OCR |
 | [...]Film A tijal “Having achieved the distinction of winning an Oscar this year and having accumulated[...]ar more than the official film/ production house of the Federal Government: it’s the industry’s “Vital Alternative’? 99 “In these days of intense competition for government funds, Film Au[...]ustralia must be a pace—setter, at the frontier of society, the very point where the Australian char[...]enterprise; it’s the use, in a responsible way, of public resources to do things that private enterp[...]. Among the challenges we face are the potential of videotape and the changing patterns of distribution, we realise that to get our message across, we must go where the audiences are; when we talk of audiences, we mean the general adult public, children, the university population, special interest groups and instituti[...]jects include a 90-minute study (in 11 parts) of a country tow, a third series of ia K '‘-‘-\\i \‘\:"'.\_"*«", V ‘~°*[...]ntary series to be filmed in China. Just a few of the good things coming from Film Australi[...] |
 | [...]ec”Ialexcitem % Sehepisfs " “The G of Blacksmith” |
 | [...]ode............ as a Gift, a year s subscription of Cinema Papers from . . . . . . . . . . .[...] |
 | [...]ending upon industrial experience, a small number of applicants who do not hold formal qualifications[...]l be conducted on Monday‘ Tuesday and Wednesday of each week. Applications close on Monday, 21 Novem[...]on forms available from:The Secretary, Faculty of Art, Swinburne College of Technology Box 218, Hawthorn, 3122. Tel: (03) 819 8124 V 7 A ivision of Swinburne College of Technology Ltd. THE VICTORIAN FILM CORPORATION RECENTLYPURCHASHDTHE WARDROBE FROM THE FILM THE GETTING OF WISDOM. THESE PERIOD COSTUMES ARE NOW BEI[...] |
 | [...]nd equipment to bring out the best in every job. Of course not everything’s an award winner[...] |
 | [...]78 based upon BLUE FIN by Colin Thiele the author of STORM BOY. The script is being written at present[...]cript right through to exhibition. A wide variety of educational material is being prepared for use ne[...]released in each State a few weeks before the end of the school year in 1978.Word is being spread no[...]JECT BLUE FIN should make it a special favourite. Of course, not everybody has to study the book to be[...]PROJECT. A study kit relating the interest areas of the story across the curriculum is among the educ[...]ntaries on the pre-production and post-production of BLUE FIN for educational broadcast. Radio Programmes Discussions are under way towards the production of a radio dramatisation, a reading of the book, and interviews with the author, scriptw[...]ional Technology Centre and the Film Study Centre of the South Australian Education Department are pla[...]int and catalyst for investigations in the fields of geography, biology, history, social sciences, dra[...]t the year. INTERESTED? Contact the Co-ordlnator of PROJECT BLUE FIN at the address below. South Aus[...]ABT THE BIIBPIIBATIIIN Fflll Fll.MlNli IN 08 OUT OF TASMANIA ifasmanian Film Corporation 64[...] |
 | [...]principal aim being to encourage the development of the art of film. In 1976, the AFI adopted a new constitution[...]ncent Library, the AFI distributes a wide variety of 16mm and 35mm shorts, short features and features[...]s productions, films produced with the assistance of the Experimental Film and Television Fund, maintains Collections for embassies as well as a collection of classic features and shorts. The Library has just[...]Film Posters 1 906-1 958, a colourful compilation of early Australian film posters; and Australian Fil[...]y. Plans are underway to publish a further series of books and monographs.The Australian Film Awards[...]kers. Now in its twentieth year, the presentation of the Awards is televised nationally to draw public attention to the latest achievements of the nation's film industry. The Australan A it[...]substantial book library, an extensive collection of magazines, and some vital indices. These include[...]ubject index 1935-74. As well as the complete run of a number of significant magazines (including Film Quarterlyan[...]will soon make available on microfilm every copy of Variety ever published. The information centre has recently made available a Master Index Of Current Film Periodical Holdings In Australian Sp[...]under its curatorship a newly acquired collection of cinematographic memorabilia covering the history of cinema up to the coming of sound. Many of the exhibits are exceptionally rare. It is envisa[...]comfortable alternative outlets serving the needs of filmmakers, independent distributors and a large section of the community. "The Longford is, in my opin[...]e AFI, in conjunction with the Australian Council of Film Societies, organises film viewing weekends t[...]es a festivals bureau and has arranged screenings of Australian films in a number of overseas film festivals. Australian Film Institu[...]e Member? It's the easiest way to keep . informed of the activities and services of the AFI. Benefits include: Concessions to AFI cin[...]er, and voting rights for the Award for Best Film of the Year in the Australian Film Awards. To join,[...]ic. 3053 I hereby apply for Associate Membership of the Australian Film Institute and enclose[...] |
 | Your scenario calls for the hero to be shot out of the sky three times . . . You will be doing a lot of filming in a tropical jungle gorge (during the mo[...]. Your lead suffers from ophidiophobia (fear of snakes) and has a trick knee as well . . .. Q655[...]as little as 24 hours. Contact David Solomon — Sydney, or Wayne Lewis —— Melbourne; the expert dire[...]in insurances for the entertainment industry i l Sydney Melbourne Brisbane Box 3884 GPO 163 Collins St. GPO Box 1022 Sydney 2001 Melbourne 3000 North Quay, Qld. 4000[...] |
 | [...]innane, Leon Gorr, lan Baillieu 128 Melbourne and Sydney Film Festivals Scott Murray, Tom Ryan 134 Interna[...]Dermody 173 MnKbm Stephen Kennett 174 The Getting of Wisdom Brian McFarlane 175 Cria Cuervos Inge Pruk[...]tion Report H'g';S%°é'i',g%rt 178 Melbourne and SydneyThe Last Wave: 147 Film Festivals: 134 Mana[...]nmark — Gail Heathwood. Advertising: Sue Adler, Sydney (02) 26 1625; Chris Davis, Melbourne (03) 329 598[...]Consolidated Press Pty. Ltd, 168 Castlereagh St., Sydney 2000, Telephone (02) 2 0686, ACT. Tas. — Book P[...]views oi their authors and not necessarily those of the Editors. While every care is taken on manuscr[...]rry St., Melbourne 3000. Telephone (03) 329 5983. Sydney Office: 365A Pitt St., Sydney. Telephone (02) 261625. c Copyright Cinem[...] |
 | 7% Q CORPORATION CONTROVERSY The funding policies of the Victorian Film Corporation have been strongly attacked in the press, a possible conflict of interest being suggested between corporation members and those awarded investments. Two of the most vocal critics have been Colin Bennett and Barry Jones MLA‘. Mr Bennett was one of those responsible for advising on the setting up of the corporation and Mr Jones is the Labor shadow minister who introduced the concept of the VFC into state parliament. in response to th[...]the daily press. Cinema Papers believes it to be of considerable interest, and it is reproduced below in full. The members of the corporation are Peter Rankin (chairman), Grah[...]The Age headline on August 25 accused VFC members of being given "most film grants". The VFC rarely, i[...]production are offered as investment. The figure of $526,500 has been quoted, It is broken down as follows: Summerfield $ 76,500 In Search of Anna $ 50,000 Mary and Joe $100,000 The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith $300,000 Summerfield was scri[...]laced before the VFC. Mr Green owns five per cent of the equity in Summertield. In Search of Anna: Natalie Miller is the associate producer of this film. Ms Miller has five per cent equity in[...]The VFC has not contri- buted financially to any of the scripts development costs of Mary and Joe. if the film goes into production Mr Green will have five per cent of the film. The VFC believes that the percentages[...]on on the statement in the press that 55 per cent of the corporation funds have gone to its own member[...]imply that they are a major beneficiary. In each of these projects, the applicant for investment from[...]They were: Summerfield — Pat Lovell; In Search of Anna— Esben Storm; Mary and Joe- Oscar Whitbread and Frank Brown. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith: in reaching the decision to invest $300,000 in The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith the corporation members were conscious of the public and political criticism that this deci[...]ers believed then, as they do now, that The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith will perhaps be the most import[...]before it. Mr Fred Schepisi is recognized as one of Australia's leading directors, and the VFC was de[...]. Additionally, the investment offer in The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith was made over two financial yea[...]ema Papers, October Phillip Adams‘ The Getting of Wisdom, Patricia Lovell’s Break of Day (scripted by Cliff Green), and the Homestead[...]11 (page 278), Peter Rankin said: “In the field of script assessing the Corp- oration has decided no[...]or the time being make all asssessment by members of the Board." Given the present controversy. it is[...]g" and whether the Board sees this present method of script assessment as being a stop-gap or permanen[...]The 1977 Australian Film Awards were announced in Sydney on September 20, during a national telecast on the ABC. The awards were: Best Film of the Year Storm Boy Best Performance by an Actor[...]ievement in Cinematography Russell Boyd for Break of Day Best Achievement in Editing William Anderson[...]Award Storm Boy S.K. MIFED REPRESENTED A group of Australian films are featuring this year in MlFED[...]ut It Works, Leisure, Final Animated Step. A Tale Of One City and the India series (ABC/Film Australia[...]r the few with one or more successful films. One of the most frequently proposed explanations of this state of affairs is the totally unattractive way (for private investors) that the Commissioner of Taxation treats their investment. Film is generally considered a unit of industrial property‘ which means an investment[...]tors Convention at Surfers Paradise. the chairman of the Australian Film Commission, Mr Ken Watts, spo[...]rongly lobbying Treasury for a 12-month write-off of 100 per cent of investment in film production. It appears AFC off[...]tuation where investors get a leveraged write-off of their investment (ie. they can write off two or t[...]the recent Budget decision to increase the amount of withholding tax paid by film distributors on royalties paid overseas for licences of film copyright. This amount, which has been aroun[...]lm Corporation came into being. Created by an Act of Parliament, it replaced the Department of Film Production which had been in operation for 3[...]ddress at 64 Brisbane St., Hobart. The functions of the corporation, as defined in its Act, are to pr[...]s out personnel and film equipment. The director of the corporation is Malcolm (See lan Bail|ieu'[...]ralian Council for the Arts. Part-time chairman of the corporation is Gil Brealey, former chairman/director of the SAFC. and presently a freelance film consultant and lecturer at Flinders University. Adelaide. Other members of the corporation are W. H. Perkins, a former senior lecturer in education at the University of Tasmania: Barbara Manning, director of the Theatre and Education. Tasmania: Colin Hogden. general manager of Tasmanian Drive-In Theatre Holdings; and H. Grier[...]e Premier's Department. M. Smith is also a member of the corporation and D. Donnelly is its secretary.[...]he Australian Film Commission in the Lynch budget of August ‘77. several organizations have had thei[...]977/78 and has subsequently ceased operation. The Sydney Filmmakers Co—op, however, was granted a simila[...]pen a Melbourne office, The National Film Theatre of Australia received $73000 instead of the requested $98000 and has been told that they[...]e and the State in Adelaide. and the distribution of films through the Vincent Library. The AFl is als[...]ing taken over by the Creative Development Branch of the AFC and will be run from the new AFC office in Melbourne, In a statement, the chairman of the AFI. Barry Jones MLA, said: “The Commission has offered no explanation of the rationale behind its decision. Given that the[...]ing. “We also want to resolve the implications of these cutbacks and to determine what future. if a[...]e. When the Prime Minister announced the transfer of functions of the former Film. Radio and Television Board of the Australia Council to the Film Commission. he[...]to result in a diminution in the creative aspects of film in Australia. "The recent demise of the Melbourne Film- makers Co-op and the cutbacks[...]r organizations such as the National Film Theatre of Australia would seem to run counter to that policy. "No one, least of all the Commission itself. would want the Commission to become a monolithic body monopolising all aspects of the Australian film scene. We are therefore conce[...]PERSONNEL Peter Rose, who as marketing manager of the South Australian Film Corporation was respons[...]Storm Boy, has left the SAFC. He is now based in Sydney and is the personal assistant to Terry Jackman, the managing director of Hoyts Theatres. MCA vice-president for Australia[...]acific and Japan, Ron V. Brown, formerly based in Sydney, has returned to Hollywood to take over as a Universal vice- president in charge of special projects. Australian Film Commiss[...] |
 | [...]rporation having drawn up, inter alia. a new form of investment contract.Fred Schepisi s The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith is the first totally Australian film to employ a foreign publicist. Geoff Freeman of Denis Davidson and Associates. a London and Los A[...]A.|.G. MAKING PRIMETIME The September 14 issue of Variety had a listing of series on U.S. television and the estimated production costs of each episode. While Australian producers struggle to make television features on budgets of around 3140.000. or series episodes for less, U.S. producers generally spend in the vicinity of $360,000 per hour-length episode and $170.000 per[...]. The most expensive live show is ABC's coverage of football each Monday night. At $700,000 a game it makes quite a contrast with the “exorbltant" fee of $100,000 for the tele- vision rights to Melbourne[...]ver television features— is The Wonderful World of Disney at $800,000 an episode. That budget would[...]o make any Australian feature with the exceptions of The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith and Eliza Fraser. The listing[...]. . . . . . . . . . . . ..190.000 New Adventures of Wonder Woman, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .[...]. . . . . . . . . . . . . 660.000 Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .[...]. . . . . . . . . . . .. 180,000 Wonderful World of Disney, The . . . . . . . . . . . 800.000 S.M. W[...]int. he recut the film on June 18. This consisted of deleting the original ending where Father Lamont (Richard Burton) and Reagan (Linda Blair) walk “out of the Georgetown house and intothe sunset. while th[...]these cuts, Boorman re- plied: “We are victims of audience expecta- tion based on the first picture[...]ted was not giving them what they wanted in terms of horror. There's a wild beast out there, which is[...]unde- cided whether they should go to the expense of a new print order on a film that had already cost[...]roversy-free screenings at the 1977 Melbourne and Sydney film festivals, Nagisa Oshimas L’Empire des Sen[...]ducation films, there has been the recent example of Pasqual Festa Campinale‘s The Sex Machine. This[...]xually mating couple — has more than one minute of hard- core sexual activity. Several commentators[...]uncut only after appeal. The sexual explicitness of The Sex Machine is, therefore, no accident. Why then is L’Empire des Sens deprived of a certificate? This refusal. combined with the fu[...]ival, suggest Prowse is trying to make an example of it. But there is nothing in L’Empire des Sensth[...]White Emmanuelle. The Oshima film is the victim of censorship politics and is yet another sad example of how little the Appeal Board is prepared to ensure freedom of speech. S.M. FILM FESTIVALS The following is a list of world film festivals during this quarter. (Not al[...]velling Film Festival began screening a selection of six films from the recent Sydney Festival at Newcastle on September 9, and after v[...]shorts for each program chosen represent a precis of the larger Sydney Festival. European in flavor. the films chosen we[...]and Edvard Munch. These are screened in sessions of two films a night from Friday to Sunday. The Sydney Film Festival, working in association with the Arts Council of Australia, are presenting rural people with the opportunity of viewing first-class international films, most of which would not gain commercial release in[...] |
 | [...]years since Chinese cinema, in the bracing guise of the Bruce Lee films, made its impact on the Canne[...]siderable artistic recognition. King Hu’s Touch of Zen was invited to the Cannes Film Festival and h[...]Rotterdam Film Festival included a retrospective of the work of director Sung Tsun-so.To a degree, writing about the Chinese cinema of Hong Kong from a Western perspective tends to come down to a matter of backing personal enthusiasm with a series of calculated stabs in the dark. There is a dearth of published information in translation and even if one has access to translations of key articles, one ends up conscious ofof course, but no real substitute for access to the output of, for music track or post-dubbing, or in which he[...]I've done in that time I see nothing but a series of compromises with the capitalists, whom we nowaday[...]take pleasure.” In Hong Kong a small catalogue of films is widely admired as exemplars of a ‘true direction’ for Chinese cinema. These include a group of films made for Li Han-hsiang’s short-lived inde[...]ma adopt the strategies, recast in its own terms, of a Wenders or a Syberberg, it is example, the Shanghai studios of the 19305 and— difficult for a Western critic t[...]situation is further complicated by the existence of two Hong Kong cinemas: the Cantonese language cin[...]s. It was, however, not at all outside the sphere of influence of the dominant fifties modes: watching some of those films now one is struck by the fidelity with which the ubiquitous Italian/Hollywood fetishes of the period were blueprinted. Mandarin cinema was[...]rical dramas and epic romances with some pretence of authenticity, (the prime example in this area is the work of Li Han-hsiang), as well as increasingly spectacul[...]wever, to see it as a purely artificial off-shoot of a commercial and political situation; or as purely an emigrant cinema of nostalgia for a lost China. In its mobilization of traditional subject matter — its sources range[...]ike The Water Margin, The Golden Lotus, The Dream of the Red Chamber, Strange Stories from a Chinese S[...]nese culture by co-opting the past in the service of the present. To an extent, Hong Kong Chinese cinema is one of thwarted perfectionists. A cinema, too, indulging in a certain crisis of conscience. It is rare to talk to a director who[...]or who will whole- heartedly embrace the ambience of commercial cinema. To some extent this is a product of an admittedly horrific production situation in wh[...]have no final control over such intimate aspects of a film’s post-production as the Verina Glaessner is the former editor of the film page in Time Out and is a frequent cont[...]is verdict. One tends to espouse the achievements of a vital popular art in the hands of artists who turn limitations into generic strengths. CHAHG CHEH ,Ana:HE ACEIOD eEn=iE It is the films of Chang Cheh, alongside those of Bruce Lee and King Hu, that have probably contributed most to the Western concept of Chinese cinema. Golden Swallow, Vengeance, The New One-Armed Swordsman, Duel of Fists, Blood Brothers, Heroes Two and others have[...]rnational distribution. And for once the vagaries of commercial distribution have proved apt and revea[...]d degree the central and vital generic components of the Chinese martial arts film, a genre that seems as important in its definition of certain parameters of the Chinese experience as the Western does in rel[...]Vast hiatuses prevent any definitive discussion of the genre’s development, although in its recent[...]uggests a genesis in the films made in the shadow of Chiang Kai-shek’s 1927 coup. He sees the stringent censorship of the period as definitive: “Even cinema . . . fo[...]aced for the next four years by a Chinese version of the Western”. That is, by action films framed around “a synthesis of medieval knight-errant, Japanese samurai, the Fre[...]s . . . continuous violence, usually *The cinema of Hong Kong is, however, not unique in this[...] |
 | [...]orily, sounds distinctly interesting in the light of current trends.The simultaneous development of chivalric literature at this time in the direction of an emphasis on physical strength, expertise in sw[...]suggests a common root and that an understanding of the place of the ‘knight errant’ in Chinese history and li[...]ght be pertinent. James YJ. Liu in his over-view of the subject, The Chinese Knight—Errant, traces[...]de that involved individual freedom, the righting of wrongs, revenge and loyalty. In place of the feminine objects of courtly love of Western tradition, women appear as carnal figures[...]ry tradition that impresses with its sheer weight of continuity, extending through popular oral tradition to novels, the ‘high’ art of chivalric verse, theatre, pulp literature and com[...]the knight errant as disruptive force and righter of wrongs that the cinematic genre has found to a de[...]has directed around 60 films. In a sense, it is, of course, too many. But whether one regards Chang in something of a producer role vis a vis those of his films on which he works with co-directors, or as more of a conventional auteur, there is no doubting the a[...]an be categorized according to the changing group of repertory players around which he frames his narr[...]to knight-errant literature and a prolific author of novels and serials, the subject, and provides the films with a density and sensitivity of surface and a psychological resonance rarely essa[...]e cinema. For parallels one reaches to the films of Peckinpah (for whom Chang has expressed his admiration), the Ray of Johnny Guitar, the ritualized circles of pain in Leone. All of Chang’s really substantial work that I have see[...]the past — either the more or less recent past of the Republican era, of the twenties, thirties and forties China, or in the distant past (the Northern Sung Dynasty in the case of The Water Margin trilogy.) Usually Chang draws from the past a generalized situation (of corruption, moral dissolution, disorder) rather than pointing up a particular political moment. The films of his Taiwan period (between 1973 and 1975 he produced films under the semi- independent aegis of his own company in[...]table exception, framed specifically at the point of Manchu conquest in China and the collapse of the Ming dynasty, a point with very specific poli[...]nd messy fight sequences shot without the benefit of anything like the thought-out choreography of the later films. What illuminates the film, however, is the character of the wandering avenger, described in the pre—credit sequence as a virtual force of nature, and crystallized in the performance of Wang Yu. It is through his scarred and malevolen[...]s. Action is less relevant than the establishment of icono- graphic images, emblems, motifs and there[...]atic intensity that has latterly become something of a trademark. King I-Iu’s second film for Shaw B[...]to handle fight sequences and give them a degree of sophistication, if not quite the ‘abstractness’, of his later work, but it seems probable that Chinese cinema, inspired by the popularity of Japanese samurai films, emulated spectacular com[...]n. Chang’s main preoccupation is with the pull of romantic fatality located in the hero‘s (Wang F[...]lly exploiting a genre in order to yield a vision of coherently gothic dimensions. In Golden Swallow,[...], knight errant” -— and amplified the element of fatal romanticism, seamlessly deploying his actio[...]eveloped further his ability to italicize aspects of his performers‘ personae. The real diegesis of the film therefore became less the narrative and more an almost sculptural interplay of character through a series of pregnant relationships which themselves translate[...]ingly epic dimensions and detailed choreo- graphy of action. Golden Swallow is a con- summate example[...](played by Wang Ye as a wayward killer with some of the ‘wounded’ resonance of Brando of The Wild One) and Lo Lieh as Swallow’s faithful companion in her tussle against the forces of constriction, corruption and death. Where Hu locates heroism in the action — and carrying out of an intellectually conceived strategy — Chang locates it viscerally in the figures of his archetypally disruptive seekers of justice. Many of his films admittedly accomplish little |
