Screen Hub: Economic downturn no dampener for integrated spend

My story for Screen Hub today:

Despite a contraction of global marketing spends, there was an overwhelming optimism amongst speakers at Tuesday’s Screen Producers Association of Australia (SPAA) forum on ‘Branded Entertainment’ in terms of the opportunities for cross-platform projects and the potential for it to be a financially workable model (or models)…

To read in full, click here

this week at FOMM: Nico Lathouris

Drama King
The role of the dramaturg

With both philosophical discussion and practical demonstration from ill-fated Justice League to The Bourne Ultimatum, Kennedy Miller Mitchell’s Nico Lathouris talks about how dramaturgy works between director and actor (or non-actor) to enhance dramatic truth of a project.

Venue: AFTRS Theatrette, Entertainment Quarter, Moore Park
Date: Friday, February 27
Time: 5-6pm
Entry: Free (2-hr free parking)

Friday On My Mind is AFTRS‘ weekly event bringing you face to face with the industry’s brightest thinkers.

Samson & Delilah

Writer: Warwick Thornton
Director: Warwick Thornton
Producer: Kath Shelper

Samson & Delilah, Rowan McNamara

[In Australian cinemas April 30 (NSW May 7) through Footprint Films]

Exile, struggle and salvation are all central themes of Warwick Thornton’s first feature Samson and Delilah. But this is no simple allegory. And it is completely unpretentious. In fact, the conceit of this film’s title works precisely because the plight of its protagonists seems of so little consequence to everyone else around them.

Unlike similar angst-ridden couples – from Bonnie and Clyde to Neil Armfield’s Candy to new Mexican director Gerardo Naranjo’s volatile Voy a Explotar (I’m Gonna Explode) – Thornton’s Samson and Delilah elicit a mute protest and quiet pathos.

Thornton’s signature characters are here: the Green Bush radio station and Nana (Mitjili Napanangka Gibson) that made his award winning 2005 and 2007 short films by the same name world celebrated (the former won Best Short in the Panorama section of Berlin and the latter a Crystal Bear). Both bring humour to this otherwise largely bleak landscape. But what I like most about Thornton’s direction in Samson and Delilah is that he never allows the journey to be romanticised. Whilst his stunning cinematography could easily have elicited a nostalgic glow, the Samson and Delilah he creates in long, slow shots and intimate close-ups are all too real.

This narrative runs to its own rhythm and pace. There is no clearly delineated line of cause and effect; action and consequence. There are repetitions, echoes even, but no clear tracks. This will make it a difficult commercial sell but should play well at international festivals. It is Thornton’s homage to a culture (and one that he knows well) in which change does not come quickly or easily and in which the greatest danger is the subtle erosion of hope itself.

Samson & Delilah, Marissa Gibson

Inside Film (IF)

60 issues, 9 international film festivals, 1 written warning.

Interviews during editorship include: Lars von Trier, Marc Forster, Michael Winterbottom, Cate Blanchett, Hugh Jackman, Franke Potente, Cate Shortland, Anton Corbijn, Charles Roven, Christopher Doyle, January Jones, Gillian Armstrong, Jane Campion, Julian Schnabel, Catherine Breillat and oh so many more.

A selection of covers, from Nick Cave to Eric Bana:

Inside Film covers

Sydney Morning Herald

From a Cannes interview with Gus Van Sant to social commentary on Sydney’s singles scene that caused a blogging frenzy.

  • ‘Love Unlimited’
  • ‘Radar’ cover story – March 15, 2006
    A player’s guide to Sydney’s modern day harem

  • ‘Kurt So Good’
  • ‘Metro’ cover story – August 26, 2005
    How much Gus Van Sant’s Last Days is a homage to Kurt Cobain

    British Cinematographer

    BC’s “girl on the ground” Australian correspondent for news section ‘F-Stop Down Under’ as well as cover stories and cinematographer profiles.

  • feature story: ‘Heat & Dust’
  • February 2009
    On filming Baz Luhrmann’s epic Australia

  • cover story: Seamus McGarvey, BSC
  • August 2005
    profile of the cinematographer on Charlotte’s Web, Sahara and Butterfly Kiss

  • close up: Jules O’Loughlin
  • September 2007
    profile of this DOP’s innovative work shooting 16mm but framing 2:35 for Widescreen

  • close up: Grieg Fraser
  • July 2007
    profile of the Cannes credited DOP singled out by Jane Campion

    other freelance

  • Budget boost for Australian film and TV
  • Government News – May 2007

  • film review: ‘9 Songs’
  • Dazed + Confused magazine (UK) – March 2005
    Michael Winterbottom film banned in Australia for its live sex on-screen

  • ‘Art of War’: interview Gillian Armstrong
  • Metro – May 2002 (cover story)
    Charlotte Gray, Gillian and strong female roles.

  • ‘Children of the Digital Revolution’
  • Metro Magazine – Oct 2001 (10-pg feature)
    The hyper-real spectacle of Moulin Rouge

  • ‘Rising Interest in Reality TVC’
  • Australian Creative – Autumn 2000
    Ad campaign for MBF blurs the line between info and entertainment

  • ‘Electric Darkness’
  • OnLine – June 1999 (cover story)
    Effects design behind the black neon style of The Matrix

  • ‘Exploding the Myths’
  • Pulp – Christmas 1998
    Hollywood looks down under for VFX talent.

  • ‘Surfito Ergo Sum: I surf therefore I am’
  • Australian Surfer Magazine – Spring 1997 (14-pg feature)
    Do critical theorists surf? They do now.

  • ‘News enters the virtual dimension’
  • International Broadcasting Asia – Aug 1997
    Designing sets for a virtual newsroom

    Feeling_Lonely? (2007)

    Short film
    Writer: Rachael Turk
    Director: Rachael Turk
    Producers: Melissa Beauford, Rachael Turk

    Feeling_Lonely? Angus Sampson

    Rob is “the man who has everything” (and everyone). But when 45-y-o ‘Mother Manchester’ catches his eye online, he gets more action than he bargained for. In an age of ritualised surveillance, where familiarity is often confused for intimacy, Feeling_Lonely? is about watching and being watched.

    My lighting brief to DOP Bonnie Elliott was to create a “fishbowl existence” – lots of U/V light and so on. She then chose the F900 to give the images a clean, almost clinical feel. Casting comic actor Angus Sampson against type paid off big time – his presence is palpable in this dramatic role.

    AWARDS

  • ‘Best Short Drama’ WOW Film Festival
  • Finalist Manhattan Short Film Festival
  • ACS (Australian Cinematographers Society) Bronze
  • FESTIVALS

  • LA Shorts Fest
  • Sydney International Film Festival
  • Brisbane International Film Festival
  • WOW Film Festival
  • Rome International Film Festival
  • Manhattan Short Film Festival
  • Click here to watch the film.

    [produced with assistance from the former Australian Film Commission]