Main

Film Archives

October 25, 2007

Opening tonight: Four

Cinema-goers seem to be more interested in true stories and real people now than ever before, which is good news for those who like to tell true stories about real people. One such storyteller is documentary director Tim Slade, whose film Four opens in Brisbane at Dendy George Street tonight.

‘The film is a journey for the audience, a journey through the four corners of the world, that is at once familiar and unknown,’ said Slade. ‘It demonstrates that the timeless rhythms and harmonies of music, and the rhythms and harmonies of life and nature, are one and the same thing.’

Following on from a hit season in Sydney and sold out sessions at the Sydney and Melbourne International Film Festivals, Four is geared to delight Brisbane audiences with what critics have praised in such glowing terms as ‘vibrant and ambitious’, ‘sumptuous and very poignant’, ‘exquisite’, and ‘seamless’.

The film follows four world-class violinists from far-flung locations and backgrounds, one for each season and with Vivaldi’s iconic baroque violin concerto series, The Four Seasons, as an auditory backdrop.

Continue reading "Opening tonight: Four" »

February 26, 2008

International filmmaker comes home to Oz

Internationally acclaimed Australian filmmaker Gillian Armstrong is on her way home.

Continue reading "International filmmaker comes home to Oz" »

May 4, 2008

Nowhere to go for film and theatre makers

By all accounts, the Australian film industry is under the pump.

Apparently, independent Aussie films are lucky to pull $3 million at the box office and usually cost between $3 million and $10 million to make.

Not difficult sums to work out.

Those films that do manage to get close to that $3 million mark are the relatively big ones like Romulus My Father that have actual marketing and publicity budgets.

This situation leaves the others to survive on word-of mouth. Only they don’t usually stay at cinemas long enough for word to get passed through enough mouths that are attached to bums which will end up on cinema seats.

People in all sections of the industry seem to agree that the business model is faulty.
Although it isn’t as faulty as the one Australian independent theatre makers are currently negotiating.

Independent films at least have budgets that include paying cast and crew, whereas it’s pretty rare to find an independent theatre production that manages to pay for its public liability insurance and time in the performance space, let alone its director, performers, and the myriad of highly skilled behind the scenes players it takes to put even the most humble of shows on the boards.

The comparison may not be that of apples with apples, but the two are related artforms: both tell stories through image and sound; both need collaboration between several people; and actors, directors and writers often cross over and back from one form to the other.

Film and theatre are two of the more expensive artforms because they take a lot of equipment and a group of people to create a piece.

To practice as an actor or director or lighting designer, you need a specific project to work on.
It’s not like being a writer, musician, dancer, painter, sculptor—those forms of expression you can practice on your own with a pen and paper, instrument, the right shoes, canvas and paint, clay or wood or a piece of rock and a chisel.

If you’re moved to express what’s in you through one of those mediums, you can do so by yourself, in your own time, outlaying no more than a couple of hundred dollars, and without needing to relay on convincing other people they want to consume what you produce.

Sure, you don’t make any money off it unless you convince someone that they want to swap it for your art, but you can still do it.

And doing it, in the end, is what allows an artist in any medium to hone their craft, get better at expressing themselves in a way that resonates with others.

Continue reading "Nowhere to go for film and theatre makers" »

July 4, 2008

Film Review: Children of the Silk Road

In 1937 the Japanese invaded China and began to systematically exterminate the people they found as they moved across the country from Shanghai to Wuhan. They hadn’t actually declared war on China, claiming they were helping the country, which gave them more freedom to play outside the rules for things like the treatment of POWs and the admittance of the press.

This is the setting for Children of the Silk Road, a film centring around the true story of one journalist’s experience of the eastern beginning of World War II.

Desperate to get into the city of Nanjing, Japan’s latest conquest, and report on what’s really happening, George Hogg poses as a Red Cross delivery driver and makes it into Japanese controlled territory.

What follows is not what he expected, but that’s what happens when life takes you in hand and points you in a different direction.

Continue reading "Film Review: Children of the Silk Road" »

About Film

This page contains an archive of all entries posted to Sarah Jansen | Writer | Editor | Web Geek in the Film category. They are listed from oldest to newest.

Literature is the next category.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by
Movable Type 3.34