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AICN-Downunder: Peter Weir's SHANTARAM, Luhrmann's TEN THOUSAND HORSES and more!!!

Published at:  Dec 09, 2005 9:32:51 PM CST

Ahoy, squirts! Quint here on BNAT eve with a little piece from our man from the land downunder, Latauro. He's got the skinny on all things Aussie and Kiwi for ya'. Enjoy!



Freddie, every time you light my cigarette, I know you're lying to me.



AICN-DOWNUNDER



It's been a pretty awesome fortnight to be a film geek. Correction: it's been a pretty awesome fortnight to be me.



Where do I begin? Well, a while back I carefully selected the film geeks from my circles of friends and brought them together for night of film geekery. Recently, this has evolved into a fortnightly process whereby we each take turns programming a film double. The last one was ENTER THE DRAGON followed by Jackie Chan's YOUNG MASTER. The next double will be Fellini's 8 1/2 and Fuller's SHOCK CORRIDOR, neither of which I've seen. The anticipation is palpable.



Anyway, it's two weeks ago and we've just had the Bruce Lee/Jackie Chan night. Two days later, I'm at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image to see Malcolm McDowell. Let me tell you, it's not the easiest thing in the world trying to save nine really good seats by yourself when the session is packed out. Still, seven of my friends showed up on time and we settled in. I was keeping an eye out for my friends Joel and Sarah; I'd got Joel a ticket as a belated birthday present, and was getting a bit nervous about the time. Then I spotted them on the other side of the theatre. I waved my arms. He saw, waved back, and stayed where he was. It took my a moment to figure out why. McDowell was standing in front of him. The bastard got to shake his hand, and even received a friendly hit on the shoulder from Mr De Large. Needless to say, the moment Joel sat down next to me, I began scraping McDowell DNA off his shirt and rubbing it on my own. I'm not a proud man.



I don't know how long McDowell was meant to speak for exactly, but I'm pretty sure he ran over by about an hour. Nobody cared. In fact, some of us wanted him to keep going. The man was humble, witty, funny, and interesting. If you're ever in a position to see him speak, take it. You won't be sorry.



The anecdotes about Ian Holm, Albert Finney (is it just me or does every single British actor cite Holm and Finney as the greatest actors they've ever seen? McDowell certainly did), Sir John Gielgud, Stanely Kubrick and everyone else you'd expect were brilliant. Never knew that McDowell had the lead in POOR COW before he was replaced by Terence Stamp. Wonder how THE LIMEY would have turned out in that alternate universe...



Interesting bit of DVD news. Apparently McDowell had been trying to get IF... released on DVD, and was getting no response from the head of Paramount's DVD division. Then a group of filmmakers known as the Pizza Club invited McDowell to attend their private screening of IF... At the end, he asked if they would consider applying pressure to Paramount to get the DVD released. The next day, McDowell received a call. He didn't tell us when it would be out, but he has recorded a commentary and participated in interviews, so the thing is definitely coming out.



The next night was the AFI awards, and I'd managed to score an invite. Not the actual ceremony, mind you, but to the red carpet event. Not terribly thrilling, but we had a prime position on the balcony (if you watched the telecast, you would have seen fleeting images of me in the background over Hugo Weaving's shoulder). Star spotting isn't my favourite pastime in the world, but the beer was free and plentiful (fresh bottles arrived before the previous one was emptied), and it was kind-of fun. I was a bit surprised to see McDowell turn up, and even more surprised to see the crowd saving their loudest cheering for Eddie McGuire.



A few days later I was at the Astor Theatre seeing, for the first time, THE GRADUATE and BLOW UP. THE GRADUATE was awesome, just as great as everyone's always claimed. BLOW UP was an interesting one for me. I hated the first act, loved the second, and hated the third (disaffected tennis-playing mimes? Are you kidding me?). It gave me a negative feeling towards the film, but I've softened a bit. The more I think about it, the more I want to check it out again on DVD. As much as I loved that sequence with the photo development, I still think I missed something. Definitely one to watch for. (The experience was added to with the Astor cat -- not Marzipan -- wandering along the aisle and jumping onto my lap during the final thirty seconds of the film.)