 | [...]ic like Vengeance, however, conjures with notions of cosmic pessimism of Jacobean tragedy. While the Water Margin Trilogy[...]x in a mosaic in which exposition takes the place of narrative, and plot, character, theme are all explored through combat sequences of extra- ordinary power.In Blood Brothers, Chang turns in an impressive investigation of the knight errant personality under the aspect of romance in a tradition which treats love and hero[...]n Taiwan films, which all focus on the adventures of disciples of the Shaolin temple displaced through treachery, the depiction of the martial arts becomes, under the direction of Liu Chia-liang, more literal (a legacy of Bruce bee’s realistic precision) and also more[...]c heroic gesture attached to a developed sequence of movements. Films like Heroes Two, Men from The Monastery and the wonderfully Hawksian Disciples of Shaolin, all explore the arts in relation to theo[...]re’s peplum influences are left behind in favor of a specifically Chinese interpretation. The series confronts its subject and the genre at its point of (historical) origin —— the temple — and con[...]ok up the theme and Liu himself directed a series of films which mined areas similar to those explored[...]opportunities this offered, including a new mine of classical, historical subjects, were largely at the hands of the studio’s golden boy, Li Han- hsaing. And it was very much his blend ofof the Peking Art Institute and actor whose attempts to enter the somewhat charmed circle of the Shanghai studios had foundered, Li’s eye wa[...]reer spans some 30 years, beginning with a series of intriguing black and white, more or less socially[...]e informal ‘repertory company’, both in front of and behind the camera, for substantial periods of time). His work ranges from the epic, to the cour[...], the period drama, satire and erotic compendiums of dramatic and comic tales. Golden Swallow[...] |
 | [...]rd (Li Han-hsiang), which is set in the aftermath of the Republican revolution. In a way his oeuvre r[...]ope for a more appropriate director for a subject of epic scope than this genuine hedonist whose penchant towards the extravagant prevents his treatment of the genre from becoming mere exercises in the gra[...]r working within the essentially collective arena of commercial cinema needs a certain determination a[...]ts planing down effect and this is certainly true of the arrantly commercial and often low—budgeted[...]dustry. Many interesting directors like Chu Yuan, of Intimate Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan and the recent, brilliant The[...]in recognizing a powerful grasp in his mobilizing of mise-en- scene and detail towards deliberately ex[...]and sensual moments stick in the mind: the group of women ranged about the weeping Ti Ying (in the film of the same name) luxuriating in their abandonment to distress; an elegant and unexpected flurry of fabric and exposed flesh framed with a sequence of biting irony and wit in Scandal; the sense of physicality that makes Li’s ghost in Bliss, one[...]refreshingly benevolent environment in which some of the Hong Kong cinema’s most interesting directo[...]impossible within the tightly budgeted confines of the studio. One gropes for parallels and finds them perhaps in Ray’s King of Kings, perhaps in some of Huston, in the massive confidence of some of the more impressive Hollywood or peplum epics. l 10 — Cinema Papers, October Hsi Shih: Beauty of Beauties mobilizes land- scape with the expressiv[...]d on the artificially palatial sets and costumes of the studio films and manages to embue the weighty deployments of the battle sequences and the moments of surprising intimacy with an enthusiasm that is co[...]despite being somewhat flawed by the attentions of the Taiwan censor,'wraps a tale of court corruption in a romantic dressing. The plotting and counter-plotting by the rival bands of medical specialists, for motives obscure, around the obese, drugged and increasingly senseless figure of the son of the royal household, manages to suggest the foreignness of a past age and the essence of a baleful corruption that is not finally exorcized by the romantic vision of filial piety and paternal benevolence on which the film ends. The history of what has tended to be labelled, with a hint of superiority, “Shaw spectaculars“, and are in[...]lavish guise, is slightly less shrouded than that of the martial arts genre, primarily because of the genres obvious upfrontness about its cultural[...]carnation as lightly on the whole as he does that of the sword—stroke—action film, finds its roots in the Shanghai studios of the period of Japanese occupation when, again, to paraphrase, refuge in the past provided a ‘safe’ way of dealing with Japanese pressure. (True on a certai[...]hat there is to be said?) As Leyda remarks, much of the Shaw Brothers’, and Li Han-hsiang’s, initial output consisted’ ‘of films which reworked subjects handled previously[...]most interesting remake case is undoubtedly that of Li’s brilliant 1976 film, The Last Tempest, a f[...]al films in his pre-Shaw days. The Secret History of the Ch’ing Court, of course, gained a certain notoriety in 1967 by bec[...]tural Revolution test case. Reviewed today, many of the costume romances can yield unexpected riches, The Kingdom and the Beauty, the story of the love between a country girl and an emperor, sidesteps mere wishfulfilment to conjure, with some sense of grandeur, notions of a crushing social hierarchy. Yang Kwei Fei: The M[...]chi) may somewhat come to grief around the figure of ‘the Emperor, too much a rabiula rasa for the[...]ood, but nonetheless lays out the weighty rituals of court life and its concomitant in the abandonment[...]ement to Li. They co-operated on the film version of Eternal Love, a Huang Mei opera (with Hu as assis[...]ale role involving the heroine assuming the guise of a youth in order to partake of an educa- tion denied to women. _ . Eternal Love achieves an amazing richness of effect, its persuasive feminist undercurrents, its innumerable surface charms, its knowing recasting of a theatrical form in cinematic terms, and its flowing lead performance all make it something of a landmark. In Hong Kong, Li is chiefly prized for his patently sensitive and informed handling of Chinese culture and history. But certain critics find in the remarkably pared down and deliberate simplicity of The Winter, which he made for his own company, something of a pinnacle in Chinese cinema. The Winter is an o[...]activity and narrative passivity adheres to much of Li’s work. It seems that it was not until the collapse of his company — something of a locus classicus for the industry’s crisis of conscience — and Li’s reluctant retrenchment[...]veal an icily satirical perspective on the nature of power. Both, centring on magnetic performances from Michael Hue, are set during the aftermath of the Republican revolution, and they reveal a society arrested in a state of odious and malignant corruption: a blackly moral vision that has hardly been bettered. The concomitant of the admiration for Li’s historical approach has[...]th: his sophisticated sensuality. Hence, choruses of disdain as he tackles ‘yet another sex film’. While not decrying the tokenness of many of his post Empress Dowager and Last Tempest erotic[...]Lotus recalls Pasolini in its careful marshalling of surfaces, narrative, textures and characte[...] |
 | [...]that you have an ability to coax information out of people . . .Yes, but I finally got sick of it because I couldn’t escape the potentially exploitative nature of what I was doing, though there was another reason[...]ize that there weren’t any sharpies any more in Sydney. So I went out hanging around tattoo shops instea[...]me, and in Phil Noyce is probably the best-known of Australia’s non-mainstream directors, with two of his films, “Castor and Pollux” and “Backroa[...]so reached wide audiences despite the limitations of their very low budgets. Noyce joined the Interim Training Scheme of the Film and Television School in 1973 (and there[...]lancer on “The Golden Cage” and “A Calendar of Dreaming” before being invited to direct “God[...]eg was actually made to illustrate to school kids of about 12 and 13 the structure of a middle—class Australian family and way in whi[...]d and, at the same time, hindered the development of the kid. Whereas “Mick” is totally different... Yes, the idea of Mick was to illustrate the way in which peer grou[...]by a distributor and shown in the cinemas because of his bizarre behavior: covering himself with tatto[...]inema Papers, October — 1 l l 5 Leon Saunders (Sydney) |
 | [...]y night, travelling in the car —- all the sorts of things F.J. Holden might have been.BACKROADS W[...]me a short story he had written called First Day of Spring. We took one incident and the spirit from[...]e wrote was a young Shooting Backroads. Director of photo- graphy, Russell Boyd, with camera (bottom)[...]op). The last shot was to be three or four miles of traffic stacked up behind this car. We were act[...]t politically it was a cop—out. The Aboriginal of 26 to 30 who had journey these men undertake was[...]to a white woman. He always seen as an allegory of the had been trying to make it in the journey white men and the white society under the influence of his wife because that was the ideal presented to him. What was the involvement of the Aboriginal actors in the making of the film? I didn’t know many Aboriginal actors[...]y, I’d seen Gary Foley around town for a couple of years, so I asked him to play the part of Noel. I also wanted him to have some creative control, as well as the ideological control of the black statement the film generated. Was it a[...]ge. They abandon the car, leaving it among a mass of vehicles, and disappear into the concrete jungle.[...]g? Not really. We didn‘t have enough resources of money and manpower to do the sort of ending that we finally compromised on. Also I had[...]for the characters. The realism and forcefulness of the characters have also tended to provoke perso[...]lly blame critics — you just have to find a way of pointing out to them how your film might appeal. Pierre Rissient, the director of One Night Stand, who was once a publicist, used to make successes of films that looked like sleepers. And he did this[...]level. You seem to be very involved in this side of filmmaking as well. . . It is absolutely importa[...]m, they are never going to put in the same amount of energy, or present the same outlook, as you can.[...]things go wrong. In filmmaking there is a degree of departmentalizing, inasmuch as the art dir[...] |
 | [...]seeing it. I can't sell it to television because of the subject matter and language, so I had to make the most out of the theatrical situation.How has “Backroads” gone? It went okay in Sydney, but great in Melbourne, though in Melbourne it w[...]ou see yourself making more films with the budget of “Back- roads”? Yes. I’d like to do some fe[...]el you can get more social comment into this type of film? You can do things that you can’t do in a[...]ect matter, would be offensive to a large section of the community. But I could afford to take a risk be- cause it was only $25,000 worth ofof Philippe Mora’s Brother Can You Spare a Dime an[...]aft screenplay which already has a certain number of characters and a plot line, some of which I agreed with and some I didn’t. It's bee[...]wsfront” basically about? Its a dramatic story of the newsreel cameramen who lived and worked in Australia during the golden era of the newsreel from ’1948 to 1956. It uses actual docu- mentary footage of the public events that shaped and influenced the[...]hese are set against the fictional private lives of the men who recorded that history, and the women[...]ey had relationships. It’s the story basically of one cameraman, Len McGuire, who works for a compa[...]co is, as Movietone was, an Australian sub-branch of an international company. Newsfront is also an examination of what happened to Australia during that time of great change. Between the end of the war and 1956, a million new settlers came to Australia, and this greatly altered the make—up of our society. One result was a more international[...]general. Coupled with this is the Americanization of this country. One of the early events of the film, and this typifies much of the film’s attitude, involves the launching of the first Holden. The Holden has always been seen as a symbol of nationalism, a reminder of a more naive time of peculiarly Australian symbols, like the kanga- ro[...]300 million to the U.S. in profits from the sale of Australia’s national car. The launching of the Holden was, therefore, really a nail in the coffin of Australian economic and, as it turns out, cultura[...]ve the Germans as the Opel. There has been a lot of criticism lately about the number of period films that we are making in Australia and[...]ilms because it‘s attempting, by an examination of the social fabric and the public events of the near past, to make statements about the evolu- tion of present day attitudes and constitutions within Au[...]ng was an event which embellished a fear in a lot of Australians — that of communism. The same goes for the Petrov affair, w[...]to the split in the Labor Party and the formation of the Democratic Labor Party. I must add that thes[...]and the film is really a narrative — the story of a family and of two men. Is it going to be a problem cutting the news footage into the narrative? Only inasmuch as some of the newsreel stories were edited with a different aesthetic then. So the rhythm of the cutting is often quite dissimilar to the way[...]e reason the film ends then. And television was, of course, a further nail in the coffin of so- called Australian independence, because it in[...]hat people like, say, Hilary Linstead, spend most of their time keeping abreast of the latest productions on the stage and in the cinema. Hilary is constantly aware of any emerging talent and of the wide cross-section of actors and types. Concluded on P. 19] Ci[...] |
 | [...]ruption, Charles continues his frightened pursuit of his own death." Robert Bresson's Le Diable Probab[...]ircus, with five or six shows running at any time of day and most times at night. But efficient organi[...]ded the main competition, the International Forum of Young Films, a program of new West German films, the large market/informa-[...]trospectives — including an almost complete one of Marlene Dietrich‘s films. There were even various fringe screenings arranged by the local association of art cinemas.The festival's only weakness was the standard of the main competition. The festivals director, Dr Wolf Donner, plans to upgrade it by advancing the dates of next year's festival from July to -early March — two months ahead of the Cannes festival. Dr Donner believes that the[...]l there were 34 films in the main section, and 25 of these were eligible to compete for the Bears — a sign of the overall lack of quality that the same four or five were shortlist[...](London). l 14 — Cinema Papers, October Most of the arguments were focussed on Robert Bresson’s[...]ousness and sincerity a world in which the choice of life and death should be treated with equal respect." Jan Dawson, in a dazzling thematic analysis of the film, says in the festival program note that it “...requires a spiritual progression on the part of the audience, from antipathy to compassion to awestruck admiration". Though the audience forms part of an over- populated, polluted and degraded world c[...]ruption, Charles continues his frightened pursuit of his own death." However, like the similarly suicidal heroines of Bresson's previous films, the people in Le Diable[...]ssionals who show little except advanced symptoms of anorexia nervosa. Naturally the psychiatrist_Char[...]hat people within the film are seeing. In moments of emotional stress, we look away from faces: we stare at the texture of a trouser-leg, the shape of a shoe, the glint of metal on a railing or a lift'door. The camera fol[...]nt, a station in Charles’s calvary. The tension of the film — and probably its greatness — lies in this combination of alienation and sub- jectivity, sharpening our self-disgust, or even our shame that in view of his meta- physical pretensions, man should be suc[...]film as . . not about war, but the relationship of the inner self to the outside world. There are tw[...]he question that interests me is the possibility of a mans resistance to his inner destruction." Alt[...]first prize. The increased honesty and wide frame of reference of Ascent postulated a moral refinement new to the S[...], it was a necessary political gesture. In Berlin of all places, in this precarious island city trying to be the open market between the nihilism of sophisticates and the unthinking assump- tions of loud ideologies, it is important to remember that[...]on aesthetic grounds alone. Another illustration of the way fascism eats the soul, not in the over- m[...]write Borau's Poachers and Camino's Long Holidays of ‘.36; in turn, Borau collaborated on the script of Black Litter, so the similarities of approach and treat- ment are not surprising. In both films there is a threat of violence from the beginning: the harsh lighting,[...]all right-wing terrorist group under the guidance of their mother. They attack libraries and shops, an[...]ves to show her that he can fulfil the conditions of membership — secrecy, revenge, and the willing sacrifice of his dearest and nearest for the cause. Tatin fail[...]yet Black Litter was probably the best acted film of the competition, rivalled only by the Hungarian e[...]g aesthetic qualities", especially the camerawork of Elemer Ragalyi. But the acting was equally good.[...]lties for Endre Holman who played a communist boy of about 18 trying to escape, after the failure of the 1919 revolution, by dressing as a girl. He re[...]ise-en-scene is masterly: even the lyrical beauty of the changing seasons becomes an inexor- able dramatic force. Many of the competition films were bedevilled by miscasti[...]ed plays, a genre which most critics consider out of place at film festivals anyway. For this reason,[...]iar choice — surely, with all its faults, Break of Day would have been more appropriate? The[...] |
 | of the Citadel), by Bernhard Wicki, and Die Vertrelb[...]n contrast to everyone else in that static comedy of the absurd. Lily Tomlin was chosen as best actress for her portrait of a neurotic but tough, charmingly phoney all-American girl in The Late Show; but then, none of the other films had plum parts for women.The Berlin festiva|’s real strength lies in the Forum of Young Films, established in filmpolitical opposit[...]her amicably, owing to the forums eclectic policy of showing anything and everything liked by the orga[...]estivals, resulting in a miscellaneous collection of sleeping giants and under- developed subjects. T[...]szaros‘s Nine Months, Cassavetes’ The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, and Dennis Hopper's The Last Mo[...]ames Benning’s 11x14, the Mulvey-Wollen Riddles of the Sphinx and Celestino Coronado’s Hamlet. I m[...]styles which have been around since the invention of the film. At best they are the poetry of the cinema, and as poems do not have to be long t[...]re's epic play is reduced to 65 minutes, and much of that is mime. A small but skilled cast double up[...]amlet, whose indecisions are split between a pair of identical twins. A rococo extravaganza of a film, inspired by the same impulse which makes models of cathedrals in strawberry ice-cream, I would still[...]urkish director Yilmaz Guney who was, at the time of the festival, under arrest in Turkey. It may be t[...]bles, even Pal Sandor's A Strange Rois the story of a communist boy who escapes the failure of the 1919 revolution by dressing as a girl. Andras Fricsay and Antonia Reininghaus in The Conquest of the Citadel, an adaptation of the novel by Gunter Herburger. without arrest an[...]etitions for Guney’s release to the Turks. One of the forums pleasurable surprises was The Perfumed[...]Best First Film. it is in the faux-naiftradition of Jacques Tati or even Buster Keaton, telling the cautionary tale of a Filipino boy who spent his early life dreaming about the U.S., and the marvels of technological progress. His dream comes true when[...]ork taxi and flies him to Paris, with the promise of an eventual trip to the U.S. After getting used to Paris, and a quick trip to Germany (“the birthplace of Wernher von Braun“], Kidlat begins to question[...]er subject and style, before the seven-day wonder of The Perfumed Nightmare exhausts its international[...]circus-ring, introduced this year, was the series of about 40 recent German films — enough for a sep[...]aphy by Evelyn Kunneke, a very German combination of Vera Lynn and Billie Holiday; and Stunde Null (Ze[...]s an autobiographical subject; and it is a matter of personal importance to confront what Reitz calls a national neurosis, taking the form of total amnesia about the events of 1945. Reitz’s anti-hero, a boy of 14, has no concept of life before or without the war. Treated well by the first Americans he meets, he forms an idea of the U.S. as Eldorado. His Nazi upbringing makes h[...]uture as promised by the Russians: like thousands of other, mostly older Nazis, he opts for the Americ[...]satire, there is also the indomitable tenderness of the disenchanted humanist. An impressive amount of care and subsidy went into this New German Cinema[...]h aimed_at showing a representative cross-section of the 1976-77 production. The National Film Production Board provided sub- titled versions of 22 films; another 18 had earphone translations an[...]may be salutary to note the flamboyant withdrawal of Hans Jurgen Syberberg from it all. in an open letter to the editors of four influential newspapers, Syberberg explained[...]an reception (or its absence; he complains mainly of a lack of receptivity) to his one-hour sample from a six-ho[...]r sample at Berlin. He also forbade any screening of Hitler in West Germany. While it is not impossib[...]two critics, he accuses the German press en masse of conniving to strangle artistic freedom and deaden[...]nd these teacup storms, especially as in the case of Fassbinder the situation is complicated by the uneven quality of his work. His latest film, though advertised, did[...]s Caudillo, a newsreel compilation about the life of General Franco. The title, being Franco’s middl[...]its own retrospectives, too: there were the works of the East German director Konrad Wolf, and films a[...]anyone noticed, but, in the political atmosphere of the Berlin Festival, it made me feel a lot[...] |
 | What was the genesis of “Sunday Too Far Away”?Sunday was actually a[...]in central NSW, where shearers had been a fantasy of mine, I thought the idea sounded bloody brilliant[...]as an important film because it was the beginning of being able to tell a small but very important part of the beginnings of a nation. It has something to do with our nationality and is, at the same time, bound up with the ethos of the sheep shearer. The other important film to be made, I think, is the story ofof Aust1'alia’s great success stories. It has already accrued a gross in excess of $1,000,000, the book has sold more than 300,000 c[...]s undergone further changes after the appointment of John Morris as corporation director and the departures of Jill Robb and marketing manager, Peter Rose. Carroll is now executive producer in charge of feature and television production. In the follow[...]usses “Storm Boy”, “Sunday”, and the role of the SAFC. I was co-producer with Gil Brealey tho[...]and very, very emotional. Gil hadn’t been part of that, having had to run the corporation at the sa[...]t was unfortunate. I think this was the beginning of all the problems you hear about — the cu[...] |
 | [...]e where Jack Thompson breaks down after the death of Old Garth. Now, as it comes at the end of a roll, it is possible to cut the scene, and Gil[...]extremely important scene and the emotional heart of the story.What about Foley’s relationship wit[...]le, confusion creeps in . . . The whole sub-plot of the girl was quite complicated and it was very Picnic at Hanging Rock, one of the independently produced films the SAFC has in[...]ork dramatically. Does the SAFC retain the right of cut on all the films it produces? The standard[...]n’t always have to end up that way. In the case of Storm Boy, the director’s cut was basically the[...]to the distributors — and this was at the time of Alvin Purple — they said “Yes, it is very int[...]delaide. The thing went through the roof and all of a sudden there was a great ‘deal of interest. Roadshow, in fact, did agree after some[...]gh they still believed Adelaide was no indication ofof the box—off1ce for a lot of advertising time. Jill then went overseas leaving[...]mestic release. Phillip Adams was another critic of the release of “Sunday”, particularly over the choice of the Rivoli Cinema in Melbourne . . . I certainly[...]r, I might have put Sunday into a city cinema in Sydney instead of the Double Bay. I don’t think the triple suburb[...]e SAFC to produce “Storm Boy”? Under the Act of the Film Corporation we are required to make film[...]ssible to make children’s material, but outside of Disney there seemed to be very little, though a lot of people were campaigning about how few good films[...]to 100, rather than for the usual cinema audience of 18 The Fourth Wish, the feature spin-off of the four-part television drama. Cinema Pa[...] |
