Australia

  • Jane Campion – An Exercise in Discipline – Peel (1982)

    1981-1990AustraliaJane CampionShort Film

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Review (Geraldine Bloustien, ‘Jane Campion: memory, motif and music’. Continuum)
    Peel explores the dynamics of family relationships and the way patterns of power can be
    learnt and repeated. It also says a great deal about our need for daydreams and fantasies.
    The film opens with a juxtaposed, almost cacophonous mixture of sounds and visual images –
    the noise of the radio being switched from station to station, the flash of cars on the
    roadway, the white lines on the road and the thump of what we discover is an orange
    being thrown against the front windscreen of the car, like a ball. In contrast to this
    nerve-jangling montage, the graphics after the large and forceful title – PEEL – present
    us with a diagram connecting the words ‘sister’, ‘brother’ and ‘son’ in a triangle and
    we are informed, again through the written text, that the film explores ‘an exercise in
    discipline’ and that this is a ‘real story’ of ‘a real family’. In other words, it would
    seem at first sight that we are being asked to regard this film as a scientific study, a
    documentary exploring anthropological patterns of kinship, perhaps. However, the
    contrast between the opening montage of subjective images with the more formal graphics
    already alerts us to the tension in the car and that all may not be as it seems.Read More »

  • David Bradbury – My Asian Heart (2009)

    2001-2010AustraliaDavid BradburyDocumentary

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Despite today’s cynical and fast world turnaround of images and headlines where traditional photojournalism has become swamped by a torrent of lifestyle reporting and celebrity paparazzi photography, there are some who still care. Classic photojournalism is still alive, though struggling, amongst a new generation of photographers. Philip Blenkinsop is one of them. He documents conflict, war, life and death in all its forms throughout Asia.Read More »

  • Lukas Schrank – Nowhere Line: Voices from Manus Island (2015)

    2011-2020AnimationAustraliaCrimeLukas Schrank

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    Nowhere Line: Voices from Manus Island is an animated short film, which tells the stories of two men, currently detained in Australia’s notorious Manus Island Offshore Processing Centre. In October 2014, director Lukas Schrank made phone contact with the men who were able to tell their stories from within the compound. Their interviews offer a chilling insight into the reality of life for the 2000 people currently being held in Australia’s offshore detention centres Their stories are the voice of the film, guiding the animation through the backstreets of Jakarta, across the sea and deep into the fenced facility of the Manus Island Regional Processing CentreRead More »

  • Ubu films – Ubu Films – Sydney Underground Movies 1965-1970 [Volume 1 & 2]

    1961-1970AustraliaExperimentalShort FilmUbu films

    Quote:
    UBU Films was a Sydney-based independent film-making co-operative which operated from 1965 to around 1970. Its members produced many of the most important experimental and underground films made in Australia in the Sixties. Ubu was also a pioneer of psychedelic lightshows in Australia, and during the late Sixties the UBU collective was Sydney’s leading lighting provider for dances, discos and other special events.

    Formed by Albie Thoms, David Perry, Aggy Read and John Clark at Sydney University in 1965, UBU FILMS was Australia’s first group dedicated to making, exhibiting and distributing experimental films. Although these four are considered the key members, the UBU circle took in many young film-makers who were to become very prominent in later years including Matt Carroll, Peter Weir, Phillip Noyce and Bruce Beresford.Read More »

  • Torsten Hoffmann & Michael Watchulonis – Bitcoin: The End of Money as We Know It (2015)

    2011-2020AustraliaDocumentaryTorsten Hoffmann and Michael Watchulonis

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Bitcoin: The End Of Money As We Know It traces the history of money from the bartering societies of the ancient world to the trading floors of Wall St.

    The documentary exposes the practices of central banks and the dubious financial actors who brought the world to its knees in the last crisis. It highlights the Government influence on the money creation process and how it causes inflation. Moreover, this film explains how most money we use today is created out of thin air by banks when they create debt.
    Epic in scope, this film examines the patterns of technological innovation and questions everything you thought you knew about money.
    Is Bitcoin an alternative to national currencies backed by debt? Will Bitcoin and cryptocurrency spark a revolution in how we use money peer to peer? Is it a gift to criminals? Or is it the next bubble waiting to burst? If you trust in your money just as it is – this film has news for you.
    (Written by Torsten Hoffmann)Read More »

  • Jane Campion – Sweetie [+extras] (1989)

    1981-1990ArthouseAustraliaDramaJane Campion

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Synopsis:

    Explores sisters, in their twenties, their parents, and family dysfunctions. Kay is gangly and slightly askew, consulting a fortune teller and then falling in love with a man because of a mole on his face and a lock of hair; then, falling out of love when he plants a tree in their yard. Sweetie is plump, imperious, self-centered, and seriously mentally ill. The parents see none of the illness, seeing only their cute child. Kay mainly feels exasperation at her sister’s impositions. Slowly, the film exposes how the roots of Sweetie’s illness have choked Kay’s own development.Read More »

  • Jane Campion – The Piano (1993)

    1991-2000ArthouseAustraliaDramaJane Campion

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Synopsis:
    A mute woman along with her young daughter, and her prized piano, are sent to 1850s New Zealand for an arranged marriage to a wealthy landowner, and she’s soon lusted after by a local worker on the plantation.

    Review:

    Quote:
    “The Piano” is as peculiar and haunting as any film I’ve seen.

    It tells a story of love and fierce pride, and places it on a bleak New Zealand coast where people live rudely in the rain and mud, struggling to maintain the appearance of the European society they’ve left behind. It is a story of shyness, repression and loneliness; of a woman who will not speak and a man who cannot listen, and of a willful little girl who causes mischief and pretends she didn’t mean to.Read More »

  • Anna Brownfield – The Band (2009)

    2001-2010Anna BrownfieldAustraliaComedyMusical

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    When lead singer Jimmy Taranto dumps his girlfriend Candy then his rock band Gutter Filth, Candy decides to take his place in the band. Together with anal bass player GB, cross-dressing drummer Dee and Jennifer their loyal manager, they begin a journey to stardom. While their success eclipses Jimmy’s, Candy still can’t find the true love she is looking for. But sometimes the things you want are right in front of you.Read More »

  • Rolf de Heer – Charlie’s Country (2013)

    Drama2011-2020AustraliaRolf de Heer

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Blackfella Charlie is out of sorts. The intervention is making life more difficult on his remote community, what with the proper policing of whitefella laws now. So Charlie takes off, to live the old way, but in so doing sets off a chain of events in his life that has him return to his community chastened, and somewhat the wiser.Read More »

Back to top button