The next day, a massive order arrived from Amazon, including the three disc WIZARD OF OZ, the THIN MAN collection, the HANZO THE RAZOR trilogy, and that massive STAR TREK twenty-disc film box.



Then, in roughly a twenty-four hour period, I got to see press screening of GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK and THE ARISTOCRATS, and then a non-press screening of HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE on the massive V-Max screen. And I already have primo seats book for KING KONG.



Life really doesn't get much better than this.



NEWS



Peter Weir, Australian genius export who gave us WITNESS, THE TRUMAN SHOW and MASTER AND COMMANDER (like you didn't know) will next lend his "Action"-yelling skills to SHANTARAM. The film follows the true story of Gregory David Roberts as he breaks out of prison, escapes to India and leads a life containing two cumulative hours of interesting material. Interestingly, Johnny Depp will star as Roberts. Not that I don't love Depp's work, but there are a lot of big A-list Australian actors of the right age who can do the accent convincingly. I doubt Depp will resort to the usual faux-cockney tripe we usually hear, but still...



The new Baz Luhrmann film -- which I believe is called TEN THOUSAND HORSES or something similar... I got told by a prospective crew member over a beer, like, three months ago -- will begin shooting soon with a budget of $40million. Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman will star as two people who fall in love or sing or try to get three words out before the next slam cut.



According to Batman-on-Film.com, Lachy Hulme is coming around to what the rest of us knew all along: he probably won't be playing the Joker in BATMAN KEEPS GOING. Though he's been in talks, Hulme acknowledges the role will almost definitely go to someone else. I'd repeat the roster of rumoured actors, but I don't think any of them have come from the production itself.



In an interview with Moviehole.net, George Romero said that Simon Baker is suggesting that LAND OF THE DEAD 2 takes place in Australia. This is unlikely to happen (if you read the quotes, it sounds more like buddy-buddy kidding around than an actual plan), with Romero suggesting that if there *is* a sequel, it'll probably take place in Canada. He did say, however, that Baker would most likely be re-recruited for the follow up.



New Zealand indie film FUTILE ATTRACTION (from director Mark Prebble) has completed post-production thanks to cash from internet donations. The film is being released on DVD soon, but it needs your support. Read more at www.makemarksmovie.com



SWEET FA has just entered pre-production, and will begin shooting in January of 2006. The low-budget Aussie flick is set to shoot on HD, and will star Matthew Okine (HOUSE OF WAX, AQUAMARINE) and newcomer Luke Ellis. Writer/director Mick Skelton describes the film as a "road movie on foot". Check out the website at www.awesomely-awesome.com.



Lastly, props to the staff from the National Film and Sound Archive in Canberra. Last Saturday night a massive hailstorm threatened to destroy 65 000 photographs and scripts from Australia's film history. Acting quickly, the seventeen staff members were able to save every item, ensuring that nothing was destroyed. The Federal Minister for Hailstorms defended the actions of his department and refused to apologise. "A bit of ice never hurt anybody," Mr Abbott said.



AWARDS AND FESTIVALS



AUSTRALIAN FILM INSTITUTE AWARDS



The red carpet thing ended not with a bang, but with a fizzle. The big rumour -- that Eric Bana was going to arrive by hovercraft -- did not eventuate, so we all left. After some truly amazing Chinese food and some quick sobering up, I got home in time to watch the actual broadcast on the box. Having not seen the majority of the films nominated (I'm ashamed to have not yet caught LOOK BOTH WAYS, LITTLE FISH and THE OYSTER FARMER), I won't comment on any of the wins, but rather the ceremony itself. There was obviously a conscious effort to make it more glamourous than previous years, but the whole thing was scuttled by the choice of host. Russell Crowe may have brought big attention to the awards, but he just wasn't cut out to host the thing.



I think he's a great actor, but what you need here is a comic. Remember a few years ago when Shaun Micallef made the Logies not just watchable, but hilarious? ("Now, it's no secret that our next host has a terrible drug problem..." *consults piece of paper on podium* "Oh, I'm sorry, it IS a secret.") The repeated references to the phone-throwing incident were lazy and predictable. The ad-libbing was lame. The only one who did worse was Australian icon Jack Thompson. Clearly "tired and emotional" out of his skull whilst presenting the lifetime achievement award to compatriot Ray Barrett, it was a nail-biting five minutes just waiting to see if he could make his way through it.



