Monthly Archives: August 2013

‘Coffee Town’ Film Keeps Hot on Digital Platforms

When the CollegeHumor website decided to make its first feature film, “Coffee Town,” it wasn’t entirely clear how to maximize a full-length digital and VOD release.

The CollegeHumor audience is accustomed to viewing short humor videos online forfree, while feature films released through companies like IFC and Magnolia Filmsoften include a theatrical release to generate reviews and press attention.

Distributed by Filmbuff, “Coffee Town” premiered July 9 on digital andcable/satellite VOD, with iTunes and Xbox turning out to be the most successful platforms for the pic. While it’s too early to say just how much the film will make, the minimal marketing spend and blanket digital strategy make it a potentialbreakthrough moment for multiplatform distribution. Continue reading ‘Coffee Town’ Film Keeps Hot on Digital Platforms

Doco shines among imports at MIFF

A documentary about Father Bob Maguire, In Bob We Trust, is one of the best Australian films for years.

This year’s Melbourne International Film Festival was marked by the now almost  complete switch to digital projection – and by the triumph of the Americans.

To start with, there was Brian De Palma’s return to form with Passion, a sexy  corporate thriller in his most delirious, experimental vein. The director of pop classics from Carrie to Scarface, De Palma might have been born to exploit the  possibilities of an era when images circulate ever more rapidly and freely – when  anyone can become a star on YouTube, or secretly photograph others using a mobile phone.

The origins of that era are explored in Andrew Bujalski’s Computer Chess – a  deceptively quaint study of 1980s computer geeks, shot in black-and-white on an  analogue video camera, that was another of the best films at MIFF. (Stanley Kubrick,  the primary influence, would surely have loved it.) Other highlights among the lowbudget American ”indie” films were Joe Swanberg’s beautifully shaped romantic  comedy Drinking Buddies and Dan Sallitt’s unorthodox coming-of-age story The  Unspeakable Act. Continue reading Doco shines among imports at MIFF

Coming soon … a fine crop of world-class British films

Cannes may not have been a triumph for British films, but hopes are high for Venice and Toronto with some promising movies due.

A man-eating alien, set loose on the Scottish Highlands and played by a glamorous American star, may not look like a fitting figurehead for a major British film industry revival, but Scarlett Johansson’s role in Jonathan Glazer’s long-awaited Under the Skin is the most eye-catching offer in an extraordinary lineup of premieres next month.

These include a dozen promising British features, from costume drama to a comedy about a doppelganger to an honest look at middle-aged marriage, made by celebrated new film-makers such as Richard Ayoade, Steve McQueen and Ralph Fiennes as well as by established names including Stephen Frears, Terry Gilliam and Roger Michell.

All have been selected for coveted screenings at the leading film festivals in Venice and Toronto, where festival directors are already hailing the strongest British lineup for many years. Continue reading Coming soon … a fine crop of world-class British films

Mia Wasikowska – up and coming Aussie actress

Blossoming young Australian actor Mia Wasikowska has emerged as one of the world’s most bankable film stars.

“I’ve always been fascinated with trying to understand people” … Mia Wasikowska took up acting as a 14-year-old.

At this year’s Sundance Film Festival in Utah, Mia Wasikowska and Nicole Kidman did the press rounds together as they promoted their latest film, Stoker, made by renowned Korean director Park Chan-Wook (of The Vengeance Trilogy fame). As the fellow Australians moved around the snow-trimmed streets of Park City, a herd of paparazzi followed them from place to place. But when Wasikowska left one media interview before Kidman, the paps kept their cameras idle and simply waved a cheery greeting to the young Canberran as she sauntered past solo.

“They were like, ‘Hey, Mia!’ ” she recounts. “I just kept walking and they’re just, like, sitting there waiting for Nicole and no one took a picture of me. It was really good!” Continue reading Mia Wasikowska – up and coming Aussie actress

Rise of the essay film

For years the essay film has been a neglected form, but now its unorthodox approach to constructing reality is winning over a younger, tech-savvy crowd. Freedom and possibility…

For a brief, almost unreal couple of hours last July, in amid the kittens and One Direction-mania trending on Twitter, there appeared a very surprising name – that of semi-reclusive French film-maker Chris Marker, whose innovative short feature La Jetée (1962) was remade in 1995 as Twelve Monkeys by Terry Gilliam.

A few months earlier, art journal e-flux staged The Desperate Edge of Now, a retrospective of Adam Curtis’s TV films, to large audiences on New York’s Lower East Side. The previous summer, Handsworth Songs (1986), an experimental feature by the Black Audio Film Collective Salman Rushdie had once attacked as obscurantist and politically irrelevant, attracted a huge crowd at Tate Modern when it was screened shortly after the London riots.

Marker, Curtis, Black Audio: all have made significant contributions to the development of an increasingly powerful and popular kind of moving-image production: the essay film.

Continue reading Rise of the essay film

‘The Grandmaster,’ Wong Kar Wai’s new film

At one point in Wong Kar Wai’s “The Grandmaster,” the Chinese kung fu legend known as Ip Man is confronted by an arrogant upstart who seeks to engage him in combat. Ip Man accepts, but not before inquiring as to whether the young man has eaten lunch yet. He has, in fact — rice and barbecued pork. Big mistake.