 | [...]market, so we decided to use the education system of the various states to mobilize people into the th[...]aide, where we found there was a desire on behalf of the education department to involve their classrooms, not only in the process of going to see a film but also in a whole range of fringe educational activities. So, we put out pic[...]in New South Wales because it is very much a case of every school for itself. So we did a series of direct mailings.The resources that had been pro[...]spent on a film? It was actually lower because of our efficiency in marketing films. Our main campaign was the school mailings, and a couple of those don’t cost as much as three or four prime time spots in Sydney. We also knew exactly the sort of material that had to be produced, so when materia[...]istributors, it was material they could use. One of the other things we learnt on Storm Boy was the importance of test marketing. That was why we opened the film[...]big potential box- office, but no one has thought of tapping it — except us. How good a test market[...]For example, we didn’t let on from our release of The Fourth Wish in Adelaide that it wasn’t working with audiences; but we knew what sort of audience it was attracting and had a good idea of what its fate would be. Storm Boy which Carro[...]ed for the SAFC. It has already grossed in excess of $1,000,000. 1 18 — Cinema Papers, October With the advantages of hindsight, what would you say were the reasons fo[...]idn’t want to go through John Meillon’s agony of seeing his son die. \ Do you think it ‘should[...]al. We got no advance for it, but they paid a lot of the costs and we got a direct split of the box- office. Do you feel it should have been released i[...]emiered in the Directors’ Fortnight is the kiss of death? No. It did an enormous amount of help, because the announcement of being in the Directors’ Fortnight hit Australia just at the time of the films release and it did a lot to boost the f[...]ay, which has limited ability to perform in a lot of European markets, and certainly in the American m[...]hink the Directors’ Fortnight would be the kiss of death for a very blatantly commercial film like E[...]r Sunday. How does the film stand at this point of time, financially? It is in profit — we broke[...]RATIONS The SAFC appears to have the flexibility of a small Hollywood studio in that it can initiate[...]hing. We are very keen to encourage the expertise of the people who have moved to South Australia so t[...]n getting things off the ground. There are signs of this happening. One company to whom we have given assistance has started to do a television series, and one of our telly films has been written by a local write[...]similar to the public service. All those outside of the clerical staff, like myself, are on short—t[...]. What are your feelings about the proliferation of film corpora- tions? I am very worried by it, th[...]nd the corporation is virtually a rationalization of something that hadn’t been very efficient in th[...]acing a crucial stage and I think there is danger of the federal government seeing the state corporati[...]l Party policy. But doesn’t this proliferation of film corporations lessen the need of an AFC? In other words, isn’t it a question of centralization versus decentralization? I think the strength of the SAFC is our entrepreneurial ability; o[...] |
 | [...]st, that is what the 33- year-old writer-director of Star Wars, George Lucas, is claiming.Ignoring t[...], Star Wars is undoubtedly spectacular in its use of special effects. And the man largely responsible[...]ly become established. During the pre-production of Star Wars it became obvious that a large number of miniatures and other related effects shots needed[...]ctor George Lucas, the Wookie and crew on the set of Star Wars. the newly-formed company, Industrial[...]some operating 24 hours a day to keep up the flow of production necessary to have everything completed[...]ounted on a crane, along a straight 42 ft. length of track, simultaneously raising or lowering, pannin[...]final space clashes for the film became somewhat of a nightmare due to its very fast pace. The dogfig[...]certain to become the science fiction equivalent of the Bullitt chase sequence. It was painstakingly[...]r 2 air-to-air combat footage as it was this type of action that Dykstra wanted to portray on screen. For one seemingly rapid three or four second scene of an X—Wing fighter being pursued by an enemy T.[...]e X—Wing miniature, having been placed in front of a translucent blue screen, is attached in such a[...]with the cameras yaw and pitch gives the illusion of the camera tracking along behind the X—Wing as[...]emy ship replaces the X—Wing miniature in front of the blue screen set-up. Its movement, combined wi[...]rol. There are now two black and white shots, one of the X—Wing and the other of the T.I.E. ship. The pieces are laid together and[...]or this one quick chase scene six separate pieces of film have been exposed. In many of the scenes, laser beams are being fired by either one or all of the space ships in rapid succession. These too required many matting processes. The length of laser fire, its point of origin and impact area had to be syn- chronized to match the movements of the miniatures in each frame. Concluded o[...] |
 | Tom Ryan Luke’s Kingdom was shot in the foothills of the Blue Mountains of New South Wales during 1974 and 1975. The concept[...]table exceptions being Oliver Tobias, in the role of Luke Firbeck, and British television directors Pe[...]ilms, Hannam directing Sunday Too Far Away, Break of Day, and Summerfield, and Weir The Cars That Ate[...]c At Hanging Rock and The Last Wave. The writers of the series, as far as I have been able to gather,[...]tain Women, and Elizabeth Kata, who wrote A Patch of Blue. Luke’s Kingdom ought to be first seen in the context of what can be loosely described as Australian histo[...]concerned in their own way with a particular era of Australian history, using the background of the developing country to locate their characters in problem situations. The best of these, Rush, initially an Australian production a[...]ion in its second series, followed the adventures of a police constable (John Waters) attempting to ma[...]ian gold-mining settlement during the latter part of the 19th century. Despite occasional concessions to the presence of political corruption in the colony, and to the te[...]2() — Cinema Papers, October central thrust of the series is towards romance — a conventional[...]rcising his power and wisdom to provide the means of resolution for the dramatic conflict. Only in one[...]ld not be so resolved. Needless to say, the issue of resolution need not be the defining one if one is concerned with critical estimations of value, and qualities of visual and dramatic style can provide their own standard of excellence. Unfortunately, none of the Australian series I have mentioned (at least after a single viewing of occasional episodes)has such quality, beyond the often intelligent working through of particular motifs at the script—level. The standards of production, even making allowances for the limite[...], and are severely restricted by the uneasy blend of videotape and film, of studio and location work. Luke’s Kingdom, however, is shot completely on film and sustains an evenness of surface texture which seems to me to be essential to con- ventional television drama. Set in the early part of the 19th century in New South Wales, it is characterized by a harshness of tone (the human drama) in constant tension with the romantic conception of settling the new land (evocatively conveyed by th[...]allenging wilderness). And while there is a sense of the closure of a particular story at the end of each episode, this is rendered irrelevant in terms of the broader context of the drama as a whole. Beyond the collision betwe[...]e’s father, a retired British naval lieutenant, of genteel disposition, sees his and his family‘s future in terms of the past, as an extension of their life in Britain which they have left after the death of his wife. Luke, on the other hand, is better equipped to tackle the savagery of the colony, denying the relevance of the past and seeking to achieve his vision of the future — his “kingdom" —— by whatever[...]amorality — provide a background in which each of the dramas is placed, either directly or by impli[...]referred to Luke’s Kingdom within the framework of television series, binding it together with anyth[...]le there are, for all their differences, a number of valid reasons for viewing these as relations, if not as members of the same amorphous family, it ought to be noted t[...]m, arguably, has more in common with that species of “continuous dramas”* which seems to have been[...]s, Downstairs, The Search for the Nile, A Bouquet of Barbed Wire, The Forsyte Saga, The Pallisers, and[...]for obvious reasons centred on a particular group of people, * The current tendency is to note these dramas as “mini- series“, but the thrust of my argument demands an alternative descrip[...] |
 | often a family of filially unrelated individuals forced together by social circumstances. However, while each of the episodes of a series starts again, as it were, taking no account of what happened in previous episodes, the individual parts of a “continuous drama” need to be seen together as a developing and interlocking whole.Episodes of a series can be, and oftenware, shown in any order; those of a continuous drama require a particular chronological order. The writing of each part demands an overall concep- tion and that the material ofof destiny for every character and what the resoluti[...]devise stories which will advance that in a sort ofof years (Luke’s Kingdom spans seven years;Rich Man, Poor Man Book 1 more than 20), a number of sub—plots which serve to evoke the mood of the period as well as provide a collage of reflections of the central characters and the central conflicts[...]format ending but undercuts any traditional sense of resolution by pointing forward to an ambiguous fu[...]doms”, have been ruthless in their exploitation of those around them, whether friend or foe, and bot[...]finally forced at least to a partial recognition of their own limitations as human beings. Luke’s Kingdom closes with the destruction of Far left: The Firbeck Family glimpse Austra[...]n Morse) stand together and look beyond the ashes of the Firbeck property to the future; and as Rudy a[...]m’s ashes, but implicitly forward to their hope of being able to start again. It is worth looking closely at the beginning of Luke’s Kingdom, the episode entitled A Sort of Gentleman (written by Keith Raine, directed by Ke[...]d with old photographs and furniture — remnants of an era now past. A girl comes across and begins t[...]ual role suggesting that the girl is a descendant of Kate’s (and, perhaps, of Luke’s) and binds together the present and the[...]he diary is Jason’s — . . I believe the hand of God to be with us . . ." — a fact which adds a[...]ile to that which forces him towards an awareness of the inadequacy of his principles in this God-forsaken place— . .[...]m to his liking . . .” — Jason recalls a face of history which is moulded in his own image, its features elsewhere providing the substance of most text-books about Australia’s past. A ploy of the dramas as they progress is to visually rewrite, and contradict, Jason’s words and the sort of history which conceals the moments of brutality and anguish by submerging them within a broader historical movement. Of course, Luke’s Kingdom is fiction, but the issue here is one of placing that fiction within a period of history. Amid the echoes of voices from the past, voices that we are to recog[...]LUKE'S KINGDOM the dramas, the girl reads of the Firbecks’ voyage from Britain to the colony. A cut transfers us to the past, and an overhead shot of the family (Jason, his son, Samuel, and daughter[...]ng companion, later to be depicted as the subject of the episode’s title, playing cards around a tab[...]y drunk and his abrasive manner disturbs the tone of the gathering. Here, and throughout the subsequent episodes, Luke is ill at ease in the pursuit of civilized rituals, and often deliberately upsets the unity they embody. The sighting of the Australian coast-line finds the family together on deck, eagerly straining for a sight of their future. Jason’s observation — “A new[...]ing!” — catches the communal, pioneering mood of the moment, and lays the foundation for an irony[...]ly anchored in the past. Bound by the moral codes of the Mother Country, the ethic of the ‘gentleman’, the course he endeavors to pursue is out of tune with the reality of the colony. The Eden that he is envisaging across the waters of the bay has much more in common with Hell (Luke,[...]episode, describes it as “Pandemonium: an abode of devils”) which has no room for moral niceties. Jason, of course, is not alone in holding this view, and hi[...]clashes with the convicts laboring in the streets of Sydney, as Jassy finds herself the object of crude suggestive- ness, and of mockery for her lameness. The brutal response of a guard to the convicts is as disturbing to the f[...]en their departure from the oppressive atmosphere of the town offers little respite from the sense of a country divided into nobs and scum, an environm[...]an official document, guaranteeing him possession of government land, rich for grazing — Jason’s way is shown to be inappropriate to the needs of the settlers. First Luke, then Charlton (John Clayton), a prospective ticket—of—leave employee being interviewed by Jason, warn him of his error in not anticipating that their journey overland would ruin the fleece on the sheep bought in Sydney. A fair man,’ Jason realizes his mistake, and recognizes what is to be gained from the advice of those who know better than he what is required to[...]on, but not before Luke has voiced his resentment of his fathers authority: “Does he play whist, father?” In fact, as he witnesses Jason’s generous offer of wages, he usurps that authority, interrupting the[...]ason, according to convention, stands at the head of the family, directing the route it must take. His[...]than etiquette, kindness and diplomacy (the mode of 5 Cinema Papers, October — l2l |
 | [...]) after Roberts has been tricked into killing one of Luke‘s enemies. behavior most likely to appeal to an audience of popular television). Luke, on the other hand, while aware of his place in the family, is little concerned with it or with any other of the conventions on which a civilized community is[...]). Given this dramatic conflict, and the absence of any resolution to it, the placing of sympathies in A Sort Ofof the landscape is nicely evoked by the recurrent references to the broad vistas of mountains and forests, a reading of these images being directed by the orchestral surge of the soundtrack music (a score which, by the way,[...]hatic and intrusive). But against this suggestion of a romantic adventure into the unknown, one has to set a more localized, and immediately hostile, sense of place. This feeling is illustrated by a single camera movement, from left to right, across the trunk of a decayed tree, the Firbecks and their newly- acq[...]the road towards their new home. The implication of this image is a dwarfing of the individual, his boundless hopes for the futur[...]Luke as well) being situated within the confines of his immediate location within the landscape. As[...]ted Luke casts a suspicious eye on the activities of the shepherds around the wagon which contains their supplies. He recognizes the nature of these activities too late —— Charlton has robbed them. The moment of rest, of distraction from the task demanding full and constant attention, is sufficient to sabotage their chance of success. Luke alone seems capable of realizing the need for total commitment, and his pursuit and arrest of the thief demonstrate this. He beats infor- mation out of the shepherd who has remained behind with the Fir[...]ough! I want to stay with you.”), bribes it out of the occupants of the inn/brothel (its sign carries the temptation of “Bed and Bawd”) in the scanty township to whi[...]ary authorities. Charlton has made an occupation of robbing prospective settlers, disposing of his goods so that his guilt cannot be proven. The[...]r Weir and Luke. Victoria Anoux as Rosie, one of the “girls“ at the Border lnn. Luke, uninhib[...]in propriety, characterized by a ruthless pursuit of his own end, has been able to succeed by adapting[...]gs. Side by side with the Firbeck saga in A Sort of Gentleman is the introduction of the first of a series of periphery characters whose stories direct attention, in terms of narrative, away from the central conflict of Jason and Luke, but serve to sharpen our focus on it in terms of the aesthetic structure of the particular episode. Aloysius Fogg (Barry Hill[...]time he expressed his love for Jassy, arrives in Sydney to set himself up in a law firm, and finds that t[...]arded his money is now penniless and on the brink of suicide. In desperatestraits, he meets up again[...]ance upon her, which is rejected, and the removal of a sextant from the Firbecks’ equipment, which Luke discovers by chance in his pursuit of Charlton. Fogg has begun the episode with dignit[...]n impulses and the uncompromising circum- stances of life in the colony, to a situation in which his[...]accurately, his amoral one) by invalidating that of the gentleman, forces Fogg to watch the whipping[...]ss, Luke responds by offering him the alternative of confessing and thus alleviating his stricken cons[...]e Firbeck . . . You'll do well. This is a bastard of a place; it’ll take a bastard to lick it.” L[...]distance, the nowhere beyond the legal boundaries of the colony. As he asks, “Whose land is that?”, director Hannam places a group of convicts working in a chain gang in the middle- foreground, while in the background the unconquered beauty of the Blue Mountain foothills invites the entry of those who dare. “A new world, an open pa[...] |
 | [...]rosby and director Ken Hannam during the shooting of the A Sort of Gentleman episode. m. . ‘ u. Luke explains[...]A Man Worse Than Cormac episode. the scriptures of Australian history by those convicts, by the unse[...]s been granted to another. In a scene with echoes of the opening one, Luke re-enters the family circle, drunk with his dream of the way that lies ahead, intruding on their depre[...]requires that they become squatters, their tenure of the land an illegal but condoned one, their statute that of stinking commoners, their kingdom of Luke’s design, rather than Jason’s. But it is[...]y Luke’s enthusiasm. I have suggested that one of the most interesting aspects of Luke’s Kingdom is the way in which each segment serves to illuminate the characters and relationship of Luke and his father. The pattern seems to be the introduction of a character linked by behavior or context with Lu[...]t drama providing clarification or qualification of our perspective on the two men, and intensifying[...]intention to settle outside the legal boundaries of the colony, in what is now known as “No Man’s[...]lier Luke as he declares to the officer in charge of the local soldiery, “Liberty is riches with the[...]at he now needs “more land”, that their stock of sheep will have to be tripled in a year. The connection of the two sequences in the prologue, the placing of the two men at the centre of the drama in each, and the sentiments offered by[...]title to the episode suggests its own comparison of them. That Luke is ostensibly the hero and that Doyle is the villain (the later intrusion of his men into the Firbeck land can be likened to t[...]Donald Bull, directed by Peter Hammond), a ticket-of-leave convict, Jack Skelton, has gained employmen[...]becks. Expressing his resentment at the treatment of convicts by the authorities (“like beasts for t[...]thus presenting a metaphor for what the savagery of Australia has done to its inhabitants, he finds a sympathetic Jassy willing to listen to his tale of woe and to understand his yearning to return home to his wife. As a result of an incident at the inn (an attempt to defend an Aboriginal boy against the mistreat- ment of one of the local ruffians), Skelton finds himself answer[...]d then, more seriously, for breaking the contract of his ticket-of-leave by working outside the legal boundaries of the colony. The corrupt local magistrate sentence[...]her retrea- LUKE‘S KINGDOM ting to the safety of a belief in “God’s will”. For Jason, the situation becomes a crisis of conscience. He remains poised between his humanit[...]inst the cruel magistrate exercising the dictates of the law, but is persuaded to protect the escapee[...]is, and . . This confrontation with Jassy is one of several between the two in the episode. The others find Jassy reacting against his nostalgic recall of Britain and of her mother, accusing him of having failed to give her sufficient support to live. Jason is thus linked with Skelton in terms of their response to the hardship of their present circumstances, both acting with dignity against the injustices of the colony, both aware of the humiliation that the destruction of their principles entails, and both seeking respit[...]s the wounded Skelton rides off to die at the end of the episode, his departure witnessed by Jason and[...]at least been able to face death with the comfort of having been questing for freedom, rather than with the morti- fication of being forever imprisoned “on the island”. The method of construction of Luke’s Kingdom around the interruption of outsiders into the life of the Firbecks is an intelligent one, in the way it, in line with the pattern of the continuous drama, shifts the centre of interest in each of the separate narratives, while at the same time,[...]are implicit in all the episodes. The appearance of relative innocents, like Fogg, Skelton, Cope (in[...]n Enemy Too Many) brings to the fore the presence of Britain and her values and the motif of (in the words of Jason’s diary) “pygmy mortals who violate a w[...]or “corrupted by the savagery". The intrusion of the lawless, like Cormac Doyle, Corporal Bailey ([...]ott (An Enemy Too Many), underlines the impotence of those who attempt to survive in the wilderness on the basis of an alien morality. In Luke’s words, “We are e[...]men who fill their empty lives quoting the books of law. There are no laws here.” Any discussion of Luke’s Kingdom must finally focus on Luke, whose character lies at the heart of this continuous drama. With his obsessional behavior he belongs somewhere in that line of anguish-ridden figures found in the John Wayne characters of Ford films; in the James Stewart characters of Anthony Mann’s westerns; in the gangsters who inhabited the 1920s and 1930s environments of Raoul Walsh’s films; or in the tormented heroes of much of Nicholas Ray’s cinema. As such, he is unique t[...]thless in satisfying his own desires, his methods of |
 | ZZ— Eric Rohmer is one of the most uncompromising directors in France today: uncompromising in his choice of subjects, in the actors he works with, and in the[...]s a director, Rohmer also lectured in film at the University of Paris 1, and has made a number of programs for French educational television. Roh[...]y began in the 1950s but never really was a part of the explosion which was the New Wave. Despite th[...]omolli, Barbet Schroeder, Jacques Rivette — all of whom have now taken radically different direction[...]many critical articles for the “first period” of ‘Cahiers du Cinema’, and it is obvious that[...]er than specifically cinema. Was “The Marquise of O” a long- range project? No, it was quite a r[...]easier, but the Italians have such a personal way of making their films that it is very difficult for[...]. What really appealed to you in “The Marquise of 0”? Everything. To begin with, the way it was[...]do now in Percival. That is to say, a certain way of integrating narration with the action; of allowing the dialogue to take over the narration, and vice versa. In The Marquise, although there are a lot of things narrated by Kleist, I did not want to use[...]t was in indirect speech * — and there is a lot of it — into direct speech. I also did this becaus[...]he has remained faithful to his original project of the six “Contes Moraux” (“Moral Tales”),[...]rman) “Die Marquise vonO...” (“The Marquise of O”) which is a rigorous, suggestive and beautiful staging of the Kleist text. No small amount of credit for the pictorial accuracy and harmony of “The Marquise” must be given to Rohmer’s c[...]researching a project based on the medieval text of ‘Percival’ by Chretien de Troyes. The follo[...]e in Kleist, and the only thing I kept in the way of narration were the inter-titles, which were very[...]will narrate what they are doing; they will speak of themselves in the third person. For example, the[...]ere must be similarities . . . Are you conscious of these? No; that is to say, there are subjects wh[...]an ambiguity between good and evil and an absence of clear-cut judge- ment, I like very much. I would[...]st that. I like characters who are on the limits of the diabolical and the angelic. Like Pasc[...] |
 | [...]Die Marquise van 0 “is theatrical in the type of acting called for, in its construction, but not i[...]ise. In your introduction to the written version of the “Moral Tales”, you say there are no origi[...]turning to literary adaptations? It is somewhat of a paradox. Even if you want to write for the cine[...]f it is very beautiful and original, such as that of Bergman. I find that it is sometimes a little opp[...]I wanted to say. In another interview you spoke of “The Marquise” as a performance of the Kleist text, rather than a transposition into[...]as perhaps more ambitious — it was the ambition of my generation to make something lasting. Now I re[...]g which is ephemeral, which only lasts the length of the performance. Also, I find that theatre the w[...]myself —-— if only from an experimental point of view. In any case, I dont think I would become a[...]ly in the theatre, but from an experimental point of View I would certainly like to do something. You[...]is very theatrical? It is theatrical in the type of acting it called for, in its construction, but no[...]The Marquise there is no stage. There is no point of view which would be that of a theatre spectator; we are actually in the apart[...]fireplace to the mirror. There is an end-on view of a corridor — which is something that wouldn’t[...]rical set can have only three walls (the position of the fourth wall being taken by the audience), whe[...]e Marquise, in particular, there is only one type of music used — the drum — and I played t[...] |