Hopefully next year we'll have just as many successful local films and a host who can really do something with the event (Shaun Micallef, Andrew Denton, John Safran, etc)



(The following list is a selected combination of the winners from the Craft Awards portion held on the 25th and the Pretty People We're Happy To Present to the Public portion on the 26th.)



Best Film - Bridget Ikin (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Lead Actor - Hugo Weaving (LITTLE FISH)

Best Lead Actress - Cate Blanchett (LITTLE FISH)

Best Direction - Sarah Watt (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Original Screenplay - Sarah Watt (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Adapted Screenplay - Robert Connolly and Elliot Perlman (THREE DOLLARS)

Best Supporting Actress - Noni Hazlehurst (LITTLE FISH)

Best Supporting Actor - Anthony Hayes (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Editing - Alexandre de Franceschi ASE, John Scott ASE (LITTLE FISH)

Best Original Music Score - Nick Cave, Warren Ellis (THE PROPOSITION)

Best Production Design - Chris Kennedy (THE PROPOSITION)

Best Costume Design - Margot Wilson (THE PROPOSITION)

Best Sound - Sam Petty, Peter Grace, Robert Sullivan, Yulia Akerholt (LITTLE FISH)

Best Cinematography - Benoit Delhomme (THE PROPOSITION)Best Children's Television Drama - Ann Darrouzet, Dave Gibson and Jenni Tosi ("Holly's Heroes")

Best Comedy Series - Selin Yaman and John Safran ("John Safran vs God")

Best Light Entertainment Series - Ted Robinson ("The Glass House")

Best Television Drama Series - John Edwards and Claudia Karvan ("Love My Way")

Best Telefeature or Mini Series - Andrew Benson and Greg Haddrick ("The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant")

Best Documentary - Dennis O'Rourke (LAND MINES - A LOVE STORY)

Best Short Fiction Film - Tony Krawitz (JEWBOY)

Best Short Animation - Anthony Lucas (THE MYSTERIOUS GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORATIONS OF JASPER MORELLO)

International Award for Best Actor - Russell Crowe (CINDERELLA MAN)

International Award for Best Actress - Emily Browning (LEMONY SNICKET'S A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS)

Byron Kennedy Award - Chris Kennedy

Life Achievement Award - Ray Barrett



38TH ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN WRITERS GUILD AWARDS



With over three hundred and sixty-five legitimate award ceremonies celebrating Australian film, television, theatre and Eddie McGuire each year, it's inevitable that two of them will clash. Nevertheless, with a membership roster full of people who will never be invited to a televised event, the AWGIES took place on the same night as the AFIs (not to mention the same night as that Canberra hailstorm), and we presume the Melbourne Bitter was flowing like nectar. Some selected "high" lights included:



The Hector Crawford Award for significant contribution to the craft via a body of script editing work - John Alsop

The Monte Miller Award for an unproduced script by an Associate member: Jacqueline Cook for RAW

Short Film - Mark Shirrefs for THE MYSTERIOUS GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORATIONS OF JASPER MORELLO

Telemovie, Original - Tony Krawitz for JEWBOY

Telemovie, Adaptation - Peter Duncan for HELL HAS HARBOUR VIEWS

Feature Film - Michael Frank for RA CHOI

2005 Major AWGIE Award - Melissa Reeves for THE SPOOK (stage play)



2005 INSIDE FILM AWARDS



It really is festival season at the moment, ain't it? The IF Awards, celebrating seven years of not being an acronym for Independent Films, were announced only a day before the AFI Uggo Awards. The Sydney ceremony (the AFIs took place in Melbourne) had an identical lineup of nominations, but only a similar set of winners. Drum roll, please...



