see our tweets on screen. Read more »
A sexy funding solution for an age-old problem
Chris Murray proposes an ingenious plan to help fund local screen productions with the naughty dollar.
It has recently come to light that the Hungarian government has some innovative ideas for supporting their local film industry. By introducing three different taxes, our European friends plan to channel funds into local productions and ailing art house cinemas.
The first tax would apply to local porn websites; another, a three per cent tax on multiplex tickets, to funnel into art house exhibition; and finally a general 20 per cent tax break on foreign productions.
According to Variety, the latter has so far generated a US$98 million injection into the local economy via the miniseries World Without End, The Borgias and feature film 47 Ronin starring Keanu Reeves. This is on top of income from Brad Pitt’s US$125m budgeted zombie flick World War Z which is currently shooting in the Hungarian capital, Budapest. Read more »
No dramas, sadly
If there’s a time that Foxtel’s marketing machine outdoes itself, it’s when it comes to reveal its future year’s programming.
Last night Foxtel made the most of having its hands on the Sydney Opera House for the Australia’s Next Top Model final and announced its plans for 2012 too.
It was a glitzy upfront, attended by media agencies and trade journalists, plus plenty of Foxtel personalities.
But comparing it to last year’s affair, the emphasis appears to have shifted away from local drama. Read more »
Want more Swamp People? Then drop the local content quota
The short-sighted idea of dropping TV networks’ local content quota obligations was put back on the agenda today with ad agency CEO Mat Baxter claiming the safety net can now be removed, because we’re all loving local content.
But Australian programs rating well, and the Australian TV industry thriving are completely different.
Despite the high ratings of Packed to the Rafters and The X Factor, what is the likelihood commercial programmers would keep investing in Australian shows? Slim, Read more »
Fox Studios comes out of hibernation as the bustling screen hub we want to see
A few months back I visited Fox Studios in Sydney to view the filming of a commercial for Earth Hour.
The main thing that struck me (apart from the massively rude security guy on the gate) was how depressingly empty most of the place was.
It was desolate. It had the atmosphere of a business district on a Sunday afternoon rather than the film hub of one of the world’s great cities.
Today though, the feeling is very different. Read more »
If scripts could talk
This week the Screen Producers Association of Australia presented its list of seven projects that it will be putting in the shop window at its conference. But the SPAAmart list omitted the names of the script writers. A member of the Australian Writers Guild offers this alternative version of events.
Trouble is brewing over this year’s SPAA conference, with the scripts selected for the feature film shop window staging a sit-in at SPAA head office.
Wake Up Dead, a particularly fat script, blocked the door of the SPAA lunchroom just before lunch yesterday while other scripts phoned media outlets with a list of demands.
Sci-fi thriller The Room was clearly angry, “I mean, we all wrote ourselves, didn’t we? Read more »
The screen industry should run on ingenuity, not politics
Popcorn Taxi’s Chris Murray suggests a taxi service and pie van could keep the industry moving – an industry that should be founded on ingenuity and creativity rather than politics.
It would seem, based on serial offenders to the numerous blogs in and around the Australian Film Industry, that as a generalisation, filmmakers have a lot of time on their hands.
Shirley Barrett on South Solitary
Director Shirley Barrett discusses her new film South Solitary, which will premiere at the Sydney Film Festival on June 2.
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Comments
23 Jul 10
5:35 PM
Well done Shirley, its now on the big screen
I am going to see it with the Friends Of Maatsuyker on the (th August.
You must be very pleased.
Hope to hear from you some time.
John
The Light House Keeper
28 Jul 10
9:33 PM
A message to Shirley. I just saw South Solitary, found it very moving and beautiful. I’m an actor and a maker of theatre as an independent artist, and became interested in lighthouse life after researching for a performance at the launch of an exhibition at the National Archives in Canberra :”Beacons by the Sea’. This was in 2002. I got a grant to further the research, stayed on Swan and Bruny Islands with the caretakers of the lighthouses there, gathered many stories, delved into archives, and eventually there are two shows as a result. ‘Flotsam and Jetsam’ (2003 the first production. There have been 3 versions) is for children, about lighthouse life for kids in the 1950s (based mostly on Tasman Island stories) and ‘The Keeper: a Gothic Tale of Light and Dark’ for adults. In 2008 it had its first season in Canberra, a performance in a marquee at Cape Otway Lightstation as well. It was on at La Mama in Melbourne 2009, and one of the central themes of the story is the man in the bath on Deal Island, Thomas Haigh. I toured both shows in Victoria in May this year and am about to tour with these shows to coastal towns in NSW, including the National Maritime Museum in Sydney (August/September). I would so love to have a contact with you, and invite you to see a performance. I’ll be touring Victoria again next year (May/June). There is info about the shows on my website. It’d be an honour to hear from you…there were so many resonances in your film to the images and events in my show…even to the girl touching the shoes on the dead lightkeeper…I know the subject matter is full of these images, but I was very impressed and moved by the film. I hope you have a moment to contact me.
Yours,
Chrissie Shaw
12 Aug 10
11:52 PM
Dear Shirley,
Along with two friends, one of whom has now seen “South Solitary” twice, I wanted to congratulate you on a truly beautiful and memorable movie. I admit I was hesitant, when a friend asked me along, on the basis that I “would just love it”. Much as I was surprised by her enthusiasm, (she’s not one to go overboard over movies at the best of times), I was also loathe to see it after the very tepid reviews it received from both David and Margaret on “The Movie Show”. Margaret was insistent that the film wasn’t really about anything – ie, there was no real story to hang it on, and said the audience would lose sympathy, as she did, once the heroine did something so unspeakably awful you could never like her again. This was in fact one of the main reasons I didn’t want to see it. By the time it was too late and I was in the audience, I confess, I was dreading some future hideous deed – perhaps the torture of the lovely Lucille, or the boiling of the baby birds in the chimney, as I sat nervously in the audience, waiting to hate my heroine.
When I discovered the act to be something so simple and oddly innocent as a young woman’s acceptance of sex from a married man, I was astounded. What a puritanical attitude from Pomeranz – who after all has in the past defended the rights of freedom of cinema in a way I actually find morally bankrupt. (That French cinema verite film she fought to have screened, which included a real rape scene immediately springs to mind). And to judge a character so beautifully, exquisitely drawn by both script and acting presence, so harshly…? Shirley, as a screenwriting graduate and would-be film director (who turned to the relative safety of the playwriting out of sheer frustration with the industry), and as a lover of good acting performances, I commend your writing and directing. This is a film that will stay in the hearts and minds of your audience for a long time to come. Much the way “Love Serenade” did, all those years ago. Don’t let the narrow minded peculiar attitudes of our resident critics, and the resultant fairly average response nationwide, put you off making more films. You are the next generation’s Paul Cox – and your films will be greeted with the same fervent passionate responses – both negative and positive – as a result. We need your films. They give us guide posts, both visually and viscerally, to who we are. From three people who loved your film, and who will talk about it for a long time yet, THANK YOU. We look forward to many more to come.
18 Aug 10
10:32 AM
To Shirley,
You had me at Lighthouse !
A beautifully told story.
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