 | [...]o dividethe narration into two —. the character of Jerome, who tells his story, and the novelist, wh[...]terested in Murnau from a visual or a moral point of view?Well, what I studied in Murnau was a certain organization of space, and in particular the presence of certain motifs, such as the expan- sion and contr[...]ay, but that is something a director is not aware of. Murnau, however, has been important for me in t[...]d me, though I am not always absolutely conscious of this. And Hitchcock . . .? Yes, of course. Unlike some of my colleagues, I do not have a good memory. For e[...]o encounters. Why do you disallow all possibility of this woman ever remaining with the hero? But that is the theme, or the subject. There is no way of replying to that, since it is the starting point.[...]sionate affair with a Milena. Doesn’t this type of situation interest you? I don’t know. She is alluded to in order to show a certain richness of life in all these characters, to show that this i[...]to show that these characters have a life outside of the story. Do you think women are less morally s[...]The woman is presented from a more interior point of view. But it is evident that in all my films the[...], does Aurora (the novelist) represent your point of view? In your other tales there is no equivalent[...]fternoon. divide the narrator into two. My point of view is not necessarily that of the narrator’s — I film someone who is tellin[...]are two people who tell the story: the character of Jerome, who tells his story, and the novelist, wh[...]a subject which was narrated, but without the use of the voice—over of a narrator. But Aurora brings an ironic element to the film, a point of view which the spectator himself provided before[...]es the character in the film who is the spectator of the other, who tells his story . . . Are you able to teach what interests you at the university? Personally, it is not cinema that I would most[...]but I am not qualified. And the cinema is a part of other art forms. I find that it is interesting to[...]your time reading? I am not one to devour a lot of films. Sometimes I find it sufficient to see the films shown at the university during the week. I read much more, but this is co[...]h Percival, I am studying not only the literature of the Middle Ages, but also their art and so on. I am more often in front of a book than in a cinema. When do you thin[...] |
 | [...]SERVICE AGREEMENTS - Z In this seventh part of a 19—part series, Cinema Papers contributing ed[...]citors Leon Gorr and Ian Baillieu discuss another of the service agreements a producer must grapple wi[...]operty to the screen. 1 . Introduction A number of differing forms of service contracts for talent are discussed below as well as the Equity standard form of agreement which feature film producers within Australia have to enter into because of the union situation. The Equity Agreement sets ou[...]hich compensation clauses, default clauses, grant of rights clauses and general covenants clauses are[...]s differ from British and U.S. models in a number of ways. Except for a few stars, local agents give l[...]e unlikely to argue greatly about the whole grant of rights clauses that their clients frequently sign[...]r any promotional tours or the like. The concept of free time is a negotiating ploy used by overseas[...]Australia, which local producers should be aware of. An agent, after having agreed to a fee for say f[...]is paid on a weekly rate calculated at the amount of the total fee divided by thenumber of working weeks. Local artists are less likely to[...], limousine to set/location; 16mm * The grant ofof finished film for private use; first class air tr[...]aranteeing the performance by the service company of its obligations to cause the artist to perform.[...]foreign artists, in addition to the requirements of Equity, discussed below, the producer will need a[...]with the artist allowing him to deduct any amount of withholding tax from the artist’s salary and/or share of profits as determined by the Commissioner of Taxation. The producer will also note that he wil[...]. The producer may also wish to consider the form of currency the com- pensation should be paid in, e.[...]are more likely to want a salary package instead of a mere cash fee. This salary package may include an additional fee deferred out of first producer’s profits paid pari passu with (or sometimes ahead of) other defer- ments as well as a piece of the producer’s net or gross. The salary package may need stepped payments over a number of financial years or payments to a third party. Oth[...]Department) and Aboriginals (refer the Department of Aboriginal Affairs). 2. The Equity Agreement In[...]ent with Actors and Announcers Equity Association of Australia, the union to which all working actors[...]an extent through the Creative Development branch of the AFC, have generally been exempted. It is an[...]fully be remedied, that there is no standard form of equity agreement which each producer automaticall[...]een agreed to after discussion by representatives of Equity and 1111- feature film producers. As it[...]ir thrall, and have been able to develop a number of clauses and attitudes which are oppressive to the[...]ly repressed industry situation. Equity’s form of agreement (an example of which is set out in Precedent 10A) begins by considering the ambit of its agreement and unreasonably attempts to prevent Australian producers from the reality of exploiting their rights to video cassette, cable television and similar forms of distribution. The union’s ground is that they are too difficult for them to control. The form of the agreement contains many clauses that are adop[...]ndard contract. In the U.S., however, the number of actresses and actors available have made it possi[...]southern states, particularly in low budget areas of filmmaking. Basic rates of pay are set out for various sets ofof pay set out in the agreement apply only to Austra[...]U.S. network) and U.S. network. The total amount of these loadings have varied from film to film, bu[...]d 125 per cent, depending on the bargaining power ofof ancillary rights within Australia claiming they are too difficult for the union to control. Clause 36 of Precedent 10A sets out a form of stepped loading for ancillary rights, similar in[...]agreement. The producer is faced with the problem of either paying all (or most of) the loadings at once without knowing whether he will need to exploit some of these rights, or waiting until there is need to l[...]g basic rate, not the rate prevailing at the time of entering the general agreement, and he may[...] |
 | [...]ical parts. Actors may be joined for the duration of a production only, if Equity agrees, but the joining fee may be more than the cost of the quarterly membership.It is worth checking t[...]egotiable. Producers may want to widen the grant of rights clause (clause 25 in Precedent 10A) to bring it into line with clause 4 of Precedent 10B: the long term “star" agreement,[...]otiable point. The clauses concerning alteration of calls; holds; overtime and Sunday rates should be[...]ld not do the part. There is a strong atmosphere of chauvinism prevalent in Equity which stands at lo[...]greement does not concern itself with intricacies of billing, but in the event of a foreign performer being considered, Equity may[...]bject to a foreign performer getting 100 per cent of the above the title billing. Again the producer will find ways of negotiating here. 3. Long form ‘Star’ Agreement A form of such agreement is set out in Precedent l0B, which is contained in the sub- scription service. This style of agreement will be used for the leading role or ro[...]nt if the performer, either local or imported, is of some box—office value. The agreement sets out the period of employ- ment of the artist, which may or may not include a stop date by which, regardless of over schedul- ing, the artist must be allowed to[...]contracts modelled on American agreements. It is of dubious merit. American law precludes specific performance of a contract for personal services, but there is a specific exception in Section 526 (5) California Code of Civil Procedure and Labour Code Section 2855 whic[...]to that found in clause 3(d). Australian courts, of course, are loath to enforce by specific performance contracts for personal service. The grant of rights clause is extensive and includes a basic p[...]doubling rights, full cutting rights (a reflexion of the ‘pay or play’ clause, which may be partia[...]ts approval clauses); publicity rights; ownership of any literary material provided by the artist for[...]ights. The general covenants clause has a number of provisions which have been previously discussed in Part 6 of the series: the Directors Agreement to which read[...]ip clause. Detailed provisions, as to the effect of inter- ruption or default, are set out. These cla[...]ly negotiated. The need is to minimize the amount of time an artist may be disabled, disfigured, in de[...]oducer can terminate the agreement. At the speed of schedules Australian producers work on, a period of more than two or three days may be enough to jeopardize the completion of the film. The question of the compensation payable to the artist, before te[...]ttled. Billings clauses are only beginning to be of concern to Australian agents although they will b[...]or by agents for foreign artists. Different sorts of billing requirements reflect the supposed stature of the star. The form and size of the billing is generally related in size and positioning of the films title card, and there will be exclusion[...]use 7(ii) has been discussed in the previous part of this series. In an acting context this clause can give the producer an untrammelled right to reduce the size ofof contract clauses. There is also a savings clause which provides that in the event of any conflict between this agreement and the Equit[...]to which this agreement protects him in the event of breach, is when all is said and done an actor can[...]erform. No drafting can protect against this sort of behavior. 4. Short form ‘Featured Players’ A[...]cription service is basically an abridged version of the long form agreement 10B. Unlike the long form agreement the compensation clause provides for a breakdown of the salary total into various component parts, in[...]agreement. A loadings clause sets out a breakdown of various loadings the production has agreed to with Equity. The grant of rights clause is a standard release coupled with[...]tor on set and a sufficiently comprehensive grant of rights and exclusion of liability for certain hazardous acts, damages and[...]Equity Agreement AGREEMENT entered into this day of One thousand nine hundred and seventy BETWEEN ACTORS‘ AND ANNOUNCERS' EQUITY ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA of 72 Stanley Street. Darlinghurst. New South Wales (hereinafter called “the Union") of the One part AND of (hereinafter called “the Producer“) of the Other part relating to the minimum fees, sala[...]er remuneration to be paid to, and the conditions of engagement of artists engaged by the Producer to work (rehearsa[...]r work) in or for or incidental to the production of a feature film as hereinafter defined and as here[...]"the film") tentatively known as 1. APPLICATION OF AGREEMENT A. The Producer agrees that notwithstanding anything else herein contained no performance of an artist in connection with the said film may be[...]es or the like is effected solely for the purpose of normal transmission by a television station and w[...]other purpose or in any other manner or disposed of such as for but not in limitation thereof retail sale. B. The Producer agrees that any agreement of engagement between the Producer and any member of the Union or other person engaged by the Producer[...]set out in this agreement and that the conditions of engagement of each artist shall never be more onerous than the[...]t in this agreement. The Producer agrees that all of the terms of this agreement shall apply to all persons engaged[...]visual or oral or both) in the film irrespective of the weekly or daily salary. wage or fee paid to s[...]n. PROVIDED THAT it is distinctly agreed that all of the monetary terms set out herein are minimum terms and all of the hours set out herein are maximum ordinary hours and that the number of days work per week set out herein is the maximum number of ordinary working days per week. C. The Union agr[...]ith the Producer for the film during the currency of this agreement and that the Union will not call or order any stoppage of work by artists engaged by the Producer for work in accordance with the terms of this agreement. PROVIDED THAT the Union may order a stoppage of work by artists if it be reasonably established that the Producer is committing a breach or breaches of this agreement. 2. DURATION OF AGREEMENT This agreement shall commence on 1st August 1977 and continue for a period of one year or until the completion of the said film whichever is the sooner. 3. BASIS OF MINIMUM RATES OF PAY. ETC. The minimum rates of pay set out in this agreement are based on the mi[...]rates set out in this agreement as from the date of operation of such Award increase. 4. FEES/WAGES — SCALE OF MINIMUMS PAYABLE The minimum fee, wage or salary[...]performance and work incidental to the production of the film shall be: Basic Rates Total Minimum Rat[...]6 per day (iii) Engaged bythe hour for a minimum of 4 hours and not required to speak more than two lines of dialogue $8.25 Plus Minimum Loading (120%) $9.9[...]photographed in a manner which avoids recognition of the Double and who does not speak dialogue[...] |
 | [...]$47.52 per day D. STUNTMEN/WOMEN a: Minimum terms of engagement as per sub-clause A. of this Claus 4E. CROWD EXTRAS (An Extra is a person whether in costume or not who is part ofof the public in modern civilian dress to join in a scene and such members of the public shall not be regarded as employees and shall not otherwise be covered by the terms of this agreement.) (i) Engaged by the hour for a minimum of four hours $5.97 per hour (ii) Engaged by the da[...]is an artist who is less than sixteen (16) years of age.) Juveniles shall be paid at rtorless than 50% of the applicable rates of pay set out in this agreement. G. MINIMUM LOADING Excepting as to Crowd Extras‘ rates the minimum rates of pay set out in this Clause4 contain loadings tota[...]red and twenty per centum (120%) in consideration of which the Producer is granted sole theatrical (ci[...]as excepted). H. POST SYNCHRONISATION. RECORDING OF WILD LINES OR ADDITIONAL DIALOGUE (i) An artist[...]rtist and the Producer with a minimum call period of 215 hours; other than during his normal call time[...]'s voice in one episode shall be paid at the rate of $12.37 per hour with a minimum call period of 21/; hours for any one programme. (iii) The voice of an artist appearing in a programme may not be dub[...]v) Payments as set out in paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this sub-clause shall be the full and only paymen[...]dio premises or location hotel room on completion of a day's shooting; but not recorded to picture; ar[...]hooting time or extension thereof. I. ALTERATION OF CALLS If for any reason the Producer alters the date of any call or calls before or.during an engagement,[...]ist provided that not less than seven days notice of such alteration has been given to the artist prior to the time of the original call. Should less than seven days but more than iorty-eight hours notice of such alteration be given, the artist shall be entitled to a fee of not less than sixteen and two-thirds per centum (162[3°/n) of his negotiated fee for such altered call or calls[...]thirty-three and one—third per centum (33|}3%) of his negotiated fee for the altered or postponed c[...]artist—or with an artists agent for the placing of a "hold" upon the artist for a period exceeding thirty-six (36) hours from the time of the commencement of such hold and an artist or his agent may not agree to such "hold" exceeding such period of thirty-six (36) hours. K. CLIMA'I1C ALLOWANCE WO[...]ia, Northern Territory, Eastern or Northern Zones of Western Australia, Western or Northern Zones ot S[...]he artist shall be paid at a daily or weekly rate of pay for his ordinary hours of work a sum which is not less than a sum which is 10% in excess of the daily or weekly rates set out in this clause[...]e in the world outside the territorial boundaries of the Commonwealth of Australia or its dependencies (excluding Antarcti[...]he artist shall be paid at a daily or weekly rate of pay for his ordinary hours of work a sum which is not less than a sum which is 10% in excess of the daily or weekly rates set out in this clause for all such work. 5. ANNUAL LEAVE The provisions of the New South wales Annual Holidays Act shall app[...]ged for work intbe film as though each engagement of an artist were made in the State of New South Wales and as though the entire engagement was carried out in that State. Payments in lieu of annual leave shall be calculated on the total min[...]ein, whichever is the greater. 6. ORDINARY HOURS OF WORK The Maximum ordinary hours of work shall — (i) For weekly engagements not ex[...]break excluded) on any one day. (ii) In the case of a per day engagement not exceed eight consecutive[...]make-up shall be in the artist's time. 7. NOTICE OF CALL TIMES The Producer shall notify an artist employed on a weekly basis at the end of each day's work in the studio or on location as the case may be of the artist's commencing time for the next day's w[...]give the artist not less than twelve hours notice of starting time. 130 —— Cinema Papers, October[...](i) For weekly engagements time worked in excess of nine hours on any one day shall be paid for at ti[...]vided that all overtime in any one week in excess of fifteen hours shall be paid for at double time.[...]sixth day in a week he shall be paid at the rate of time-and—a- half for all ordinary time worked o[...](iii) For daily engagement time worked in excess of eight hours shall be paid for at time-and-a-half[...]uired to work between midnight and 6.00am as part of his ordinary hours of work shall be paid an additional 15% of the hourly rate to be calculated on the artists B[...](vi) where an artist has not been given a break of ten clear hours between the cessation of work on one day and the commencement of work on the next succeeding day he shall be paid at the rate of double time for all time worked during the said break of ten hours with a minimum payment as for one hour[...]c Holiday which occurs during the artist's period of engagement the artist shall be credited with eigh[...]tist to negotiate for and receive rates in excess of the rates herein set out. A negotiated rate may include payment for a specified number of hours of overtime (whether worked or not) provided that-[...]of are set out in writing (signed by or on behalf of the Producer and artist) prior to the commencement of the engagement; and (b) the amount of such negotiated rate shall not be less than the aggregate of all applicable rates herein set out. 11. MEAL AN[...](i) An artist shall be provided with a meal break of a duration of not less than forty-five minutes nor more than sixty minutes and the length of such duration shall be the prerogative of the Producer. The time of such meal break shall commence between noon and 1.30pm in the case of lunch or between 5.00 p.m. and 6.30 p.m. in the case of dinner. PFIOVIDED however that in any event such[...]ur hours nor later than five hours from the start of the actual work session involved. (ii) Should an[...]ce not later than ten hours from the commencement of the artist's work on that day and at the Producer[...]a satisfactory three-course meal or paid the sum of $3.00 in lieu thereof. (iii) The artist shall be allowed a tea or smoko break of ten minutes‘ duration in the Producer's time during each session of work and not later than 2.5 hours from the beginning of the work session. (iv) All meal breaks other tha[...]time. (v) An artist shall be entitled to a break of not less than ten clear hours between the time of cessation of work on one day and the commencement of work on the next succeeding day. 12. TRAVELLING[...]he Producer to travel away from the artists place of residence (temporary or permanent as the case may be) to the place of the Producer's registered office for the performance of the artist's work. when such travel involves any[...]be provided with a sleeping berth at the expense of the Producer if such berth is procurable and if n[...]department for such sleeping berth. in the event of the Producer requiring an artist to travel by air[...]asis and the Producer agrees that no off loading of an artist will take place as a consequence of that artist holding an F.O.C. ticket. The Produc[...]Producer shall pay to the artist a meal allowance of $1.50 for breakfast, $2.00 for lunch and $3.00 fo[...]uired to stay away overnight from his usual place of residence. the artist shall be provided with firs[...]ion or the Producer shall pay to the artist a sum of $15.00 per night for overnight accommodation whil[...]l cities, first class accommodation shall consist of an unshared room with bath or shower room and toilet facilities therein except in cases of emergency. The artist shall during such an emergency, be paid $15.00 per day by the Producer in lieu of such accommodation. (iv) In any event if an arti[...]vailable to the artist or the artist is by reason of wearing costume and/or make-up unable to proceed[...]satisfactory meals or pay to the artist an amount of $2.00 for lunch and $3.00 for dinner. (v) if an[...]suit the artist's convenience and be paid the sum of $15.00 for each such day or part thereof. If the[...]artist shall be paid for each day or part thereof of such travel at half his negotiated wage for each day of such travel including the days of departure and return. (vi) Travelling time other[...]lause shall be counted as working time in respect of all travel both ways between the pick-up point (referred to in subclause (vii) of this clause) and location, with a maximum travelling time of eight hours on any one day. (vii) An artist is r[...]taxi, private car or chartered bus), at the place of temporary residence of the Interstate artists engaged for that day's wor[...]d for a time later than the time for commencement of work for the day may be required to use such public transport as is available and the use of which is reasonable in the circumstances. The Producer shall reimburse the artist the cost of fares paid for such public transport. (3) Travel[...](b) For rehearsals, at such place within a radius of five miles of the General Post Office as is nominated by the Pr[...]ed by the Producer to and from the artist's place of residence (temporary or permanent as the case may[...]be available during working hours for the taking of still photographs to be used by the Producer only[...]AGEMENT TO BE SET DOWN IN WRITING The engagement of an artist shall be properly set out in writing and shall clearly set out full details of the engagement including the artist's rate of pay and period of engagement. The Producer shall provide each artist with such written agreement of engagement at a time which is: (i) Not later than 72 hours after the verbal or other confirmation of an artist‘s engagement. (ii) Not later than 8 clear days prior to the commencement of an artist's engagement. (iii) In the case of the verbal or other confirmation having been made[...]o provide an artist with the said written details of engagement as provided in (i) or (ii) of this clause an artist shall be given such written details of his engagement prior to the actual commencement of the engagement. PROVIDED that in the case of an artist being required by the Producer to trave[...]he said written details prior to his commencement of such travel. SIIBSIIBIPIIIIII SEBIIIEE Orders are now being taken for the loose leaf subscription series of the "Guide for the Australian Film Producer“ by[...]as the local production industry grows. Teachers of film will also find the service a useful aid. First mailing of the series will be in January 1978. There will be an installation fee of $A75 and an annual subscription of $A75. In most instances, subscriptions to the gu[...]it with a cheque for $150. The initial print run of the service will be limited and only paid orders[...]December 21 will be guaranteed a January mailing of the binder and first material. To Cinema[...] |
 | [...]ing the next 12 to 18 months. I think the effects of the introduction of color television and the economy will still be wi[...]ar is going to be tough also. I hope that the end of next year will see us come out of it —— at least the color television side.One of Hoyts’ major expansive activities in the exhibi[...]st 18 months or so is the Entertainment Centre in Sydney. How is that working.’ It’s a great success[...]nsive centre, costing $14 million. That’s a lot of money on which to get an adequate return. However, the Centre is one of the few theatres in the world that really works f[...]other theatre will work that way for a film. One of the aims of the Entertain- ment Centre, by virtue of the scale and size of the theatres, was that it would enable a film to[...]t might. . . Terry Jackman, managing director of Hoyts Theatres Ltd., is one of the new style executives now running some of the major exhibition and distribution companies i[...]theatres there before it finishes. The whole idea of the Centre is flexibility. However, it’s not quite as simple as it sounds, because it depends on the type of film you have coming in as openers. For instance,[...]has to play in a small house. In addition, in one of the two small houses, Cousin Cousine was such a s[...]it ran 26 weeks. There have been rumors that one of the theatres is going to be broken down into two[...]Cinema Papers, October — 131 r. Leon Saunders (Sydney) |
 | [...]Jimmie Blacksmith in Fred Schepisi‘s The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, the first Australian film that[...]ated. At the same time, we probably will twin two of the houses which will give us five in that building and three in the other, making Melbourne the same as Sydney if we twin one of the larger houses there. We have an additional pr[...]It’s a little more developed than the plans for Sydney and I may do it next year. We have to do such ren[...]the grand staircase. Fortunately, it will be one of the few usable National Trust theatres, unlike the Plaza Theatre in Sydney. We will build the four cinemas in the existing auditorium, and that will begin early next year.One of the ideas that was mooted by your predecessor —[...]ban drive- ins were concerned — was the putting of selective hard-tops into drive-in fields in Melb[...]about. They are fairly old and in the wrong kind of areas. What are your views on Hoyts- Fox’s inv[...]involved during the past two years in the opening of the Entertainment Centre. It was a gigantic proje[...]laced behind it. As to production, we have a lot of confidence in the standard of Aus- tralian productions and are confident that w[...]r us to enter into it. In addition, we have a lot of theatres and there is not enough box—office films from tradi- tional suppliers, so we ne[...]ction industry in this country, and the directors of the company share this view. What attracted you to “The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith”, the first film Hoyts has in[...]c confidence in Fred Schepisi, who I think is one of three or four top directors in the country. “The Chant of Jimmie Black- smith” has, by Australian standar[...]o The new 7-cinema Hoyts Entertainment Centre in Sydney. become involved in projects with budgetary scal[...]stralian production? Though there has been a lot of talk, there really isn’t a budget. There is, however, an amount of money we think about,»but there is no actual bud[...]ceived. I guess you could call it the first right of refusal. And if Fox decides to buy the film for[...]even been discussed. As there is no deal outside of the Australia-New Zealand area, it would be discu[...]for other territories. There have been a number of figures mentioned in the press about the exact amount of Hoyts’ investment in “Jimmie Black- smith”[...]producer. He reads the scripts THE PAST MEMBERS OF THE PANTHER , FAMILY HAVE BEEN ;_:~ I[...] |