Best Feature Film - THE PROPOSITION

Best Actress - Cate Blanchett (LITTLE FISH)

Best Actor - Hugo Weaving (LITTLE FISH)

Best Direction - Sarah Watt (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Cinematography - Benoit Delhomme (THE PROPOSITION)

Best Script - Sarah Watt (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Music - Nick Cave and Warren Ellis (THE PROPOSITION)

Best Editing - Denise Haratzis (LOOK BOTH WAYS)

Best Sound - Sam Petty, Peter Grace, Robert Sullivan and Yulia Akerholt (LITTLE FISH)

Best Production Design - Chris Kennedy (THE PROPOSITION)

Box Office Achievement - Vincent Sheehan, Liz Watts and Richard Keddie (producers) (LITTLE FISH)

Best Short Film - Kath Shelper (producer), Warwick Thornton (director) (GREEN BUSH)

Best Animation - Julia Lucas, Susie Campbell, Mark Shirrefs, Anthony Lucas (producers), Anthony Lucas (director) (THE MYSTERIOUS GEOGRAPHIC EXPLORATIONS OF JASPER MORELLO)

Best Documentary - Deborah Szapiro, Georgia Wallace-Crabbe (producers), Janet Merewether (producer/director) (JABE BABE: A HEIGHTENED LIFE)

Best Short Documentary - Marco Ianniello (producers), Sascha Ettinger-Epstein (director) (SENTENCES)

Award for Rising Talent - Kath Shelper

Living Legend IF Award - Jack Thompson

Independent Spirit Award - Wayne Coles-Janess (IN THE SHADOW OF THE PALMS)

'What IF?' Award for Best Unproduced Screenplay - Ben C. Lucas and Anthony Vercoe (ALL FLESH MUST BE EATEN: THE MOVIE)

Festival of the Year - Sydney Film Festival



2006 SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL



For anyone planning on attending this year, we offer the following tip: stay clear of Harvey Weinstein. The man tears the cheques off so fast, it's like he's auditioning for Gambit in X4 (note: this will be Australia's entry into the Eurovision Joke Contest, and will be read by Bud Tingwell). You might, however, be interested to check out the following Australian films which will be screening at the next festival: Gilliam Armstrong's UNFOLDING FLORENCE: THE MANY LIVES OF FLORENCE BROADHURST, JEWBOY and THE PROPOSITION. New Zealand film NO.2, directed by Toa Fraser, will screen in competition. Additionally, CLARA and that frustrating-to-type-out JASPER MORELLO film will both screen in the International Shorts Category.



BOX OFFICE



Gilliam's worst film ever (why, Terry, why?!?) shot to number one last week, but has now dropped to fifth place. Word of mouth is a two-way street, you know. SAW II held onto its number two position whilst Mr Potter predictably magicked all of your money into his Gringotts account.



1. HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE

2. SAW II

3. FLIGHTPLAN

4. DOMINO

5. BROTHERS GRIMM



RELEASED THESE PAST WEEKS TWO



The most effective anti-French propaganda film oozes onto the screen, Tony Scott burns up some film stock, Elijah Wood stars in the remake of the Zero Mostel comedy UKRAINE BE SERIOUS!, Potter goes forth, ancient Russian cinema not involving Battleships is re-released alongside..., ...crazy award-winning Jules Verne-style animation, MIRRORMASK gets its description moved down a place so its alphetising doesn't screw with that Jules Verne thing I had going there, Jackie Chan gets sick of waiting for Chris Tucker and dusts off his own franchise, another IRA film totally bombs at the box office, Chiwetel gets Swanky, Steve Martin cradle-snatches, REM bassist Mike Mills takes time out to direct an indie comedy (kidding, I know they're different people), Ryan Reynolds appears in a film whose title sums up his relationship with good scripts (too long a bow?), and Anthony LaPaglia continues the obliteration of his Australian accent.



5 X 2

DOMINO

EVERYTHING IS ILLUMINATED

HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE

MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA

MIRRORMASK

THE MYSTERIOUS EXPLORATIOS OF JASPER MORELLO

NEW POLICE STORY

OMAGH

RED DUST

SHOPGIRL

THUMBSUCKER

WAITING

WINTER SOLSTICE



REVIEWS



GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.