The brief slapstick episode that follows is not only the funniest moment in this lyrical and kinetic martial-arts drama, but also one of the numerous true stories Wong came across while researching Ip Man’s life firsthand. It’s a welcome reminder that although the Hong Kong auteur may be the cinema’s pre-eminent poet of romantic longing, even his celebrated arthouse weepies, such as “Happy Together” and “In the Mood for Love,” have their undercurrents of humor.

“I’m not a very serious person,” Wong chuckles, sitting down at the Four Seasons Beverly Hills to discuss his 10th feature (which the Weinstein Co. will release Stateside on Aug. 23). He could even be winking, though you wouldn’t be able to tell from those signature shades, which seem to deflect one’s questions in almost the same way his movies, with their playful surfaces and elliptical narratives, can resist easy interpretation. Continue reading ‘The Grandmaster,’ Wong Kar Wai’s new film

Lizette Atkins prepares projects with Sue Brooks, Matthew Saville, Ana Kokkinos

By Don Groves –INSIDEFILM – [Thu 08/08/2013]

As a solo producer, Unicorn Films’ Lizzette Atkins has a remarkably diverse and prolific development slate. Atkins is preparing projects for directors Sue Brooks, Matthew Saville and Ana Kokkinos plus a slate of low-budget horror movies. While they span a variety of genres, Atkins says there is a common thread: all are director- driven.

She founded Unicorn Films last year after nine years as a partner in Circe Films, whose credits include Jon Hewitt’s steamy thriller X, Lawrence Johnston’s Night and Eddie Martin’s Lionel, a feature documentary on Aboriginal boxer Lionel Rose. Her latest production, Anna Broinowski’s Aim High in Creation! had its world premiere on Wednesday at the Melbourne International Film Festival.
Continue reading Lizette Atkins prepares projects with Sue Brooks, Matthew Saville, Ana Kokkinos

Kate Winslet, Judy Davis to Star in Revenge Dramedy ‘The Dressmaker’

The film project from Australian writer-director Jocelyn Moorhouse is described as “Unforgiven” with a sewing machine.

7:10 PM PDT 8/7/2013 by Pip Bulbeck – THR

SYDNEY — Kate Winslet and Judy Davis have signed on to star in the latest feature from Australian writer-director Jocelyn Moorhouse, producers Film Art Media said Thursday.
The Dressmaker, billed as a stylish drama with comic undertones, centers on Tilly Dunnage (Winslet), who returns after many years in Europe to her small Australian outback hometown with revenge on her mind. Tilly, a talented couturier, returns to the remote country town from which she fled as a child after being accused of murder. She wants to make amends with her eccentric mother, Molly (Davis), but first must unravel the secrets of her past. Moorhouse describes the tale of love, revenge and 1950s haute couture as “Unforgiven with a sewing machine”.
Continue reading Kate Winslet, Judy Davis to Star in Revenge Dramedy ‘The Dressmaker’

New Rules of Blockbuster Screenwriting

Star Script Doctor Damon Lindelof Explains the New Rules of Blockbuster Screenwriting
By Scott Brown – August 12, 2013 issue of New York Magazine.

Damon Lindelof, the ubiquitous screenwriter-producer whose name seems attached to all of Hollywood’s biggest blockbusters, is doing his damnedest to get small. This summer, he (along with fellow triage artists Drew Goddard and Christopher McQuarrie) miraculously pulled Brad Pitt out of the mass grave that was World War Z’s zombocalyptic original third act and restored the regular-guyness that made Pitt’s character work. He also resisted the temptation to threaten Earth’s existence (yet again!) at the end of Star Trek Into Darkness, focusing instead on a personal vendetta—albeit one enacted via a dizzying mile-high pursuit across a 23rd-century cityscape. But, hey, you have to give something to get something.

“We live in a commercial world, where you’ve gotta come up with ‘trailer moments’ and make the thing feel big and impressive and satisfying, especially in that summer- movie-theater construct,” says Lindelof. “But ultimately I do feel—even as a purveyor of it—slightly turned off by this destruction porn that has emerged and become very
bold-faced this past summer. And again, guilty as charged. It’s hard not to do it, especially because a movie, if properly executed, feels like it’s escalating.”
Continue reading New Rules of Blockbuster Screenwriting

Ten questions: Peter Gawler

PETER Gawler has been the driving force behind the Underbelly franchise, the latest series of which, Squizzy Taylor, is screening on Nine.

The Underbelly series has proven wildly successful with audiences. Why do Australians seemingly love crime drama more than any other genre?

Underbelly is true crime drama, not crime fiction. I think people have a natural fascination for what really happened, particularly if they can relate to the story in some way – “I remember when Jason Moran was murdered”, “My dad used to point out the house where Squizzy was shot” or “We used to go the Cross and dance in that club John Ibrahim owned” and so on.

Continue reading Ten questions: Peter Gawler