 | [...]Italian horror film, Suspira (Dario Argento), one of the independent films Hoyts has picked up for loc[...]ne —- I suppose that really rests with a number of people.Sandy has spent a lot of time with Fred talking over Jimmie Black- smith,[...]ome out about twice a year. Peter Rose, formerly of the South Australian Film Corporation, has now joined Hoyts. Is this evidence of a desire to build up expertise in the production[...]derstand, however, I’ 5-an that selected box-offlce receipts are about to be made available thro[...]in the past? I don't know why. Through the years of watching the production industry grow, it always[...]and exhibition-distribu- tion were magnified out of all proportion by a general refusal to talk. I d[...]ably give people in the production area some idea of our problems. When you work out what it costs us[...]ion and distribu- tion rights. There are a couple of other interesting looking projects, but we really want to make certain IT IS THE CRE-\'.l'[9T .\lYSl'ER\' OF “L lll(.\l SE .V( 5 HL MAX BEING \\l| L l'.\l'[...].-\R.\'lNG FORET( )l D l'( )R l‘l'l0L‘SA\'DS OF YEARS. IT IS (JL'R Fl.\':\L Wr\ll.\il.\.G. of where we are going and with whom. We are not just investing for the sake of it — we’d like to get our money back. If a p[...]ivileged arrangement with Hoyts, and the question of restrictive and exclusive franchises with Columbia and United Artists was tossed around. What percentage of Hoyts box- office receipts, say over the past 12[...]jor problem because prices are now completely out of context with what the market will stand. The prices asked are based on the boom period of two or three years ago when everybody was racing[...]nsorship? I believe we should have only one form of censorship. The Queens- land Board, of course, I grew to know very well, living four to[...]d I guess it’s only natural. When the “Story of 0” was banned in Queensland I under- stand you sought legal opinion on the possibility of contesting the ruling of the Queensland Board of Review . . . If I remember correctly, the genera[...]em worth the fight, bearing in mind the feelings of the Govern- ment. And yet, paradoxically, when a[...]ople are prepared to pay and see and the attitude of their elected government? I cant explain the attitude of the elected government. I used to talk at great length to all of them in the government and they felt that what th[...]k this is brought about in some way by the number of films that are banned,just as much as I think that the soft-core porno films screened around Sydney in commercial theatres are being affected by thes[...]Another recent censorship problem has been that of ‘R’ films in drive-ins, particularly those dr[...]way round this problem? There is no easy way out of it. We are going to need some form of self- regulation within the industry. If not, I a[...]bt this problem is becoming a big one, with a lot of pressure being put on governments to do something[...]miss out and there is going to be the usual cries of “Why me, why not you?” However, if we[...] |
 | [...]festival that were among the most interesting — Sydney with Mr Klein and Cria Cuervos, Melbourne with Ir[...]lose to what can be assumed a realistic portrayal of war, though here the sporadic fighting only occasionally jntrudes into the calm of a castle in Kratowice where several Prussian offi[...]solely in male company and disturbed by feelings of male love he has mostly contained, treats her pas[...]e in two areas: Sch|ondorff‘s delicate handling of the homo-erotic elements (perhaps here is the dir[...]film also reflects the continuing pre-occupation of German filmmakers in coming to terms with Germany[...]But in this period he sees links with the Germany of today: “The more the story unfolds, the more we can rediscover ourselves in it and recognize the traits of Prussian tradition and German history anchored in all of us.” A realistic sentiment, one not dissimilar[...]e des Hauses Wahniried 1914-1975 (The Confessions of Winifred Wagner).Sohrab Shahid Saless’ Reifezeit (Coming of Age) is a deceptively simple story of a boy and his single mother in a decaying suburb of Berlin. Yet, while Saless‘ long, static takes a[...]not impart a significance. Saless‘ style is one of accumulation, a relentless obsession with the ord[...]nally yields the extraordinary. The simple event of the boy returning home each day and climbing the[...]n a greater meaning. Obviously it imposes a sense of, if not imprisonment, then an absence of space. But this is only the superficial meaning.[...]m above. it is extremely moving. Another example of emotion being generated by repetition is the opening of the film where Saless delineates the different time planes of mother and son. The boy rises while she is asleep[...]s to bed down before her return. In this absence of sharing, their lives become like rituals, every action a mechanical gesture. And while Coming of Age does not pander to ones sympathy, the bleakness of the situation, the visible damage it is doing, and the unlikelihood of anything being done to change things, certainly i[...]attitude. And this may account for the difficulty of resolving one's emotional response with the contradictory nature of the film's concerns. Gerard (Gerard Depardieu),[...]ionship soon breaks down — Valerie accusing him of being the patriarchal head of a family that no longer exists — and in despera[...]Saless‘ deceptively simple, yet moving, Coming of Age. |
 | MELBO URNE/SYDNEY FESTIVALS bother by their insistence. But then, subtlety is not a Ferreri virtue. Part of the film's trouble is the muddle- headedness with[...]itically inactive. And to discourage any thoughts of abandoning the niceties of coupling, there is that dreaded fear of solitude. Gerard‘s move from Gabrielle to Valerie, therefore, is more the result of external forces on him than a decision of free will. As well, his efforts to maternalize hi[...]ch Pasolini would agree with given the sentiments of his ‘last recorded interview‘) but is it convincing? Certainly not so in the context of the film. Earlier in the film Gerard offers to p[...]y" and attempts to seduce a friend. It is the act of a man enslaved by society's notions of virility. Therefore to remove his own penis is to[...]l as liberating himself from stereotypic patterns of behavior. But he cannot and hence the contradicti[...]ble for its energy and the excellent performances of Depardieu and Ornella Muti. Claude Sautet's Mado is a return to the territory of his earlier Vincent, Francois, Paul et les Autres Simon (Michel Piccoli), a middle-aged owner of a small construction firm, is fighting to avoid a[...]h his principl_es already eroded by the pressures of survival, Simon finally resorts to the tactics of his enemy — though with an increasing awareness[...]unter-attacking Pierre’s abuse at the stupidity of prostitution, Mado replies, “We all sell oursel[...]sits his ex-wife Helene (Romy Schneider), an echo of the scene between Audran and Montand in Vincent[...]ly, Winter 1975-6, pp. 44. \ A grouping typical of a Claude Sautet film. Ottavia Piccolo as the pros[...]even when he discovers himself increasingly fond of Mado, he finds her drifting off with Pierre. This culmination of his descent comes when on returning from a celebration in the country, Simon’s group is caught in the mud of a construction site. It is, of course, highly symbolic, but then most things Sau[...]ace. And it conveys a sufficiently powerful sense of needless decay. Mada is generally entertaining a[...]y Ottavia Piccolo whose work, with the exceptions ofof |bsen‘s bitter attack on the puritan ethic. Th[...]he shatters the father, Hjalmar, by accusing him of building a fantasy world where the ‘real‘ is[...]sinuates that the 14-year-old Hedwig is the child of an affair between his father and Hjalmar’s wife[...]ve — the wild duck in the attic —— as proof of her love for Hjalmar. Hedwig then leaves to shoot[...]carefully composed and lengthy takes, sparse use of camera movement and claustrophobic, though never[...]nages to satisfy cinematically the restrictedness of |bsen’s play. And in this sense it follows the tradition of the recent German films of Syberberg and Schmid. However, Geissendorfer’s[...]rate his story on Hedwig. For despite the tragedy of the ending, her pure spirit is a positive force against the bleak poverty and calvanistic repression of Gregers. it makes a potentially stagnant play ver[...]1975, seven years after May ‘68 and by a series of accidents several former activists form a group.[...]us) the farm laborer turned self-employed teacher of the young, and her lover-to-be, Pierre (Jacques[...]at “t e coup e". so on. It is a group typical of an Alain Tanner film; a number of people all with different reasons as to why the energy of '88 dissipated. Despite the inherent promise of the situation, however, Jonas Gui Aura 25 Ans en[...]characters are convincingly real, but their lack of purpose is often too much the result of narrative looseness than intent. Balancing this[...]ackled. And this humor is apparent in the moments of seriousness, as when during a meaningful political discussion, a flood of tears is brought on by the, peeling of onions. This deliberate inversion of the expected with the unpredictable is elsewhere[...]farm, etc. it is a mosaic approach with moments of significance — Max joking that the world is bec[...]argues the film's sentiment, that the possibility of radical change must, at all costs, be kept alive.[...]a ‘ Cineaste, Vol. Vll, No.4, page 51. group of workers are victorious in a life- and-death strug[...]t (Harvest: 3000 years). Cantata is a recreation of a strike in 1907 at a British-owned nitrate mine;[...]d by Humberto Solas, Cantata is a classic example of political over-kill and excessive caricature. In[...]monologue on how all strikes are for the benefit of mankind, never for the individual strikers. Anot[...]as concentrates his camera solely on the officers of the suppressing army. We never see the ordinary s[...]roletariat w use their rifles. Repressive regimes of all persuasions need the support (either silent or active) of the majority of the proletariat to succeed. The fascist dictators[...]est: 3000 years, a depressingly realistic account of peasant life in Ethiopia, was significantly bette[...]ve landlord and his tenant farmers. And the agent of potential for change is the village fool,[...] |
 | MELBOURNE/SYDNEHY FESTIVALS Harvest: 3000 years is of particular interest in its observation/recreation of Ethiopian peasant life. And the significance of the title — that life has continued there uncha[...]and one greatly aided by the monotone photography of Elliott Davis. Fons Rademaker's Max Havelaar, an adaptation of Dekker's book on the Dutch East Indies in 1855, w[...]only too ready to course justice to the advantage of the East India Company. And into this situation c[...]ustice for all. His efforts, naturally, fall foul of the Regent and he is removed. The Indonesian nationals, likewise, are shown to foster the injustices of Dutch rule to suit their own, corrupt ends. In th[...]er position. Also interesting is the examination of the motivations of the Dutch, both in East India and at home. The Du[...]he more given the church’s deliberate promotion of colonial rule as a Christian act. Beautifully ph[...]epic cinema with political insight. The success of Pierre Rissient’s One Night Stand lies in the realistic way it captures, and delineates, that sense of displacement one feels when stranded alone in a foreign city; that double feeling of refuge and loneliness one experiences in anonymou[...]— but even this is doom- ed by the impermanence of one's stay. Rissient nicely counterpoints this barrenness with brief flashes of genuine. communication: the encounters between P[...]in responding fully to these alternating moments of illumination is an occasional stiltedness of dialogue. The film abounds with cinematic and literary references and these provide a level of conversation once removed from the everyday. But[...]st between this abstraction and ones expectations of the story. This tension is most apparent in the[...]Carle’s La Tete de Normande St. Onge (The Head of Normande St. Onge) is an intriguing, though basic[...]it has not been justified by the build-up. Part of the problem is that Carole Laure’s Normande is[...]in a canoe filled with blood) are too reminiscent of similar scenes in other films; they are all insufficiently different to denote insanity. Most of this miscalculation can be attributed to Carle’[...]and actress (or actor) are very close, an absence of critical distance can blur the ‘real’ charact[...]the one playing it. However, this possible lack of objectivity can have positive effects, as in the film's moments of sexual imagery. The scene of intercourse between Normande and Boulaine, for in[...]Tate are also satisfying, adding a nice dimension of craziness which helps in part to offset the sketchiness of Normande’s descent. J. Leo Gagnon is particularly good as the sculptor moulding a caste of the naked Normande; as is Renee Girard as Normand[...]s Don Owen's Partners Interesting mainly as proof of the inadvisability of marginal film industries making pseudo-American films, Partners is an uninvolving piece of light-weight escapism. And where Owen tries to invest some strains of sig- nificance (the diary extracts which parallel[...]eotypes is a delightful glance at the inhabitants of Rue Daguerre, a backwater street in the oldest part of Paris. It is full of rundown, overstocked shops, each with its peculia[...]is ability to find anything in the engorging mass of cardboard boxes and bric-a-brac. Varda is clearly fond of her subjects, and this helps her inject the film[...]m, as in the sequence where each shopkeeper tells of meeting his wife. Rather than being dismissive of their evident simplicity, Varda records them with[...]od), though at times somewhat slight, is a comedy of manners about a city family who takes on the realities of country life during a vacation. Some of Menzel‘s obsen/ation is sharp —- particularly[...]armer, Komarek, blissful in his easy manipulation of his city tenants. At times the film is also broa[...]Here, Sanders economically delineates the forces of oppression: class con- sciousness; a different, i[...]laar (on horse). language; a widespread distrust of foreigners; a fear that migrants are depriving Germans of work; etc. It is then, after a period of intense loneliness relieved only by shared sympat[...]brupt and unsatisfactory melodrama. This loading of the dice is most evident in Sanders‘ manipulation of Shirin’s descent into prostitution. Hearing of Carole Laure as Normande during her descent into[...]act with the pimp. However, as Shirin has a photo of Mahmud, why did she not show it to her fri[...] |
 | [...]n Jiri Menzel’s The Cottage Near a Wood. mercy of any depraved and base men who confront her, but b[...]Bernice Bobs her Hair — unquestionably the best of the shorts — is stunning. Based on a slight but charming short story of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Bernice shows remarkable fla[...]ed in the correct manner, can make great cinema. Of the others, Fassbinder’s Chine- sisches Roulett[...]l Pacific) has a certain charm in its depic- tion of the downstairs world in a large hotel. Gori, Gori, Moja Zvezda (Burn Ever Bright, My Star), a labored piece of regressive Soviet propoganda, was en- livened only occasionally by the catching performances of Oleg Tabokov and Yelena Proklova. And Ulli Lommel’s Adolf und Marlene, a silly parody of Adolf Hitler, was a late entry that proved not late enough. Scott Murray It is in the realm of the private that one can confront the forces of repression, that a socially circumscribed reality can be subverted. The boundaries of such rebellion are inevitably limited, and so it[...]onsciousness is insufficient to change the course of history, though the particular dimension of its quest can provide a perspective on it. L’Empire des Sens ( In the Realm of the Senses/ Empire of the Senses) sets in sharp tension this private en[...]lready attempted to place the film in the context of director Nagisa Oshima’s other available work.‘ Accepting the validity of her commentary (I have only seen Gishiki (The Ceremony) and In The Realm of The Senses), it is clear that Oshima is con- stantly preoccupied with the question of Japan and her identity in history, though “it is the spirit of the Japanese, rather than any text-book chronology, that is the real subject of Oshima’s explorations". The period of In The Realm Of The Senses (1936) is barely decipherable, ‘Ci[...]master, Kichizo. L‘Empire des Sens. MELBOURN E/SYDNEY FESTIVALS Shelley Duval as Bernice (second left)[...]Scott Fitzgerald story. and the physical details ofof flag- waving women, march past Kichizo as! he mov[...]ork that defines women as waiting on the pleasure of their men, and by the austere nature of the dwellings, built on squares with their stringent formality and their suggestion of enclosure (characteristics which have been exploi[...]ts which oppose them - Kichizo chooses the manner of his death, in search of a final pleasure, which is clearly ,not in accord with the conventional nobility of the hara—kiri or the kamikaze; Sada finally acq[...]ite their self- imposed isolation from it, a part of the world in which they exist— their motiva- ti[...]e for pleasure, for its own sake and the equality of their sexual relationship, contravenes the sexual[...]censors‘ wrath denotes the continuing relevance of Oshima’s observations), but must adopt its identity from the very existence of those taboos. The past constantly lays its shadow on the present. Sada’s constant insecurity, one aspect of her drive to possess Kichizo and his sex, is born of her place in a socially inferior class — a plac[...]ubordinated. It is significant that she makes use of a knife to threaten the geisha who challenges her social position, and then again to assert her possession of Kichizo, on both occasions defending what she sees as her contested security. The motif of the knife, and Sada’s use of it, thus enable Oshima to imply that her deepest[...]opriate) also carries with it the social identity of adulterer, an identity which is condoned only as long as it remains a secret. The question of personal honor is dependent upon a public face, a[...]elderly principal, who Sada visits, when he says of their relationship, ‘‘If this were known, I'd[...]the point con- cerning Kichizo’s consciousness of his position is clear. The maid who brings word of the telephone call from his wife interrupts his shaving — he cutshimself, then, in his only outburst of violence, shatters the window through which the maid delivers the message. This, combined with the threat of the knife wielded by a jealous Sada against him, again carrying weight of estab- lished social meaning because of her use of it, serves to remind Kichizo of his obligationsjf he is to sustain his honor —[...]sub- mission to death, an intended consum- mation of his pleasure it is nonetheless in line with what he knows would be expected of him, is lent an extra dimension. Oshima’s imag[...]ose stability is dependent upon the elimina- tion of such individuality. Against a recurrent eye-level, symmetrical framing of the images (especially of those which present, portrait-like the scenes of copulation), he places images whose divergent angles and off-centre framing (again, often of copulation scenes, and also of the buildings through diagonal compositions which[...]n ‘argument’ in the form itself. The absence of a resolution to that ‘argument’ is expressed as much by the almost symmetrical overhead shot of the prone figures of Sada and Kichizo, which ends the film, as[...] |
 | [...]Do you enjoy acting? Yes, within limits. I think of myself as a director. Does the director Huston w[...]ou shot “Asphalt Jungle” and “The Red Badge of Courage” in these soundstages at MGM. How much[...]l the same; techniques have improved, but that is of little importance. The studio system ended with t[...]director? Directing had always been in the back of my mind. It was a natural thing to go from writin[...]better way? Yes, I was not very happy with many of the films. Most .of the directors at that time came out of the editorial department. There were a few camera[...]art in the interview. It was Huston’s last week of shooting, and a few days after the interview the[...]heatre than at Warners. I would attend rehearsals of plays he was doing and I’d see what he would do with a scene. It was mostly his creation of a role, to see how he went at it, that was a lead[...]that I ever directed him in was in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. THE BIBLE AND EXISTENTIALIS[...]I’m not trying to propagate an idea or anything of that sort. So when you did Jean-Paul Sartre’s[...]ialism now? I think I am existential in my views of things. I know Sartre and I worked with him. I think he made an enormous contribution. He’s out of vogue now though, isn’t he? How does existenti[...]le”? Well, I look at the Bible as a collection of myths and legends, not from a religious standpoin[...]film. I don’t think it was meant to be the word of God. European critics, especially the French, have said that you are more interested in the pursuit of your heroes towards a goal rather than in the goa[...]in themes. I don’t even read with the intention of finding material, I just read out of interest. One day something might become a film.[...]is a challenge in it, unless there is an element ofof you work together? Hill: If we are adapting a no[...]t but you cant see what you’re doing. Then one of you will set it in perspective . . . Hill: Husto[...]often nothing gets changed. After all these years of working together we think quite similarly. How s[...]to the writer to visualize the underlying thought of Cinema Papers, October — 139 |
 | [...]y to explain through the behavior and the actions of people what their thoughts are.I know a Bergman[...]out the thoughts that are going through the minds of people. But I’ve never had an occasion to do th[...]t is at variance with the action. THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE CAMERA In terms of style, you don’t pan your camera a lot, you jus[...]that word should be stricken from the vocabulary of films. I never do it, unless that‘s the way the[...]er, now look back to me! (I look over to the door of the wardrobe trailer we are sitting in, then back[...]nd you. So that I am cutting constantly. The size of a character on the screen is determined not by th[...]ver by the door. (He points to a door on the wall of the set, about 40 metres away). I see Gladys, she[...]l that I was in love with her from the other side of the stage (He points out to the far end of the sound stage), unless I was calling to say goodbye or something of that kind. There are certain kinds of important to keep the right atmosphere. When you[...]pace between important, and that implies suspense of some kind, or that something is happening out the[...]as the acting is concerned, is the casting 100 Of course it is. If you have to direct actors a lot,[...]ing, or was it in the book? There was an element of humor in the book though I don’t think it was as funny as the film. Of course they worked beautifully together; they com[...]chael Caine, as Carneham, in Huston‘s reworking of Kipling,The Man Who Would Be King. what H[...] |
 | JOHN HUSTON On the set of The Misfits. Clockwise from Marilyn Monroe are C[...]nd from Marilyn by Norman Mailer.) On the set of The Mackintosh Man — Huston with Paul Newman.[...]“For God’s sake, John, don’t let me get out of it!” I was sure this was actually one part of Bogart, and it took him a little time getting int[...]ith Bogart was “Beat the Devil” It was a bit of a travesty — we were making fun of ourselves. Another actor in Beat the Devil was Pe[...]or themselves or too great an emotion, but a kind of overall sense of the fitness of what’s happening to them. They rise to the occa[...]lms have an influence? In a superficial sense, of course. Look at the enormous success of Roots, which I thought was very bad artistically.[...]ce. But i*sn’t it perhaps just a manifestation of a change that has already happened? Undoubtedly[...]effects any psychological change in the attitudes of the very people that watch it, well but I[...] |