I've often stated that I'm a pretty big Soderbergh fan. With the exception of OCEAN'S 12 -- which can't be forgiven by pointing out its obscure influences; I'm sorry, it's just a bad film -- I adore everything that he and his Section Eight crew put out. It's therefore been interesting to watch Clooney launch himself into the directing field.



CONFESSIONS OF A DANGEROUS MIND was expertly amateurish. Clooney's direction was slick, but it was clear he was yet to find his feet. He didn't come out of the gate with a clear style; merely facsimiles of the styles by Soderbergh, the Coen brothers, and the other brilliant directors he's worked with. None of this is a slight; I'm glad he was so heavily influenced by the best in the business.



It's with GOOD NIGHT, however, that he's really showed his colours (doing so, oddly enough, in a black and white film). While still using the Peter Andrews-style cinematography, he seems to be using it to his own effect. There's a very strong presence behind the camera, and it's the thing that makes this film such a massive success.



The story of newscaster Edward R. Murrow standing up to Joe McCarthy is one that could easily slip into preachiness. McCarthy is so universally acknowledged as being a Bad Man, that Clooney could probably have got away with loudly proclaiming such a thing. He resists, instead showing a group of people who feel compelled to defend the few who were singled out as communists, even when defending those people would draw suspicion to oneself. (It's really hard to write a sentence like that without realising what an incredible play "The Crucible" is, but that's neither here nor there.)



Even when doing the noble thing, the characters still have their moments of doubt where they wonder if they've become the very thing they are fighting against. How will history view them? Those small character moments are the film's backbone, as they drive home the film's point: that both sides thought they were doing the right thing, but only one would be eventually viewed as virtuous.



If there's one thing Clooney's clearly held onto from Soderbergh and the Coens, it's deft casting. With the sheer number of movie stars that would have jumped at the chance to star in a Clooney film that proclaims human rights to be a good thing, Clooney went with someone that only the cinephile community would recognise: David Strathairn. I've been a fan of Strathairn for years, in films like LA CONFIDENTIAL, HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS, and one of my all-time favourites, SNEAKERS. His work as the blind Whistler in SNEAKERS was, until now, his career-defining turn, the one that deserved to be remembered above all others. Kids, if you thought he was good before, you haven't seen anything yet. His performance as Murrow blows everything he's done out of the water.



He slips perfectly into his character, barely recognisable beneath his Murrow veneer, but without resorting to tics or theatrics that would tempt most. Even in wide shots where he's only visible in the corner between other actors, he draws the eye. Murrow is shown to be a strong presence in every room he's in, and Strathairn somehow manages to get this across whilst apparently doing nothing. It's my favourite performance of this year, narrowly beating out Joseph Gordon-Levitt in MYSTERIOUS SKIN.



The rest of the cast support him aptly, with Patricia Clarkson, RObert Downey Jnr, Jeff Daniels, Ray Wise, Frank Langella and Clooney himself all giving ego-less performances. It's nice -- and surprisingly rare -- to see every actor in a film slip so easily into their characters. It only serves to improve the film.



Special mention must also be given to Joe McCarthy, who plays himself. It was an interesting choice to only use stock footage, but it pays off. Showing McCarthy in his own light was just about the only way to do justice to him whilst showing how completely and totally wrong he was. Allowing him to dig his own grave was much classier than Clooney and co-writer/producer Grant Heslov doing it themselves.



This is one of the best films of the year. It's intelligent, important, but never anything short of entertaining. I can't recommend it enough.



THE ARISTOCRATS



Mere hours after getting out of GOOD NIGHT, I was in the adjacent cinema for THE ARISTOCRATS. It's really cool being part of the press. You get to see movies early and for free. Of course, "for free" is a tricky term. I parked in the wrong car park, so instead of getting free parking for two hours I had to pay $33. Then, because the film ran later than I was expecting, and I was running extremely late for a class I had to teach, I was forced to take a short cut through a toll way, thus taking my "free" cinema experience up to nearly $50. I was clearly primed for a morning of comedy.



