Monthly Archives: January 2014

Crushed aims to break the mould for indie films

Writer–director Megan Riakos’ psychological thriller Crushed is continuing the rising trend of self-funded Australian films where cast and crew forego fees in return for a share of the profits. Producer Raquelle David has come on board to help the filmmakers secure funding for post- production- they’re in talks with Screen NSW and post houses- and to liaise with distributors and sales agents.

David said each crew and cast member gets points in the film based on how much time he or she is involved in the production. A graduate of the Australian Film Television and Radio School, Riakos wrote the script while attending a screenwriting course at the University of California, LA.

Production wraps in Mudgee, NSW, on January 17 after a 19-day shoot. The plot follows Elia, a young woman who returns home after her father dies. The death is ruled a murder and her mother becomes the prime suspect.

Sarah Bishop (whose credits include MTV’s Deadbeat Dads and web series Skitbox TV and Bondi Hipsters) plays Elia and is serving as one of the producers along with Riakos and Robbie Miles, the LA-based development executive at Sam Worthington’s Full Clip Pictures.

www.meganriakos.com/wordpress

By Don Groves INSIDEFILM [Mon 13/01/2014]

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2013 report card: Another tough year for Aussie films

By Don Groves – INSIDEFILM [Mon 06/01/2014 10:57:27]

An analysis of the Australian films released in cinemas in 2013 makes for grim reading, with a handful of critical and/or commercial successes outnumbered by misfires and under-achievers. On the positive side, the debut films from directors Kim Mordaunt (The Rocket), Catriona McKenzie (Satellite Boy) and Mark Grentell (Backyard Ashes) unearthed talent with plenty of potential.

The year ended on a strong note with the Boxing Day launch of Jonathan Teplitzy’s The Railway Man, which ranks as the second-highest local grosser behind Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby, which amassed $28.2 million to become the fifth-biggest Australian title of all time. Tellingly, the drama starring Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman raked in more money in its first week than the lifetime earnings of every other title. According to IF’s estimate, the combined B.O. tally of the 26 local films and documentaries is $38.88 million, well short of 2012’s $47.9 million.

Final B.O. figures for 2013 won’t be available until later in January but several distributors are estimating the year will finish 2% down on 2012’s $1.125 billion. So assuming the total is around $1.122 billion, Australian films’ market share would be around 3.4%, below 2012’s 4.3% and the 10-year average of 3.8%. IF’s chart is current through January 1. As we have has pointed out, Australian grosses should not be seen as the sole barometer of each film’s success, given many have multiple viewings on VOD, pay-TV and free-to-air TV.

I am confident we’ll see a marked upturn in the quality and commercial appeal of the films scheduled for release this year.

Given the writing, directing and on-screen talent involved, I am optimistic about a line-up that includes John Curran’s Tracks, Greg Mclean’s Wolf Creek 2, Matt Saville’s Felony, Julius Avery’s Son of a Gun, David Michôd’s The Rover, Kriv Stenders’ Kill Me Three Times, Rob Connolly’s Paper Planes, Tony Ayres’ Cut Snake, Zak Hilditch’s These Final Hours, Stuart Beattie’s I, Frankenstein, Wayne Hope’s Now Add Honey and Peter and Michael Spierig’s Predestination.

In addition, there could be some out-of-the-box successes from among John V. Soto’s The Reckoning, Shane Abbess’ Infini, David Parker’s The Menkoff Method, Matt Zeremes and Guy Edmonds’ Super Awesome!, Josh Lawson’s The Little Death, Stephen Lance’s My Mistress, Kasimir Burgess’ Fell, Sarah Spillane’s Around the Block and Craig Monahan’s Healing.

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Australian Films Scorecard 2013

Title Release Date Total

1 The Great Gatsby May 30 $28,277,208

2 The Railway Man December 26 2,052,827

3 Goddess March 14 1,636,117

4 Tim Winton’s The Turning September 26 1,245,120

5 Return to Nim’s Island April 4 1,220,248

6 Drift May 2 931,419

7 Satellite Boy June 20 510,034

8 The Rocket August 29 477,891

9 Red Obsession August 15 438,914

10 Mystery Road October 17 409,979

11 Save Your Legs! February 28 385,680

12 Backyard Ashes November 6 251,920

13 Adoration November 21 203,089

14 Lygon Street Si Parla ItalianoNovember 14 161,456

15 Mary Meets Mohammad* May 2 150,291

16 In Bob We Trust October 17 138,223

17 Blinder March 7 101,027

18 Uncharted Waters November 15 89,859

19 Circle of Lies* August 22 50,000

20 Absolute* Deception August 29 30,000

21 Lasseter’s Bones October 31 30,000

22 The 25thReich* June 21 28,200

23 100 Bloody Acres August 1 18,356

24 The Darkside November 28 18,290

25 Patrick October 17 14,260

26 Fallout October 31 14,255

Source: Motion Picture Distributors Association of Australia

Figures through January 1, 2014

*Producer’s figure

New Aust TV programs for 2014

More screens, more Australian content, less dependence on US studio output and a
game-changing realignment of the technological goalposts promise a fiercely
competitive year in Australian television in 2014.

With analog television a thing of the past, the digital landscape equalises the ”big five”, pay TV and the newer, smaller digital channels, as well as new online players.

But the big money is still sunk into content for flagship channels on free-to-air and pay TV.

Herewith, our guide to what’s in store this year.

SIX OF THE BEST

Australia: The Story of Us (Seven)

A documentary series as a marquee program is an ambitious idea for a commercial network, particularly one that has defined itself in the past as a smart player of a safe game. Australia: The Story of Us, billed as ”more than 40,000 years in the making”, comes from the production company Essential Media.

The Code (ABC)

A ”contemporary [political] thriller stretching from the spectacular red desert of Australia’s outback to the cool corridors of power” from Playmaker Media, the company behind House Husbands and Love Child. The Code boasts an outstanding cast: Adam Garcia, David Wenham, Lucy Lawless, Aden Young, Dan Wyllie, Aaron Pedersen and Paul Tassone.

The Face Australia (FOX8)

The third version of this format, fronted by supermodel Naomi Campbell who, with model mentors Cheyenne Tozzi and Nicole Trunfio, searches for a young model who will become ”the face”. While the genre is well known – notably via another Foxtel series, Australia’s Next Top Model – The Face dials up the drama.

Living with the Enemy (SBS)

Production company Shine Australia pushes into SBS’s Go Back To Where You Came From space with Living with the Enemy, a provocative six-part series which explores ”the faultlines of social cohesion” by taking two people with diametrically opposed views and immersing them in each other’s lives.

Party Tricks (Ten)

Producers John Edwards and Imogen Banks have packaged a star vehicle for their muse Asher Keddie, who stars in another Ten drama, Offspring. Here Keddie and Rodger Corser play colleagues who once had a love affair. It’s a six-part series based on a ”cat-and-mouse game which culminates in an election-night finale”.

Schapelle (Nine)

A telemovie from Fremantle Media based on the arrest, trial and conviction of Schapelle Corby in Bali in 2004 and 2005, which, even before its broadcast, has divided the audience and galvanised Schapelle supporters into a campaign against the project. It stars Krew Boylan, Jacinta Stapleton, Denise Roberts and Colin Friels.

Michael Idato – SMH – January 2, 2014