 | [...]«-vi "*7 51.15Basil Gilbert This is the first of a series of four articles surveying the history of film periodicals in the U.S., Britain, Europe and[...]ealing with the history, sociology and aesthetics ofof specialized libraries offer a wide range of film periodical literature for study. A comprehensive list of film periodicals held in the National Library, Ca[...]is list, Film Periodicals in the National Library ofof Current Inter- national Film Periodical Holdings[...]ibraries, has been issued by the AFI as a reprint of the appendix to its Dawson Report; this list gives an indication of the distribution of film periodical literature in libraries such as t[...]established Film and Television School Library in Sydney. Access to this material has been greatly facili[...]both subscribing to the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) Periodical Index Project. Th[...]bert is a lecturer in cinema studies at Melbourne University and has done post-graduate work in film history a[...]TED STATES American Cinematographer, the journal of the American Society of Cinematographers, was established in 1920 and it[...]value lies in revealing the ingenuity and skills of the cameramen, set designers and special-effects men in the creation of technically-complex films such as The Towering In[...]o an individual film. In interviews with members of the society, a regular feature of the magazine, the creative role of the cameraman is emphasized. This is a healthy co[...]which places creativity exclusively in the hands of the director. Early issues of American Cinematographer are most useful in tracing the evolution of film cameras and allied equipment, particularly during the exciting years of the transition from silent to sound production. Experimental Cinema, one of the early polemical film journals, appeared in 1930 but ceased publication in 1934. These were the years of the Great Depression in the U.S., and the journal[...]the “ideological and organizational foundations of an American working—class cinema”. The journal is valuable for its concentration on the work of early Russian directors: Eisenstein’s articles[...]nciple and Japanese Culture”, “The Principles of Film Form” and Que Viva Mexico! ; Pudovkin’s[...]enario writing; and the dis- cussions on the work of Dziga Vertov. This rare journal has recently been[...]d immediately after World War 2, became Quarterly of Film, Radio and Television in 1951, and continues[...]is important journal was jointly sponsored by the University of California and The Hollywood Writers’ Mobilization, a community service agency of “writers, educators, producers, actors, directo[...]-operative research and production in the fields of radio, motion pictures and television". Accordin[...]s: workers in the industry; scholars and students of the arts and social sciences; and “members of the general public whose interest goes beyond the passive receptivity of the darkened theater or the half- heard program t[...]high ideals were matched by the quality and range of the contributions: Hans Richter looking at the av[...]ue Francaise; Eric Goldschmidt on the development of Australian films. The journal did not carry ill[...]ion. Films in Review began as the National Board of Review Magazine, which in turn was an amalgam of three earlier journals, Exceptional Photoplays (1[...]to Better Pictures (1924-26). The National Board of Review was a watchdog organization set up in 1909 to “represent the interests of the motion picture |
 | [...]ing and classifying films. A remarkable feature of Films in Review is its long biographical career studies of Hollywood stars, especially women (ratio to male[...]lse- where. The journal also prints short reviews of current films and film literature, and is illustr[...]ding for those connected with the production side of the American film industry. In a recent interview[...]trenchant and unbiased, and are useful indicators of the tastes of the time. The AFI in Melbourne is to acquire a full run of Variety on 16mm microfilm for study purposes. F[...]mid—1950s, is essential reading for the student of independent cinema. Mekas was responsible for the formation of the New York-based Filmmakers Co-operative in 196[...]filmmaker (Grand Street 1953; The Secret Passions of Salvador Dali 1961, etc.). The early issues of Film Culture are erudite and conventional, featur[...]eriodicals Consulted: ACTION Directors‘ Guild of America, 7950 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood, CA 900[...]s, c/o Gerald Noxon. Dept. Radio- TV-Film, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122. 2/yr, $4 p.a. Circulati[...], Retrospective Ind. FILM COMMEN T Film Society of Lincoln Center, 1865 Broadway, New York, Bi-mont[...]lnd., Hum. Ind. FILM CRITIC American Federation of Film Societies, 333 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10014. Bi-monthly, i[...]undtrack for a Film Poem ending with a Close—up of a Human Navel” gave an avant-garde note and her[...]films under review, followed by a brief synopsis of the plot and a critical evaluation. However, Film Facts takes its ‘critiques’ not from its own team of writers but from 17 daily and weekly reviews that[...]racts have been preceded by an additional summary of nationwide opinion, followed by a “critical con[...]but in 1972 was taken over by the Cinema Division of the University of Southern California. The current issues are sever[...]upsurge in new film periodicals in the U.S. One of the first of the new breed of scholarly publications was Cinema Journal which w[...]/62. Cinema Journal is perhaps the most academic of current American film journals. Its con- tributo[...]nor professional critics; they are selected from university professors, candidates for doctorates and out- st[...]d teachers from American FILM FACTS The Division of Cinema, University of Southern California, Box 69610, West Station, Lo[...]p.a. indexed: Int. Ind. Film Per. FILM HERITAGE University of Dayton, Dayton, OH 45431. Quarterly, $3 p.a. Ind[...]d. Film Per., Retrospective lnd., Art index. 101 University OH 43403. Quarterly, $5 p.a. Circulation: 1,800.[...]tions used: Retrospective lnd., Film Lit. lnd., University of California Press, Quarterly, $6 p.a. Circulation 8,500. National Board of Review of Motion Pictures lnc., 210 East 68th Street, Mont[...]nthly (JunelJuiy; Aug/Sept), $10.50 p.a. JOURNAL OF POPULAR FILM Center for the Study of Popular Culture, Bowling Green State University, Hall, Bowling Green, FILM PERIODICALS and Canadian universities. Chapters of forth- coming books are sometimes floated as tri[...]ble Six European Directors: Essays in the Meaning of Film Style (Penguin, 1974), for example, had drafts of several of its chapters in Cinema Journal and Film Quarterly[...]the book reviews are notable for a high standard of critical appraisal. Film Comment, which began as[...]several financial crises and has emerged as one of the leading American film magazines. Published by The Film Society of Lincoln Center, New York, it has a high standard of graphic design in the arrangement and presentation of visual material. Its contributors include some of the worlds leading film critics: notably, Raymond[...]rd Roud, Andrew Sarris and Robin Wood. The scope of the reviews and articles is inter- national and the tone conservative in comparison with some of the younger, more radical magazines. Last year, the journal issued a useful cumulative contents list of back issues (Jan/Feb 1976). When the Beverly Hills firm of Spectator International introduced Cinema in 1963[...]gn than a forum for argument and discussion. Many of the covers and the photographs were overtly sexist in their exploitation of the female face and figure, but gradually the staff of Cinema — “photo- graphers, art directors, wri[...]ood example is Gerald Peary’s captivating study of Dorothy Arzner (The Bride Wore Red) in iss[...] |
 | [...]ne, and Peter Bogdanovich will appear as a member of the platoon. Peter Bogdanovich is producing for L[...]a script by Dennis Clark. The film centres on one of the last great cattle kings and stars Jane Fonda[...]nter with Robert de Niro for EMI. The film is one of EMl’s slightly controversial U.S. investment pa[...]Gus Trikonis, who has proved himself in a number of Z-budgeted features, is shooting Cry Demon. Micha[...]t.in post-production are Daniel Petrie’s film of the Harold Robbins novel The Betsy (United Artist[...]New projects include Federico Fe||ini’s Voyage of G. Mastorno for Penthouse, in which Marcello Mast[...]ificatrice di Correggio), about a woman convicted of multiple murder who died in a lunatic asylum, is[...]rgio Sollima, who will be remembered for a number of key ltalian westerns and who had a major success[...], is making a spin-off, Sandokan —— the Tiger of Malatta, which is being shot in the East. Sergio[...]he Italian western, is making Scoop in Milan, one of a string of films he has directed recently. Giuseppe Squitti[...]is about a police commissioner in the last years of Mussolini's dictatorship who attempts to wipe out[...]i completed L’AIbergo degli Zoccoli with a cast of non-professionals. It is about the life of peasants at the end ofof a group of young nuns, and has Borowczyk's regular actress,[...]Adjani as Emily. Joseph Losey’s new film, Roads of the South (from a screenplay by Jorge Semprun), i[...]and Simon Ward and the Peter Sellers’ Prisoner of Zenda is in the offing. Michael Winner is re- making Howard Hawks’ 1946 version of Chand|er’s The Big Sleep. Winner has cast Rober[...]ther remake is Paul Morrissey’s comedy version of Hound of the Baskervilles, which is co—scripted by and[...]r Lear novel about the psychological manipulation of a young girl competing in the 1980 Olympics. Mar[...]Raining in the Mountains, both deal with aspects of Buddhism: The first is a ghost story, the second about the relation of power and Buddhism. it appears studio reluctance about finance has been overcome and that Li Han-hsiang (of The Last Tempest) will be able to make his version of the classic novel Dream of the Red Chamber for Shaw Brothers. Anne Hui, a Lo[...]ng a ghost story, his first film since The Empire of the Senses. Claude Chabrol is directing Bl[...] |
 | [...]ch Volume contains 400 lavishly illustrated pages of I Exclusive interviews with producers, directors.[...]0 Production surveys and ' reports from the sets of local and international production. I Box Ollice[...]ORDER FORM aouuo VOLUMESPlease send me E copies of Volume 3 (numbers 9-12) at $2] per volume. Enclo[...]see below) EASY BINDER Please send me E copies of Cinema Papers’ easy binder at $10 per copy. Enc[...]80: air « $A36.20 (C) Back issues. To the price of each copy add the following: Surlace (all[...] |
 | Copy(ies)of Number 1 at $3.50* Copy(ies)of Number 2 at $3.00 * Copy(ies)of Number 3 at $2.75 * Copy(ies) of Number 5 at $2.75 * Copy(ies)of Number 9 at $2.50 * Copy(ies)of Number 10 at $2.50 * D Copy(ies)of Number 1 1 at S2.50* El Copy(ies)of Number 12 at $2.50*D Copy(ies)of Number 13 at 8250* D Copy(ies)of Number 14 at $2.50 *[...] |
 | Robin Coppmg, gilrector of‘ 0t0g1’3P Yon‘Eliza Frazer,’ talks ab[...]ad to look totally genuine, so we were using lots of lamps, fires, moonlight and lanterns. Overall, we[...]isted at that time. This is where the combination of very modern lenses and the new 5247 really paid o[...]I don’t think I would have believed what sort of sensitivity the film stock had.” “We carried[...]arted shooting, and We found that the sensitivity of the emulsion to this kind of lighting was quite remarkable, so we used[...] |
 | [...](4) (4) 15,220 22,933(6)' 27,421 1 (5)" Break of Day 3,(2%1 “'4” 27.346 U! G 1. V ~t O’! U:[...]COL 7 857 e ancer th D 7,857 (2) 4,532 Summer of Secrets 4,753 7,855 1 1 61799 (1) 5,375 (13[...]137 9,954,715 Total - Box—office grosses of individual films have been supplied to Cinema Pap[...]This figure represents the total box-office gross of all foreign films shown during the period in the[...]‘ =Conlinuing into next period. =Figure for one of 3 weeks in period only. (1) Australian theatrica[...]ralian Film Corporation; MCA— Music Corporation of America; S— Sharmill Films. (2) Figures[...] |
 | [...]ter-free, handheld moving shots with a steadiness of image never before achieved on the screen.On lo[...]STEADICAM greatly enhances the creative latitude of the director and cinematographer while effectively reducing production costs. 105 Reserve Road, Artarmon Sydney, N.S.W. 2064 Telephone: 439-6955 Telex: 24482 A[...]ccessories but will also market a very wide range of motion picture equipment. "-63[...] |
 | [...]ve” is the latest film by Peter Weir, director of “Homesdale”, “The Cars That Ate Paris” an[...]anging Rock”. Returning to the pre- occupations of Weir’s earlier films, “The Last Wave” is a psychic thriller about a lawyer’s premonitions of the future.The cast includes Richard Chamberlai[...]ichard Chamberlain) watches in horror as the roof of his house collapses Cinema Papers,October[...] |
 | [...]make it more commercially accessible. Perhaps one of the weaknesses of Peter and Tony's draft was that it was too Austra[...]to the U.S. and involved American Indians instead of Aboriginals.Peter then did another rewrite with[...]ittle too literally. The script had lost a little of its mystery — it had become too accessible, too[...]Jim: We had come to the conclusion that a project of this size needed a package. The four elements we[...]ur agent in Europe, introduced us to Klaus Helwig of Janus Films who had bought Picnic At Hanging Rock[...]ve” is an important film in this regard because of the McElroys’ breakthrough in pre- selling the[...]eal, producing features in Australia and the role of the independent producer. They begin by discussi[...]mmond. the script in October and on the basis of that committed $50,000 on paper. He in turn had a friendly relationship with Ernst Goldsmidt of United Artists and mentioned the project to Ernst[...]Africa. Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and parts of Scandinavia had also been sold to Janus. So we we[...]more territories without jeopardising the number of territories from which we had to recoup our inves[...]off amount to approximately $400,000, the balance of $300,000-odd being put up by the SAFC and AFC. We[...]greed sum and that would be cashed in on delivery of the film. In effect, we pre—sold the film, but instead of receiving money we got a credit note. Then, for t[...]rnational film financing, we borrowed 85 per cent of the money using the credit |
 | [...]ashed in. The interest we are paying becomes part of the production costs.The second thing we asked[...]h UA had a three-step payment: one on a signature of contract; the other on completion of photography; and the third on delivery. Obviously[...]aranteed an overdraft at the bank on the strength of our contract with United Artists. Jim: The break[...]ia?” But what we have done is cut down the risk of the money involved by 50 per cent — we are only[...]s in Australia. And the UA deal wasn‘t a matter of selling our soul, giving up to the Americans or a[...]relationship with UA has allowed for an exchange of dialogue in all areas, including the film itself.[...]the British have all literally made fortunes out of Picnic, and they are eager to see more Australian films because one of them might be the next Picnic. An obvious question is why use Richard Chamberlain for the role of David Burton and not an Aust- ralian actor? Hal: Firstly, we believe that the choice of Chamberlain was valid. Burton is a happily married solicitor living in Sydney who has, by necessity, South American parents. An[...]ally looked at a dozen name actors and only three of them were American, the other nine were British.[...]Cinema Papers. October —- I49 9 Leon Saunders (Sydney) |
 | [...]found it very difficult to come up with the name of any Australian actor who would have been as good[...]demeanor and appearance, and this helps greatly. Of course, the important thing is that he is a great[...]ets co—billing with Richard. She will get a lot of exposure in the territories where the film will b[...]for Australian actors. That isimportant. Both of you are actively involved in the newly-formed association of independent producers. How did the group form? H[...]gamated with the Film and Television Producers’ of Australia Association and has become a division of it. Therefore, in future we will be known as “The Independent Feature Film Producers, a division of the F and T P A". We have been meeting on a fair[...]ave agreed to contribute fairly substantial sums of money to become members. We hope the organization[...]ere. The second is communication, and that is one of the things most lacking in our industry to date.[...]with fellow producers. Frankly, I don't like some of their films and I am equally sure some don‘t like ours, but now we can all sit down over a cup of Director Peter Weir rehearsing a scene with Rich[...]s you are. The other important thing is that all of a sudden the AFC has an entity it can deal with o[...]ies scale be significantly increased, and instead of some producers rushing off to make another[...] |
 | PRODUCTION REPORT The Last Wave, by the nature of its theme, relies heavily on the use of special effects. For as the film progresses, Dav[...]where it hasn’t rained for many years, visions of a city underwater, black rain, falling stones and[...]and Bob Hilditch. The following is their version of how they did it.* In most scenes there is rain,[...]bviously it was paramount that an adequate method of producing it was found. We went first to check out the gear used by fire departments and to a lot of pump companies. Out of these discussions came the decision to take all o[...]so metres in the air, we could control the angle of fall to almost vertical (photos 2 and 3). ‘ Ad[...]n interview recorded with Fieguth and Hilditch in Sydney by Scott Murray. 1. Monty Fieguth attends to a m[...]3. Shooting street scenes in Adelaide (top) and Sydney. THE LAST WAVE We would then work out the cruci[...]e also would shake the monitor to give the effect of gusts. Then, if needed, we would put another moni[...]have a situation where if you produce six metres of solid rain you can’t tell it is raining beyond that. So in some situations we devised a system of filling in foreground areas and letting the back- ground take care of itself. The only difficulty we faced was wind because you could have the whole thing perfected and a burst of wind would appear and blow the rain 30 metres off[...]lso lucky, in that it didn’t rain once. So none of the rain you see in The Last Wave is natural. From cameraman Russell Boyd’s point of view it was essential the rain was back-lit. So Russell’s lights had to coincide with the position of our monitors. It wasn’t really a problem becaus[...]led us to pour in the rain to within a few inches of the lens. Coupled with a drip runner acros[...] |
 | [...]nd one for support. There must have been hundreds of metres of hose and the streets looked as if they were cover[...]l you could see in the shot were two single spots of light as the car appeared at the end of the street. The rest was just blotted out by rain[...]sequences in the film, not all the rain was to be of the everyday type. In one scene it rained from the ground up, a spiral spurting up hundreds of metres.The biggest single problem we had was to[...]torm at Hammond. (See also photo 9 for the making of the hailstorm.) sitting in his car while the rai[...]ter with pe0- ,: ple floating about. We thought of back projection, but felt itl wouldn’t be convi[...]n lowered into the pool. There was also a section of a bus (photo 7). As the interior of the car is supposed to be dry, we felt we would h[...]t to create the illusion. However, the I distance of less than a metre to the perspex :- windsc[...] |
 | PRODUCTION REPORT A which we were shooting. One scene, for Sydney where there was j11 bounces, leaving an oily de[...]k black in volume, once it was had to find a way of economically producing it, falling as drops it lo[...]and examp1e,called for ahail storm in the middle of sandstone, so we couldn’t keep increasing the the desert. amount of dye. One method was to toss ice into the air with[...]aces without We found no reference to hail in any of the leaving a trace. Another special effect we had was of a roof here and abroad. There was no one who coul[...]we covered the mid- or rain_ ground with 1 1 tons of ice, the foreground with Finally we used three no[...]wn like a waterfall. A We also used several tons of rock salt which windmachine was also mounted to the scaffold was cheap (photo 8). The only disadvantage, of 12 ft. off the ground and this helped blast the c[...]in in around the camera crew. It must have amount of water being sprayed over it. We been terribly unc[...]for them, but then really won by the sheer weight of numbers, with I guess the whole film probably was. iv '_ every spare crew member tossing in hunks of = problem was to make sure the stones fell vertically over an area of 2,500 sq. ft. This was V solved by building a grid of chicken-wire over the entire area, the idea bein[...]g coated in oil, once a piece lands it 8. A load of coarse rock salt which was used to simulate hail.[...]eter Weir, Tony Morphett, Petru Popescu Director of Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .[...] |
 | [...]funds operated by the CREATIVE DEVELOPMENT BRANCH of the Australian Film Commission . . All reaching e[...]r assistance from the Creative Development Branch of the Australian Film Commission:Applications to[...]e information is provided for a proper evaluation of their project. To arrange an appointment contact[...]Thoms (Experimental Film and Television Fund) at Sydney (02) 922 6855. Melbourne applicants for all funds[...]Chairman Australian Film Commission GPO Box 3984 Sydney, NSW 2001 FILM PRODUCTION FUND provides[...]film or television script over a specific period of time at an approved rate of payment. EXPERIMENTAL FILM AND TELEVISION FUND provides assistance up to $7,000 to filmmakers with lots of promise but limited experience. The fund f[...] |
 | 35mm PRE-PRODUCTION THE BATTLE OF BROKEN HILL Prod Company. . . .. The independent[...]. . . .. Pre-Production Synopsis: The adventures of a 15-year-old boy in the tuna fishing town of Port Lincoln. CROCODILE Prod Company . . . . . .[...]Dunphy Casting . . . . . . . . . . Mitch Matthews(Sydney), Brian Muir (Brisbane). Reg Stocker (Cairns). H[...]ployee poses as a doctor and both play their game of pretend until they are unmasked. (This production[...]. . . .. Pre-Production Synopsis: The epic story of the Anzac landing at Gallipoli. THE LAST RUN OF THE KAMERUKA (Working title) Prod Company . . .[...]e length drama that takes place between the hours of 4.30pm and midnight one Friday night. Most of the action is on board a Sydney Harbour ferry and involves eight people who. because of their conditioning and background, turn a relativ[...]e-Production Synopsis: Adventure story about the Sydney underworld in 1953. PATRICK Prod Company . . .[...]possessed’? A hospital. a relationship, a sense of the usual are turned upside down in a thrilling e[...]nopsis: Based on the highly successful stage play of the same title by Sumner Locke—Elliot. Set in an army supply camp in 1942. it concerns a group of men in an isolated and hostile environment. Their[...]. . . . . . . . . .. Pre-Production The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith TIM Prod Company. . . .. Pisc[...]John Bowman. Michael Carmen. Synopsis: The story of a young half-blood aborigine. who is made conscious of his white component by a missionary. He leaves hi[...]ves by white standards. He falls through no fault of his own and explodes in a fateful “declaration of war“ — the white man's way, as he has learnt. of acquiring a licence for revenge and violence. DA[...]Synopsis: Drama based on the personal life story of Australian swimming champion Dawn Fraser.[...]e, Mark Holden. Synopsis: Newsfront is the story of two brothers who are cameramen during the golden era of the Australian newsreel between 1948-1956. It is[...]onal story—|ine played out against the backdrop of the real events that shaped a nation _ the Redex Trial. the Maitland Floods, the birth of rock- and-roli and the Melbourne Olympics. Passin[...]ldermen. and MacDougall the Singing Dog. WEEKEND OF SHADOWS Prod Company . . . . . . . Samson[...] |
 | [...]involving a hunt for a murder suspect by a group of men in a small country town. The central characte[...]This brings out the central theme: the readiness of any community to reject or dominate people who ar[...]. . Post—productionsynopsis: The deflowering of a myth — a history of Australian sport inten/voven in a fictional way w[...]ralians to opt toward spectatorship. The build up of the myth —— and a look at the reality. THE[...]. But their options are limited: it is a question of survival more than choice. IN SEARCH OF ANNA Prod Compan[...]Martin Sharp, Virginia Mort. Synopsis: In Search of Anna is a story about coming to terms with one‘[...]. . . . . . . Tony Williams Executive in charge of Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .[...]. . . . . Jan Tyrell. Therese O‘Leary Director of Aerial Photography. . Steve Locker Lampson Constr[...]lke Neidharl Synopsis: In many marriages a slate of truce and vacuum develops. Such is the case with the marriage of Elizabeth and Robert. Elizabeths realization of uniullilment in her relationship with Robert brin[...]akes an attempt at penetrating the contradictions of personal motivation. THE IRISHMAN[...]ant. Synopsis: The Irishman is basically a story of people during a time of change and the effect of that change on the lives of one family in particular. It is also the story of one man who would not accept the change an[...] |