If you haven't heard the setup, it's basically one hundred comedians telling the same joke -- the oldest joke in vaudeville history -- in their own way. It's a joke that been deemed too filthy to tell to audiences, and comedians only ever tell it to one another. Sound boring? Sound tedious? It's not.



The setup of this film, which drew me because of its high concept nature, should not work in practice. The joke should get boring, or old, no matter how many different ways it's told. The filmmakers -- Paul Proveza and Penn Jillette -- intercut the joke with comedians talking *about* the joke. They may be breaking one of the oldest rules of comedy (never analyse a joke), but it works. It actually makes the joke funnier. (This is something I've noticed with things like "The Simpsons"; the rare jokes that are actually funnier the more you think about them.)



It's hard to talk about this film to those who haven't seen it, so I'll leave you with a recommendation. The film had me laughing so hard that my cheeks were hurting at the halfway point. And if you think seeing it with a group of stuffy film critics would suck, they actually broke into applause at one point. How many times have you seen that happen with *any* audience?



Unless you're recovering from facial reconstruction surgery, or don't like dirty jokes, or have a weak heart, you have to go see this film. Funniest film of the year.



NEXT WEEK



- Rick Baker and Richard Taylor join for the Section Eight giant-monkey-senator-goes-on-rampage-through-1950s-Stalingrad in MIGHTY JOE MCCARTHY



- Ben Affleck begins work on "Project Redlight", a new reality series that sees him signs onto films in order to see their funding pulled



- Paris Hilton to star in I'M A WORTHLESS SLUT WHO'S NEVER CONTRIBUTED ANYTHING MEANINGFUL TO SOCIETY for director Tony Kaye



Peace out,



Latauro





    + Expand All

    Readers Talkback

  • Dec 09, 2005 9:49:59 PM CST

    Totally agree on Crowe's hosting debacle at the AFIs.

    by regicidal_maniac

    He was a shocker, first he thinks he's Tony Montana then to make matters worse he sang, argh by all means throw a phone at my head but fegordsake don't sing ya bastard. Chris Lilly was robbed. Maybe Lilly should host next year.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 09, 2005 11:51:36 PM CST

    second?

    by chief redcock

  • Dec 09, 2005 11:52:20 PM CST

    where is everyone?

    by chief redcock

    i think the zone killed this place deader than a doornail

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 12:40:01 AM CST

    yeah!!

    by nolan bautista

    fuckin' fourth baby!!..now back to whackin' off..bye!

    Reply to Talkback

  • So that we don't have to wait five years for another one.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 2:38:27 AM CST

    Shaun Micallef and John Safran:

    by the wrong guy

    The two best things about being Australian.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 6:08:49 AM CST

    I wish I could see "8 1/2" for the first time again

    by drunken rage

    The greatest movie ever made. As for "Shock Corridor," just one word: "Nymphos!"

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 8:38:43 AM CST

    Abbott's a cunt

    by monkey butler

    Yes he is.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 1:42:51 PM CST

    Hugh Jackman was the best ever host for the AFIs.

    by cash bailey

    Maybe they could convince him to do it again.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 5:43:39 PM CST

    AFIs

    by rasputin77

    Agree that the AFIs were pretty bad this year.
    How much did Russel Crowe want to kill Wil Anderson?
    John Safran is a great idea. Or Micallef again. Don't know about Andrew Denton though. Does he even tell jokes anymore?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 8:34:44 PM CST

    WTF? Mirrormask? Where???

    by half vader

    Where is it playing? I'm gonna freak if I missed it - at least Lat's saying "this past week" now rather than getting the post up a week later and still labeling the releases as "this week". I'm in Sydney, BTW. Please someone help me out. I can't even find it at any of the independants (what few we have left).

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 8:36:41 PM CST

    Oops

    by half vader

    Sorry 'bout the spelling. I'm a bit alarmed, being a big Dave McKean fan and all.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 8:41:37 PM CST

    The service here is excellent

    by latauro

    George Street cinema complex, George Street, Sydney. From December 8, 2005. So if you don't mind heading to George Street, Mr Vadar, that's where it is.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 9:00:56 PM CST

    The Astor cat sat on your lap during a film?

    by awesomebillfunk

    Surely some sort of blessing from the movie gods. I was at the McDowel talk, very cool guy, I loved the way he kept taking the piss out of Caligula. I also got to see Strathairn at the Nova this week, equally great guy if not more so. Get this- the cinema sound system was playing up during the movie but to no great detriment to the film until the end monolog, where inexplicably, the sound completely runs out until the final "box of lights and switches" line. When David came out he was gracious enough to give us a sort of summarized rendition of the speech, it was very cool a moment.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 10, 2005 10:49:52 PM CST

    That darn cat

    by latauro

    Yeah, it was pretty cool. Although Marzipan, the cat that's been there since forever (I met him in '97) looks completely different. I may have to investigate -- I think this is a different cat. Certainly friendlier. How good was McDowell? Best night ever. Sorry I missed the Straithairn thing, sounded good. By the way, for those interested, I entered that Kong animation competition Quint was running. If you want to check out my (unsuccessful) entry, go to: http://s27.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=3E8GWHMSYBBXS0XQUQ51GS8IF

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 11, 2005 12:54:07 AM CST

    Dude, it's in MP4 format...

    by monkey butler

    Did you film that with your phone? Cos that would be impressive. Also, damnit, how can you not have seen Look Both Ways or Little Fish? The two best things to have come out this year and you missed them!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 11, 2005 12:59:09 AM CST

    I'm a bad critic

    by latauro

    ...and you can take that as "poorly behaved" or "sucks at critiquing". It's your choice. It's very easy to miss something you're dying to see. In the case of Look Both Ways, every time I planned to see it something else uber-important came up. With Little Fish, there was some bad word of mouth that turned me off it a bit, even though I half-heartedly continued to make plans to see it. That said, I made it to the press screening of Dukes of Hazzard, so my time can't be that important. I don't know why my Kong thing saved as MP4, but it plays fine through my QuickTime Player. Lemme know if you have trouble with it.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 11, 2005 1:48:11 AM CST

    thanks, Lat

    by half vader

    For some reason Hoyts' site is acting up. It's not on the citysearch site either. Anyway, thanks so much for that. I know the reviews haven't been that great, but I really wanted to see something so visual on the big screen. Considering of course it's not playing in the number 13 cinema at George st. D'oh. Don't feel so bad about missing Little Fish and Look both ways. I'm in the industry, and it shames me to say I haven't seen that OR the Proposition. Then again, with my hours I haven't seen ANYTHING in the last couple of months. It was good when I was at Fox, though. Work 12 hours, have a break by walking around the corner and seeing a flick on the 'public' side, then go back to work again. My brother thinks I'm crazy. Anyway, thank God for Amazon.com (should be their geek slogan). I gotta say though Lat, you're either really loaded or really poor now after that last batch.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 11, 2005 1:57:28 AM CST

    Fully loaded (and posting way too much)

    by latauro

    I'm actually on a film shoot at the moment, but today we're shooting at my house so I can jump on the net a lot. It's been bliss! Not a worry, hope you enjoy the film. Regarding Amazon, I didn't go into a fraction of what I ordered. I did some freelance scriptwriting work, got a big bunch of money at once, failed in my attempt to exercise self-control, and now I'm very, very poor again. Luckily, as I have no money to go out, I can sit at home and watch my many DVDs...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 11, 2005 6:25:25 AM CST

    Hooray for Lat!

    by half vader

    That's cool - what's the film (can't very well enjoy it like you say if I don't know what it's called)? As for the DVDs (thank God you don't stick an apostrophe in there), I feel your pain. I just looked at my orders ovr the last BAS period and realised about 40 titles means my accountant's going to be shaking her finger at me (I did resist Hanzo. For now...) and my mortgage. As Homer would say though, "Mmmmmm. Deeveedeeeeees".

    Reply to Talkback

  • Dec 11, 2005 6:38:23 AM CST

    and another thing...

    by half vader

    Your little stop-motion epic was teh shit, as they say. Funny stuff, like when they pull Solisbury Hill on you in "Shining". Shoulda got a place at least! I'll forgive you "Say Anyking", but NOT "UKRAINE BE SERIOUS!". Groaaaaaaannn!