 | [...]er and mystery. 35mm IN RELEASE Ixm For details of the following 35mm films in release see the previous issue. Cosy Cool The Getting of Wisdom High Rolling Journey Among Women Summerfield The Green Machine Hot To Trot For details of the following 35mm films consult the previous iss[...]trophobic chronicle, a few days during the summer of 1975. Against the backdrop of premature elections, two people meet and systemat[...]into a separation. Helplessly bound by verbosity of the educated, unable to match each other‘s pass[...]e outside world eats, dreams and murders in spite of them. One day they must decide.[...]e Society Synopsis: The history and general story of Murray Grey Beef Cattle Elreed that flourishes th[...]cn-Ostermang Giselle and Micheline Arnauld, stars of Edgley inter- national Circus. patients of Gladesville Mental Hospital. Synopsis: Balance i[...]g to make sure they stay firmly on the right side of it. This film looks at ordinary and extraordinary people seeking balance in The Importance of Keeping Perfectly Still highly individual ways.[...]. . . . . . . . . .September, 1977 Cast: insects of many kinds. Synopsis: Follows on from Every Care[...]ow and develop. The straight- forward development of some young insects (nymphs) is contrasted with th[...]le to look and behave as their parents did. (Part of a series of short films on the behavior and life histories of invertebrate animals.) DREAMS Prod Compa[...]. . . . . . . . . .. Editing Synopsis: The magic of Hollywood. Shot during Filmex '77 with the stars of today against a backdrop of the stars of yesterday. DREAM DOORS Prod Company . . . . . .[...]and it changes him ... but into what’? A DROP OF ROUGH TED Prod Company . . . . .[...]n documentary style. The film follows the journey of Ted Egan and his 18 year old son Mark in their tr[...]ides the links in the journey and introduces many of the unique people they meet. EARTH PATROL[...]animal smuggler Caldeoni to acquire a bulk order of the rare Queensland Hairy Nosed Wombat. In this endeavor they are thwarted by members of the Earth Patrol, with comic results. (Pilot for[...]. . . . . . . . . .September, 1977 Cast: insects of many kinds. Synopsis:A film about the astonishing egg- laying habits of female insects, and of their relationship with their offspring. it starts with the simple dropping of eggs on the forest floor, as by phasmids, and runs through behavior of increasing complexity, as the mother prepares food and shelter for the offspring she will never see. (Part of a series of short films on the behavior and life histories of invertebrate animals.) FIRST THINGS FIRST[...]uncan. Synopols: A study in infatuation. HARVEST OF HATE Prod Company . . . . . . . . .. South Austr[...]ty boy, goes to live in the country. He feels out of place, doesn't like the work or the people. His o[...]Sitmar Cruise Lines Australia Synopsis: A story of a 16-day cruise to the Pacific islands on Sitmar‘s Fairstar. IMAGE OF DEATH Prod Company. . Gemini Productions Pty Ltd[...]ry Creyton. Synopsis: Yvonne Arthur is a mixture of charm and humour, spontaneity and spunk but shes[...]y builds to where Yvonne grabs at the opportunity of a life of leisure. THE IMPORTANCE OF KEEPING PERFECTLY STILL formerly[...]ed to a high society photographer around the turn of the last century. When his boss receives a vice r[...]r's family. Charles can't quite handle the strain of this and a love affair at the same time. Having d[...]y Grey Beef Cattle Society Synopsis: Explanation of the cuts of beef with Master Butcher. Ron Day. THE LAST TASM[...]Pty Ltd in association with Tasmanian Department of Film Production and Societe Francaise de P[...] |
 | [...]ORIES PTY LTD. 70 SOFTLIGHTS , ° H-""-'- DAVUGHT Of 15 -17 GOFCIOH S-I‘. SP°"'G'"‘°’ flifw EI[...]y Rd., STRAN ELECTRIC _E|SternW|Ck' A DIVISION OF FOI’ TOD quality at the right price . RANK IND[...]BURWOOD VICTORIA 8125 SALES 29 3724 HIRE 29 2213 SYDNEY SALES 439 7508 35mm & 16mm Negative Cuttin[...] |
 | [...]Rhys Jones supported by past and present natives of Tasmania. with some French and English appearances.Snopsis: The extermination of the Tas- manian Aborigines is the only case in recent times of a genocide so swift and total. A search to rediscover these unique people. THE LEGEND OF YOWIE Prod Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dead[...]Bird. Robin McKenzie. Synopsis: A "serio-comedy" of a motivation for murder induced through the oppre[...]aul Gilbert. Frank Curtain. Synop|Is:An allegory of death in the form of a mystery thriller. Mortimer is the man to whom J[...]rray Grey Beef Cattle Society Synopsis: A story of the evolution and breeding of the Murray Grey Beef Cattle. This film is more su[...]cessful opera star. she becomes involved in games of make believe which have horrifying dimensions. O[...]. . . .. B.P. Australia Limited Synopsis: Story of today's people enjoying the history and things of yesterday. PLUNGE INTO DARKNESS Prod Company. .[...]n the country which slowly turns into a nightmare of terror. QUARTET Prod Company .[...]usty. Rod Burton. Jenny Ingram. Synopsis:A study of refracted and reflected light above and below the surface of the sea environment. Light takes on a three- dlmensional character like a natural form of moving colored holography. RED DOG Dir[...]sh. Donna Lee. Graham Thorburn. Synopsis:A group of young people have just left school and are about[...]. . . . . . . . . . . . .. Pre-Production SOUND OF LOVE Prod Company . . . . . . . . . . . South Au[...]husband and wife. which dramatizes the situation of a wife and mother who realizes she is a lesbian a[...]WAYS OF SEEING Prod Company . . . . . . . . . .. Illumina[...]on Mrs P. Gration who is the only blind director of "seeing eye dogs" in the world. For details of the following 16mm films see the previous[...] |
 | [...]ne 6991393 or 6991395 Director, Writer, Producer of Commercial, Documentary, Feature, (3) 96 V[...]fessional productions in the making for a period of up to four weeks and will provide an allowance f[...]ll take into account the needs and circumstances of each candidate. If you are interested in partici[...]phone or write to the V.F.C. setting out details of your background and writing experience. Contact:[...]oms double system theatre 13 Myrtle Street NORTH SYDNEY Phone: (02) 922 5650 JEFF N€|LD Sidecar[...]a Wild Pony Caddie o Harness Fever 0 Barney Land of the Morning Calm (Korea) Complete range of equipment, any format. Can offer processing facil[...]ble in B/W and color. 168 PACIFIC HIGHWAY, NORTH SYDNEY 2060. PO BOX 885. PHONE: (02) 929 4848 A[...] |
 | TELEVISION SERIES Producers of television series and films are requested to forward complete details of productions to: Production Survey, Cinema Papers.[...]Synopsis: Air—sea rescue action adventure along Sydney's northern beaches. GLENVIEW HIGH Prod Company.[...]n Burke, Camillia Rowntree. Synopsis: Daily lives of the staff and students in a suburban high school.[...]. . . . . Rod Coats Synopsis: An untitled series of four 30 minute programs looking at individuals in[...]g Technical Facilities . . . . . . . . .. T.P. F. Sydney Length . . . . . . . . ..i . . . . . . . . .. 30[...]ally Gibbins, Lynn Patterson. Synopsis: A series of ten adventure documentaries filmed on a circumnavigation of Australia in Cropp's boat “Beva“, showing the remote corners of Australia, the wild life and adventures underwate[...]n Ewart. Synopsis: An ABC television drama series of twelve 50-minute episodes. YOUNG RAMSAY Pr[...]John. Andrew Sharp. Synopsis: The lives and loves of the young staff in a big city hospital. I A[...]ion Synopsis: This film explores the development of community libraries, where municipal councils and[...]ing Synopsis: A documentary which links the work of two Australian women, poet Judith Wright, and dan[...]ncorporates dances performed to the spoken poetry of Judith Wright. FILM AUSTRALIA, mm-:—-: ARMY[...]ondary school students the meaning and background of the Australian War Memorial in Canberra.[...]Synopsis: A film on the operations and the extent of the work of the Commonwealth Serum Laboratories in Melbourne.[...]. . . . . . August 1977 Synopsis: The setting up of a family day care program. FROM BIRTH T0 WALKING[...]. . . .. September 1977 Synopsis: A compilation of five films to re- introduce Australia to overseas[...]s: A documentary which takes a close look at some of Australia's sporting life. A GOOD THING GOING[...]an Synopsis: A suburban wife finds the pressures of a playboy husband and unallevialed motherhood too[...]the two children and many problems. not the least of which is himself. MARCH THE FOURTH[...]Synopsis:A dramatised documentary on the outbreak of a fire and the subsequent evacuation of a high rise hospital. Continued on P. 179[...] |
 | How would you describe the appeal of the film?It is no secret that we are making wh[...]rm as much as I can with the classical parameters of children’s films. I have fairly clearly painted[...]tty strongly right through to the grandmother end ofof failed children’s films influenced you? You[...]y. They seemed to lack an intrinsic honesty. Part of this is because I think they played down to their[...]y the salne token, “Blue Fire Lady” has a lot of ingredients the horse that no one but the girl ca[...]y I hope I’ve stopped it is by making the story of Jenny the core of the film and by making the 164 — Cinema Papers[...]the first assistant/ production manager on most of the Hexagon features, and is a freelance director of commercials. His documentary, “lt’s Time . .[...]recorded while Dimsey was supervising the editing of the film with editor Tony Patterson. Lead actre[...]Dimsey. Gordon Glenn other things merely parts of her life. I like to think Blue Fire Lady is the story of a 16-year-old undeveloped pre-adolescent who beco[...]s will just be the icing on the cake. In the case of Barney and Ride a Wild Pony, the ingredients were[...]orning Tea, because we were shooting four minutes of cut film a day and that is moving along on 35mm with the sort of production value we were trying to obtain. We had[...]production rehearsals, therefore, become a matter of necessity. I spent a full week with the entire ca[...]Australia. How much do you feel this is a result of tough schedules? I think it has a considerable effect and it operates in a couple of ways. Firstly, it prevents new and untried actors[...]apidly and who is absolutely trustworthy in terms of technicals like hitting marks etc.?" So you find[...]ge. You tend to play scenes in toto without a lot of insert cutting, which means you have to use actor[...]ith a dolly movement. Perhaps it is the influence of television series. How did you find work[...] |
 | BLUE FIRE LADY quick. I often found her a jump ahead of me. You must remember that the part she was playi[...]type for her. The big problem with the character of Jenny was to make it non—soppy, because she cou[...]oilt brat. It was important to give her some sort of roundness, or charm. I don’t think children ar[...]r figures to which they aspire, showing a glimpse of themselves. And I think part of the success of ABBA is that they are ordinary, right down to the[...]and basically simple music. Kids can see a part of themselves, though they know they are watching 30[...]not so glossy that they are unreachable. So, one of the things I had to try and do with the Jenny character was to scrub a bit of the gloss off her and make her a bit more ordinar[...]blade around town, equally nervous, put in charge of the situation —— that sounds a bit like ingre[...]at their “real—age” personality is not part of their ammunition. I believe that it is still part of Cathryn’s ammunition and she uses it brilliantl[...]o a highly professional actress and quite capable of convincing age changes. In fact, during a lot of the sequences where she was 16 I had to pull her up out of it a bit because she had become a little knock- k[...]e perceived the reason for this during the making of the film. I feel they are designed to be perform[...]. I believe they lack a certain vitality in terms of coloration and style. n Harrison and Mark Holden[...]p on record. How much has Mark’s consciousness of his image influenced his performance in the fil[...]inessman. This was a limitation in the early days of rehearsal but after that it certainly wasn’t. H[...]sorbed into the advertising world, you spend most of your time selling yourself, convincing people that your work is good and very little of your time actually making films. What I try and d[...]ercials to a feature film. I have had to do a lot of hard thinking and homework on this film to stop m[...]al style. It has some advantages, though. Because of the influence of television, kids have developed fairly short atte[...]pace. So it was intriguing to retain this aspect of my commercial training, while at the same time ridding myself of an obsession for going in too tight. Vince’s fe[...]helped with this, particularly early on. Instead of going for a cut-around style, I have been saying:[...]it in a dolly”. I have been focusing on a piece of action by theatrically directing attention to it,[...]ls, and it has been great fun to design sequences of two to two-and-a-half minutes which have b[...] |
 | When were you first approached for the role of Jenny?Tony Ginnane, the producer, was in London[...]ause it didn’t show that I could play this kind of girl. And what kind of girl is Jenny? She is quite realistic and the th[...]untry, I don’t get the chance to see many films of interest. Most of those shown are sensationalist films like Toweri[...]ork again until the autumn, which was rather lazy of me. I changed my mind. How different is it worki[...]Black Moon the director was working. with a group of people that was his team; you acted as part of that team. On British television productions, I6[...]ison’s fourth feature since starting at the age of 11 in Jacques Demy’s magical “The Pied Piper[...]“The Intruders” (Anglia-ITV), “The Witches ofof Jenny, was interviewed on location by Gordon Glen[...]d equine friend. however, there was less a sense of team—work and people stuck much more to their o[...]didn’t carry equipment on location or that sort of thing, and that is something which is really nice here. There is a sense of helping each other. The three features you have[...]de by top directors. How much was this the result of choice? Very much so. Till now I have been at sc[...]ached by Demy for “The Pied Piper” at the age of 11, had you considered an acting career? Certain[...]me other qualifications, and this meant going to university. There are a lot of things that interest me besides acting, though wh[...]our career so young? Not really, and that is one of the advantages of having worked with good directors yet not having[...]istic, and I love period films that really smell of the time. I think this film lost its strength by[...]I find it very hard to be objective, especially of a film like that. I know what Altman wanted to s[...]olved in. How was your relationship with Altman? Of late he has come under much attack for being an a[...]important for a director to have a certain amount of power — though it can be very subtle. But if th[...]e. He also made you feel like you were doing most of it yourself, which was nice. Did you have rehearsals? We had a couple of read- throughs. And then on the set we had time t[...]rds working with actors the most interesting part of filmmaking . . . Malle chooses to work with act[...]what you are doing and who has an under- standing of you in a personal way. |
 | BLUE FIRE LADY The changing face of Cathryn Harrison. Top to bottom: The Pied Piper,[...]that went wrong. He takes, I think, an awful lot of strain up on himself and that/ makes it easy sail[...]find its own pace. It was a very orchestral sort of thing where you had to slow down at times, then p[...]many ideas and different angles put into it. One of the basic. concepts of Black Moon was that there would be no story line[...]t visuals and mucking about with gmotions. A lot of it is very funny, though I have sat with people w[...]y ought to be laughing or not. So there is a sort of giggle, then an apology. Do you think this could[...]range — I would hate to be stuck with one type of character all my life. I must say, however, that[...]s . . . Yes, I think that is true. It is so full of symbols that don’t tie together, that if you tr[...]ack and watch the pretty pictures. The symbolism of the film is essentially emotional. It therefore s[...]nk there is an intellectual justification for all of it. But then I can’t really say as I wasn’t w[...]exactly. This also seems to necessitate a period of time before doing a take when you can work things out. Now this must be difficult on the tight schedule of an Australian film? Yes, but all the things that[...]ing which was much more difficult was the Witches of Pendle, a television play I did for the BBC. It was very well written, but it was a situation of which I had no under- standing — that of being an adolescent epileptic in the early 17th c[...]ffair with her brother. There were very few parts of me that I could draw on. Basically I’m a middle-class English girl of the 20th century. Are you using much the same te[...]ey as with Malle, whereby you go through a number of interpretations of how you think you should play a scene? I always like to have at least two different ways of looking at a given situation -— when we have ti[...]tly what he wants and he realizes there is a side of my personality which is totally wrong for the par[...]is not a defensive person, but if you spend a lot of your time travelling around and trying to make friends at nine different schools, you build up a certain way of dealing with people. It is not exactly being on g[...]ay . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bob Maumill Director of Photography. Vince Monton Production Manag[...] |
 | [...]on 16mm and on 35mm, but it isn’t much in terms of the percentage of the budget. And considering the budget of the film was around $300,000, it was felt the percentage saved was not enough to justify the possible risks of out-of- focus footage.Was this largely due to poor blo[...]e l6mm tests we shot. It was basically a question of sharpness on a very large screen. Now sometimes w[...]ical one —-— who could supply us with 30,000m of film stock of the one batch number in three days? Samuelsons wa[...]getting the British stock because I like the look ofof Photography “Blue Fire Lady” is the third fe[...]Lady”. « ~..v _ .,, ‘-7,.’ Director of Photography, Vince Monton, with Cathryn Harrison.[...]very subtle differences and it isn’t a question of one stock being better than another. It really depends on what sort of film you are making. We are shooting a film at the end of winter, so there are a lot of cloudy, slate-grey skies. We are also making a film about horses on farms, so there are a lot of greens. Now the British stock seems to handle thi[...]ere flesh tones swing towards magenta. But a lot of it would have to do with the fact that we are usi[...]ing I gave the British stock a quarter to a third of a stop more exposure. Part of this could be due to the processing here being based on American chemicals. It’s not a problem of course; it’s just something to be aware of. Have you been using clear lenses on this film?[...]dly ever use a naked lens’. I suppose it is one of those habits we have swung into since the introduction of Kodak stock which gives such a crisp, clear image[...]zoom, which I didn't think was up to the standard of the fixed lenses. I felt that if I introduced dif[...]drop too much. How would you compare the effect of using a light fog on 35 mm with a 16mm Eastmancol[...]ay that since it has to be blown up, sharpness is of great im- portance. But I find that colors tend t[...]is, therefore, im- portant to introduce some form of diffusion to keep the colors realistic. And gener[...]et the same look on 16mm. But it is just a matter of preference and I don’t really bust my guts to g[...]o on has been very, very gentle. There are a lot of exteriors in the film, so the lighting for a loca[...]or increase the fill-light. You are at the mercy of the elements to a degree. We are also trying to[...]ons we choose than the angles used. The movements of the camera are also being made as inconspi[...] |
 | [...]llll URANIUM John 0’Hai'a Television coverage of the uranium issue has been intermittent, haphazar[...]ferent from the news and current affairs coverage of any issue. But television has also been used to m[...]tained advertising program, disguised as a series of “public service announcements”, to present one side of the case about uranium. The advertisements, for the Uranium Producers’ Forum, in a series of questions and answers with Bob Sanders, have attempted to persuade the public that the subject of uranium is simple, clean, and basically none of their business. The audience has had to rest content with the assurances of a procession of experts, from scientists to a doctor with 50 year[...]y have repeated to their viewers that the process of mining uranium is routine and safe, that Australia needs the money from the sale of uranium, and that atomic fission is simple and ea[...]the media, costed for television alone in excess of $500,000, and sustained from the release of the second Fox report to the present. Curiously, the news reporting techniques of press and television have often mirrored the effects of the advertising campaign itself. The information[...]process consists, for the most part, in a series of half-truths; statements that may be true in themselves, but which tell only part of the story, and by ignoring implications, falsify the overall picture. This has been the style of commentary on the uranium issue by the miners, th[...]done with high-level waste from the reprocessing of nuclear fuel? Fuse it in a special form of glass, encase it in steel and concrete and bury d[...]ientists believe that safe and permanent disposal of nuclear waste is achievable. The form of this sharing—out of information is rather like a cookery recipe; the[...]ntists share the belief stated about the disposal of atomic waste. And what they believe is also ambiguous, that disposal of nuclear waste “is achievable". There is no time suggested for the achievement of this disposal of waste, although it is implied that once the demon[...]see for themselves. Against this misleading kind of assurance John O‘l-Iara is a lecturer in media at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and was a media commentator tor the AB[...]" What concerns us here is not the pros and cons of the uranium issue, but the ways in which informat[...]he complex issues involving uranium to a question of political and economic priorities; and corre- spo[...]politicians and businessmen have been the sources of many stories about uranium, and the style of the stories has been determined by the style of the sources. Information has also been restricte[...]al Review, which has had by far the best coverage of the uranium issue, has a circulation of only about 45,000. The mass circulation papers, s[...]the protesters. Or, more importantly, the kinds of uncertainties people might feel about the uranium[...]y (and no doubt unconsciously) parodied in a kind of rapid-fire journalism. So a journalist wrote in[...]n May 12: “For most people, it conjures visions of mushroom clouds, of genetic accidents producing monsters among humans, animals and even plants or ofof 127 press stories, from the beginning of January to the time of the release of the second Fox report. This total covers the five[...]eriod, when the public was debating the issue, 57 of these stories appeared in The Age, 28 in The Fina[...]out uranium clustered into five groups: the visit of a Japanese trade delegation to Australia; oversea[...]; divisions in ALP policy on uranium; the release of a book called Uranium on Trial (described in The Age as “a book of timeliness and significance"); and U.S. policy on uranium. Granted these focal points, the process of gathering and selecting news appears seriously de[...]sources; and pre- occupied with the novelty value of today's story, irrespective of whatever has gone before. Perhaps the most obvious example of ignoring the past was the brief mention given to[...]nt that in 1968 he had directed the disappearance of 200 tonnes of uranium bound by ship from Antwerp to Genoa. There has been no further mention of that startling incident, and the press has contin[...]sion put out by the Government about the adequacy of control measures. The single exception to this ge[...]issues in a particular light. And the constraints of the news gathering process have favored the indus[...]The media has done very little on the other side of the fence. For instance, accidents at nuclear ins[...]verseas have gone almost entirely unreported. One of them occurred in March last year, when an electri[...]iscussion at all, except in The Financial Review, of overseas inquiries into uranium processing, repor[...]heir case. Take the media reaction to the release of the first Fox report. This was received as an endorsement of mining uranium. Posters for The Sydneyof the Fox commission wrote to the Government protes[...]tful," said the report, “whether, as the number of facilities increases, it will be possible to prov[...]llation safe against attack by even small numbers of well—armed, trained men.” Or on nuclear black[...]and will tend to increase with the further spread of nuclear technology.” Concluded on P. 185 |
 | [...]it's not funny being a comedian, the same is true of writing about comedy. There are few things harder[...]ences more deadly than being on the receiving end of arguments of that sort. Despite the risks, I think the claim should be made that many of the television comedy series listed below — all[...]see them, these series, more than any other form of current television, are conceived, produced and performed within a rich and complex body of understanding shared between creators and audiences. And the high level of wit which, more times than not, individual episodes of the series achieve is the consequence of the writers‘ intelligent grasp of what these mutual understandings enable them to d[...]at any given series will generate different sorts of humor, frequently it is the sharpness with which[...]might make the point clear. In this series, most of the plots develop from Phyllis Lindstrom’s gushing sentimentalism. She wants the world to be a place of adorable children, kindly old folks, great loves[...], and behaves accordingly. Balancing the excesses of Phyllis’ theatricalities are the self—effacing commonsense of her father-in-law, Jonathan (Henry Jones), and especially the irascible toughness of Jonathan's mother, Mother Dexter (Judith Lowrey).[...]ept Mother Dexter. From the hard- won wisdom bred of more than 70 years on this earth, she refused to have any part of picnics “because the sandwiches are full of ants and the trees are full of perverts . . .”Ofof a good time is a night on the tiles with Telly Sa[...]hman). Phyllis. The boys from Happy Days. us of the depths of her scepticism. The humor, I am claiming, comes f[...]nevit- ably give her the chance to say it. A type of comic logic, understood mutually by writers and a[...]e also involves what might be labelled the comedy of confirmation. One fact about Phyllis’ lack of realism that an audience quickly picks up is its[...]t is intended to deny. Having invited the parents of Bess’ new boy friend over for dinner and a form[...]are midgets. She tries to reduce the awkwardness of the occasion by playing The Perfect Hostess with all stops out, passes a tray of savories over to the four-foot tall father, and s[...]their legs. Again the humor is marked by a kind of inevitability: we, and the writers who created he[...]tinually being made to what can be called a sense of community binding the creators, audiences and fictional characters together . . . a mood of companionability. It exists in its most obvious f[...]some high verbal or visual note. There is little of that feeling of distance which necessarily affects our responses[...]vers, The Bob Newhart Show and the later episodes of Happy Days), the audience seems to emerge as an i[...]just those generated by the constant reappearance of characters and situations. The companionability I[...]n note, for instance, the quite warm re-creations of the details and ambience of the 1950s in Happy Days and Laverne and Shirley. One episode of Laverne and Shirley wound up its plot and then fi[...]the gang dancing The Stroll to a juke-box replay of Darling, You Send Me. The people, their dress and[...]easurable to the live and indirect audiences. All of the participants — writers and audiences alike[...]times and experiences: they were familiar, a part of our communality. The reference arrows run out from the series in a variety of other directions too, including on occasions links with our mutual experiences of the media world. A police inspector visiting the precinct in Barney Miller rues the declining image of the police force, and remarks: “Years ago we us[...]ite) in The Mary *Rather like older radio series of the [.T.M.A., Burns and Allen Show and Goo[...] |