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  • Dec 11, 2005 6:47:13 AM CST

    The cat I have spent a bit of time with

    by awesomebillfunk

    while waiting around in the lobby always seemed friendly, not sure if that is Marzipan or not. Yeah Malcolm rocked, Straithairn was good too but a much more truncated experience in comparison, in fact it would have been even shorter if not for the graciousness of the man in insisting he give more people the oppurtunity to ask questions. If you had to choose one then Malc was the one to go to. Although i'm still kinda bummed I missed Ms Kubrick and co while they were down as well. I actually quite like Little Fish, I thought it suffered a bit from needless exposition when instead it could have just trusted the audience to keep up with the film, but still my favourite Australian film of the year out of the ones I've seen.

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  • Dec 11, 2005 6:57:37 AM CST

    I'm trying to download this sucker But downloading and pl

    by awesomebillfunk

    But downloading and playing cool things just weren't meant for the likes of my shitty dial up and computer specs combination. I'm lucky if I can occasionally get a trailer to run. Sigh.

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  • Dec 11, 2005 7:12:42 AM CST

    Apostrophe's in the right place

    by latauro

    Vader: The film is called Smoke and Mirrors, and it's a Tropfest entry I'm helping a friend out on. I'll let you know if it gets in or not. (I did one of the six or seven drafts it went through, and was 1st AD on set.) Ta for the kind words on Anyking. I wasn't going to put that title card in, but discovered I'd barely hit thirty or so seconds of screen time; I needed Gabriel to go on longer (and I was worried about comparisons to the work of art that is (trailer voice) "Shining". Yeah, I don't know what was happening with "Ukraine Be Serious". I was tired. (Now all you have to do is work out whether my subject refers to apostrophes plural, or whether I was abbreviating "is".)

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  • Dec 11, 2005 7:15:25 AM CST

    Cats

    by latauro

    Awesome: If the cat's friendly, it's probably not Marzipan. Marzipan is friendly until he decides he's had enough of you and takes a bite. I've had many a scarring at that place. (BTW, this "new" cat could well be a slightly mellower Marzipan, and I could just be imagining things. I have taken that into consideration.) The trailer's only 5mg, so you shouldn't have too much trouble. Especially if you convert to broadband... (dooo iiiit... I'm shilling for the big phone companies)

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  • Dec 11, 2005 7:50:05 AM CST

    I now have

    by awesomebillfunk

    30 hours and 45 minutes of downloading left, apparently, which seems against the laws of physics or something. You're right, I need broadband, and as soon as I've spent all my money buying Christmas presents and then have saved up enough I'm finally gonna go through with the whole broadband thing. So I figure I should see this in 4 to 6 months. Do you know what the status of the Astor is currently? Are they still under threat of closing down?

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  • Dec 11, 2005 4:08:54 PM CST

    I'M A WORTHLESS SLUT WHO'S NEVER CONTRIBUTED ANYTHING ME

    by frietag

    Two thumbs up, way up.

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  • Dec 11, 2005 4:59:45 PM CST

    30+ hours isn'

    by latauro

  • Dec 11, 2005 4:59:45 PM CST

    30+ hours isn'

    by latauro

  • Dec 11, 2005 5:02:01 PM CST

    Lemme try that again... 30+ hours isn't worth it

    by latauro

    I'm pleased with the result, but don't break your computer, dude. The Astor isn't under threat of closing down (or so they say), and they do have a lot of interested buyers. One of the conditions of sale (of both the building and the business) is that the Astor continues to run as it has. So fingers crossed on that one. Oh, and cheers Frietag, but someone mentioned that Paris Hilton episode of South Park to me yesterday (one of the few I've not seen), and I think I may have unintentionally ripped it off. But ta.

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  • Dec 11, 2005 10:42:20 PM CST

    John Saffran? You're f*cking Kidding!

    by oz downunder

    Why does Saffron "do it" for people? It baffles me that people find him funny. And Micallef's not much better. he has glimpses of genius but the rest is mediocre. Denton is the only host who never misses a beat. You feel safe when he's in charge. Rock On Andrew!!!

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