 | TELEVISION Tyler Moore Show is the quintessence of every media home-economist we have ever heard, re[...]hen The Women’s Weekly picks up Sue-Anne's idea of an annual salute to fruit. In The New Dick Van D[...]elspar’s Disease (The Big ‘F’). An episode of The Tony Randall Show centred on a court case involving pornographic films, one of which rejoiced in the title Crazed Housewives on the Make. Even the episode titles of a number of The Odd Couple series called this media awareness into play— The Flight of the Felix; They Serve Horse Radish, Don’t They?[...]e live—audience series, bring us into a complex of familiarities, some intrinsic to the formulae of the series, some extrinsic to them and part of a wider circle of common experience, When they work well (and one c[...]lity from episode to episode), they do so because of a sharpness of observation or insight into these familiar, communal elements, and the success tightens the bonds of companionship which appear to me to be the most singular characteristic of the comedies. The insights may be very small — the death- rattle of a failed dinner party in Friends and Lovers being signalled when the men present start to swap accounts of the petrol mileages they are getting from their c[...]lling Harris that his brother was Publicity shot of the cast of Welcome Back Kotter. trying to invent a frozen c[...]a dish, he remarked, that would combine the worst of three cultures; or Gabc’s comment in Welcome Ba[...]ent ways, these series impinge on our experiences of the world at large in a manner which is (to put i[...]ragi-comic than comic. One thinks, for instance, of Sergeant Fish (Abe Vigoda) in Barney Miller. The morose Fish is a fictional creation, of course, and provides the voice of cynicism which so many of the series contain. Yet, he is uncomfortably like a lot of people in the society we inhabit beyond the telev[...]but convinced beyond recall that he is at the end of the line. Plagued with piles and aching joints, he has been sunk by the ultimate futility of his job and the dreariness of his marriage. When he accuses Wojo (Max Gail) of being vicious for reminding him that he has a ste[...]ct with the stories also include the twin blights of failure and loneliness. These recognitions may b[...]t they are not infrequent. And though the moments of individual bleakness are healed by the communalit[...]d to join in an increasingly up—tempo rendition of “The Darktown Strutters’ Ball"), we have had moments of dark reminder.[...] |
 | /A9 IOURNEY“ In ]'unc.l976. a group of actresses and filmmakers went into the forests of thcHawkcsbury River district and spent I ~V? E[...]on hell-holeand dareto create a savage world free of man. mm says "Performances are gener smashing .[...]Macquarie Street I T BOX 1744 G-P-0 SYd“eY 2001 Sydney, N.S.W. 0 . g _ Telegraphic Address: Filmcorp Telephone 27 5575 . . . 5 //2 0/fly/Ia/20/a Sydney,Austra11a W[...]7 and became effective from July 1, 1977. BOARD OF DIRECTORS Paul H. Riomfalvy ([...] |
 | [...]WOMEN Susan Dermody I suspect that every piece of critical writing constructs an imaginary object t[...]inal film. Piaget has pointed out the common root of the words “discover“ and “invent“; certai[...]My rationalization for this process in the case of Journey Among Women is that I consider the film an “essay", in the literal sense of the word. It is an attempt (and, therefore, incomplete, not exhaustive of the possibilities)to do something worth doing. It[...]and even ambiguously utopian, in its exploration of a society of women in touch with nature. It hints at archetypes that go back to the heroic militancy of the Amazons, the dionysiac ‘madness‘ of the Bacchae. It is also firmly in the tradition of seeing women as “close to nature“, closer to[...]up more intimately with the primal natural forces of birth and death, which gives them a mysterious po[...]the rational, creative and administrative realms of men, on the other. The identification of women (and blacks) with natural forces gives them power, in the world of imagination, but severely handicaps them in the real world. I think it also handicaps the potential of the film — quite profoundly. The film is also[...]an logical, in its essay into the strange terrain of a world determined wholly by female values and interests. The handling of narrative structure is a critical problem in myth[...]. Move too far away from the story, from a thread of events, and you lose the capacity to generate rich ambivalences of meaning. Move too close to classic film narrative[...]omen makes some interesting attempts to break out of the constraints of plot, of cause and effect, of a chronologically ordered and explainable world. The first two shots of the film initiate the viewer into an exposition through images, rather than through the logic of events in time and space. Shot one is a red—coa[...]green world. Shot two closely traces the descent of a feather through the air as it lightly touches the bare shoulder of a woman standing in a room. Neither shot has tem[...]reted as fitting into one or more possible parts ofof the film, and the way shots of women will be differently handled to shots of men. The men (all soldiers in a glaring red that is utterly foreign to the green bush) belong to the world of the story, in long shot; the women belong to the world of the poem, in many kinds of descriptive camera movements and every kind of shot, including very close, unclothed shots. Whe[...]n to survive in the bush, to form their community of women, there is a long passage of shots that are edited, not for the illusion of action in continuous time and locatable space, but for the exposition of ideas through juxtaposed images. Their bodies be[...]they are at home in the wilderness. But the habit of thinking in (quite beautiful) images, and gradually developing an aesthetic of women as strongly alive, beautifully adapted creatures of nature, who have more humanity between them than[...]ately broken by reversion to the story, the world of men. Elizabeth (the judges daughter) who initiat[...]objects that are her dresses, hanging on the back of a door. The other women successfully fight off a variable number of red-coated soldiers; but then again, the women are helped by apparently “miraculous" powers of regeneration. For example, Lisa Peers is blasted[...]k, resurrected either by that peculiar life force of women, or by the bizarre continuity I mentioned as a danger of mixing myth with ‘plot’, open- ended structures of meaning with closed narrative. In fact, there are quite a few points in the film where it falls short of what I read as its mythopoeic ambition, and collapses into untidiness. This seems particularly true of the first and last sections of the film, before the escape, and after the attemp[...]re them, when the mythic and the realistic planes of the story seem out of control and in mutual contradiction. The period setting of the film seems to work well, as a distancing device. Instead of evoking a past world and enticing the viewer to l[...]nce can simultaneously hold in his mind a picture of declasse women as contemptible objects for his (contemptible) lusts, and of women like Elizabeth as another class of objects altogether. Meanwhile Elizabeth is able to break out of her world when she sees, for a moment, the intolerable nature of that contradiction, but out in the bush she imper[...]to the way she oppresses other women. She is part of the very knot of the contradiction that she repudiates: she relega[...]to her by a patriarchal society to another class of her own kind, her own minority group, and thus strengthens the power of her own oppression. As she achieves integration with the group of convict women, and as it becomes a community outside the terms of the society it has escaped, Elizabeth is “re-hu[...]" I have described, the women move completely out of historical time, just as by journeying to the uncharted wilderness, they moved out of historical place. The exposition of images, that is the centre-piece of the film and of its meaning, detaches itself from the period setting of the plot as the women lose the last shreds of their period clothes. However, it must be admitted that all of them, whether they represented female bourgeoisie[...]reasonably liberated women who, from the vantage of a liberal, middle-class education, have opted for the look of a declasse state. Even if unconsciously they already had the marks, the cliches, of women's liberation in the way they move, speak, l[...]distancing the period setting, and the trappings of plot, or as faking the evidence, planting the pro[...]. Similarly, perhaps, the noticeable stiltedness of the dialogue, which was restricted mainly to the world of the plot, may also be seen as a deliberate attempt by filmmakers to frustrate the realism of the past, or it may be seen as an inability to ha[...]y it suits the film, fits in with its suppression of plot motivation, period evocation, and psychologi[...]ly, it remains impossible to be sure how far each of these effects was intentional. Which brin[...] |
 | [...]is forced to veer between plot and myth, instead of steering a course that collides with neither. And[...]true identity, by mingling with the primal forces of the wilderness.By making the women journey into[...]ss, the film opts for being a lyrical celebration of women's apprehension of nature, instead of an analysis of the sources of their oppression in a post-industrial society. I[...]gued that the film is, therefore, celebrating one of the most fundamental of those sources, since the idea of the closeness of women to nature has been one ofthe mainstays of patriarchal ideology, excluding women from the world of rationality and decision-making. So that the fil[...]the women heroically break from, at the beginning of the story. This central idea of the film also widens the gap between the mythopoeic and narrative directions it takes. The world of the plot and the world of the women making myths in the wilderness remain d[...]ough images cannot answer. The central ‘poem’ of the women learning to survive in the exquisitely[...]When women repudiate the oppressive world—view of patriarchy, they must journey to a radically new epistemology, and not just to a deeper layer of sentience underlying the old one. The totally female utopia of the women in the bush lacks a critique of what it is replacing, in its complete isolation f[...]ld oppression. Is the successful military defeat of the male an answer for the questions raised by th[...]most naive terms, confusing the cause and effect of a closed narrative with the cause and effect that[...]reely and beautifully the film handles its images of women casting off the rags of their oppression, the total is a retreat into lyr[...]issues raised by the story. 5 J I like the idea of a mythopoeic treatment of women coming out from under an ideology that expl[...]attempt to meet it. I find that the actual story of Journey Among Women frustrates what I see as its[...]than the fairly intellectual demands I have made of the film, might find that its larger ambitions fr[...]ewett, John Weiley, Torn Cowan and cast. Director of Photography Tom Cowan. Editor John Scott. Music R[...]6, 1942 we had been awakened by the unusual noise of buses being driven round the Paris avenues at day[...]Winter Velodrome. I saw that there were children of our own age among them, squashed tight and still,[...]he cold windows, at a time made for the sweetness of slumber. I thought their round, black eyes were millions of stars in the night . . Valery Giscard d‘Estai[...]surface concealing a political and moral parable of considerable richness. The recent excesses of the Losey baroque are absent, replaced with precise, though never self-parading, imagery, and his use of space (notably in Klein‘s stair-well) is invent[...](Jeanne Moreau) explains to Klein the uniqueness of man; for while there are various species of, say, insects, there is only one species of man. For many of the French in 1942 there were two classes — the[...]wle as Laura (right) in Bruce Beresford‘s film of Henry Handel Richardson‘s The Getting of Wisdom. to notice persecution only when it is of ourselves, we are all always responsible. The inhumanity of man to man shown by the French who collaborated with the Germans in rounding up the Jews. is the guilt of every man, of every Mr Klein. Paris 1942: an art-dealer, Mr Klein, is cold-heartedly purchasing works of art from fleeing Jews. One day a Jewish newspaper[...]r. When Klein complains (“I think I am a victim of a practical joke"), he is told the police have al[...]finds there is another Mr Klein, but is not told ofof clues, from a photo of a girl on a motorcycle to some boots worn in a ca[...]lieving a report that his double, a Jewish member of the Resistance, is dead, Klein flees for Marseill[...]Velodrome d‘I-liver where he ignores his chance of freedom (his lawyer is there with proof of his parentage) and allows himself to be swept dow[...]n is likened by Florence to a vulture, the symbol of greed. But in a tapestry Klein has earlier thought of buying, there is an image of a vulture punctured through the heart by the arrow ofof compassion or pity. It is also an indifference increasingly typical of man today — Mr Klein is certainly not only abou[...]see Klein's resignation to death as a realization of his own involvement in the nightmare, and not, as[...]ein shows no interest in those with him, not even of the Jew standing behind.) The first clue of Klein‘s guilt by association comes when he show[...]iet Berto). At first, he is amused by the crudity of its anti-semitism, but then he understands what P[...]clue is the connection between the hidden branch of the Klein family —the Dutch Jews — and the vo[...]ncreasingly fascinated in. Mr Klein is a parable of involvement and Mr Klein, like the audience, find[...]g that can be disowned. Klein's journey in search of his double can therefore be seen, like that of Nicholas Urfe‘s in John Fowles‘ The Magus, as[...]rn in the labyrinth aiding in a growing awareness of everyman‘s responsibilities. And it is on this[...]e—up? The Jews or the jealous Nicole? The trail of clues laid by Franco Solinas and Losey begins wit[...]e it"). The frame-up has, therefore, been thought of before the film begins. Slowly one pieces togeth[...]: a Resistance group is ferrying wealthy Jews out of Paris. using as a half-way house the chateau at lvry—la»Bataille. The other Mr Klein is a member of this group and it is likely the Jew with the painting is also, the less faded areas of wallpaper therefore suggesting that paintings are[...]ous. And it is this ability to sustain two levels of interpretation simul- taneously that makes one‘[...]r Ralph Baum. Screenplay Franco Solinas. Director of Photography Gerry Fisher. Editor Henri Lan[...] |
 | THE GETTING OF WISDOM CRIA CUERVOS THE GETTING OF WISDOM Brian McFarIane Henry Handel Richardson’s name heads the credits on Bruce Besford‘s film of The Getting of Wisdom, so one anticipates a respect for the informing spirit of the book. The film is often perceptive and amusi[...]where it does most violence to Richardson's view of life; in relinquishing the essentially grim view of her square-peg heroine and the kind of success she grants her, the film loses coherence.[...]is no help)and to settle for the showier business of turning her into a budding concert pianist bound[...]novel is based. However, despite Laura‘s moment of defiance in not playing the an- nounced piece on[...]d), this finale does not help to pull the threads of the film together. The book is episodic, too, but[...]in the book is seen as contributing to the growth of a mind which will ultimately seek to express itself in the writing of a certain kind of fiction, though Laura is still far from clear at the end just where this will lead her. . . not a word of her narration was true, but every word of it might have been true.“ This has been the bas[...]against her virtue, her attitude to the expulsion of Annie Johns for theft (which the film mishandles[...]they are drawn together by a persuasive over-view of what they mean in Laura‘s growth as an artist.[...]al point in the film by making the girl a friend of Laura‘s and the motive for the theft her feeling for Laura. The value of the episode in the novel — as a stimulus to Lau[...]e whole scene gets played as if it were some kind of climax, whereas it seems themat- ically quite adr[...]velopment. As things are, it tends to make chunks of the film, as well as many minor moments that se[...]raneous at worst. And this is a pity because many of these moments and scenes are, in them- selves, sh[...]hose ego gets rather badly bruised in the process of getting wisdom. There is not enough detail about[...]e the liveliness and spontaneity being ironed out of her; and, equally, there's not enough evidence of her ultimate resilence for us to trust in her rising above the conformity, hypocrisy and cynicism of the school and its teachers. Possibly the role of Laura is like that of Shakespeare's Juliet: by the time the actress is[...]d musician — that the script offers her instead of a character. However, she is sensitive enough to the demands of some individual sequences, especially those invol[...]me amusing touches, especially in the performance of Kim Devine as the greedy, raucous Lilith; and Hil[...]and grace. Otherwise, the real acting pleasures of the film are provided by the gallery of intelli- gent minor performances as school- mistr[...]nt, is an imposing presence, but the role, a sort of cut-price Mrs Danvers, finally invites monotonous overstatement. Like most of the Australian films of the past few years, The Getting of Wisdom looks handsome: Don McAlpine offers some lovingly photographed interiors of muted clutter, with sudden sharply contrasted bursts of harsh landscape, rolling coast-line, and formal gardens which point up the claustrophobic aspects of the school's life. I wish he had avoided the modi[...]useful narrative or thematic point. THE GETTING OF WISDOM: Directed by Bruce Beresford. Producer Phillip Adams. Screenplay Eleanor Witcombe, Director of Photography Don McAlpine. Editor Bill Anderson. A[...]nish middle-class family as seen through the eyes of a little girl. Ana Torrent, who made her film debut in Victor Erice‘s Spirit of the Beehive, plays the central character Ana, and[...]is both innocent and knowing, profound and matter of fact, impassive yet deeply disturbed — as only[...]er and Ana 20 years later, remembering the events of her childhood. However, the adult Ana sections pr[...]remely fluid — and there is such a strong unity of place that the intuitive viewer who allows himself the pleasure of just watching can accept the shifts in time without too much difficulty. The ‘doubling’ of Ana with her mother is not only done visually thr[...]her‘s “I want to die" in that terrible moment of crisis when she hears the Almendrita story told b[...]t he believes death does not have the same weight of significance for adult and child. “For a child[...]dwell on this fact. For Ana the child, the death of her mother signifies her disappearance, which me[...]needs her. I believe that the child is incapable of establishing differences between the real and the[...]nary is accomplished without any shock. A process of rationalization is not necessary to justify it, a[...]hide and seek game involving symbolic death; and, of course, Ana herself believes she has power over life and death, and gives what she thinks is a fatal dose of “poison“ (sodium bicarbonate) to her father a[...]er, repression, guilt and sexuality — although, of course, all these are interrelated and cannot be[...]. All the adult characters are defined in terms of sexuality: Rosa is healthy and motherly, listens[...]'s father, captured in his photographs in moments of power (on a horse, or in the military splendor of his uniform), is obviously more suited to the sen[...]fferent contexts, but in her case it is a closing of the shutters, until 20 years later, Cinem[...] |
 | [...]the memories are painful.Saura has also spoken of his wish for a “subterranean communication" bet[...]is such a film, and there are many such instances of wordless com- munication. One can recall the fascination of the yellow hen‘s feet in the fridge; Ana‘s vision of herself at the top of the building — does her smile suggest complicit[...]dening ambiguity is in her smile at the beginning of the film, when she watches Amelia rush in disarray from her father's room: is her gaze one of accusation? of satisfaction at a deed accomplished? or merely cu[...]cord, so does her grandmother. whose closed world of memories is still very real for her. There is ob[...]complex and haunting film, and a close analysis of Saura‘s editing would be most rewarding. In his other films he is interested in the idea of the double, and in the self and its relationship[...]distribution in Australia: we have been ignorant of them for too long. CRIA CUERVOS: Directed by[...]lias Querejeta. Screenplay Carlos Saura. Director of Photography Teodoro Escamilia. Editor Pablo G. de[...]ield is a domaine, a mystery island off the coast of Victoria, where Jenny Abbott (Elizabeth Alexander[...]dge and padlocked gates. The island, once a topic of speculation, is now of little interest, the locals tolerating, though not understanding, the privacy of its rich owners. Into this balanced world comes[...]inated by the reclusive Abbotts, and by processes of luck and persistence, he stumbles upon Summerfie[...]here) is horrific. But it only surprises because of its improb- ability. Surely the revelation of David and Jenny's secret is not sufficiently alar[...]r, Green‘s dialogue does suggest a deeper level of narrative. When the intruding Simon breaks a cup,[...]world“). Having opted for the impossible choice of living together, they are seeing their dream thro[...]attempt to invest a simple thriller with a degree of character analysis and by doing so, tries to satisfy the rigors of genre and naturalism. This it does rather well.[...]el, David's suggestion is a deliberate misleading of an obtrusive ‘foreigner’. But at the same tim[...]cting naturally by wishing to avoid any suspicion of closeness between himself and Jenny. it is, after[...]ce given this successful but unwarranted invasion of their domain. Where the scripting does falter is[...]illingness to decide finally on the exact nature of the film and at whom the film is aimed. If Summer[...]us references to blood, the possible combinations of high and low carriers of thalassemia, or, most explicitly, the reference t[...]or lot; they are all inbred" — and this hedging of one‘s bets minimizes the possible tension. The[...]heir world functions well, perhaps too well. None of the moral or ethical traumas that give so much te[...]unnecessary insistence on Summerfield as a place of “fascination“. Magical domains, as Alain Four[...]however, is the contrast between the ordinariness of the hotel where Simon stays, and where the height of intellectualism is the weekly card game, and the[...]Simon and the landlady have intercourse, and that of Jenny and David at the end. And balancing nicely between these two worlds is Simon. Part of this is due to a solid performance by Nick Tate,[...]annam‘s direction is much crisper than in Break of Day, and though occasionally let down by some loo[...]mple, the scene where Simon first finds the gates of Summerfield locked), |
 | [...]manages to keep the film pacey — the climbing of the cliffs, for example, is a well- cut and effective piece of sub-textural tension. Hannam is also helped by an[...]-partially successful thriller. There is evidence of much thought and care; if a little more intuition[...]ucer Pom Oliver. Screenplay Cliff Green. Director of Photography Mike Molloy. Editor Sarah Bennet. Mus[...]Phil TaylorThe assumption that an appreciation of the strategic situation in a film like A Bridge Too Far is vital to an understanding of the plot is typical of the genre. Films such as Objective Burma and Cross of Iron open with compilation footage so that there is an economical orientation in terms of place, date and the state of the war up to this or that point. The technique[...]film has some factual basis, and with the decline of the fictional war film, since the abortive The Gr[...]e Too Far opens with original documentary footage of an aircraft dropping a stick of bombs, freeze-frame, and a womans voice, tired an[...]r film, A Bridge Too Far is episodic, a patchwork of scenes illustrating a large number of the facets of the resulting battle. That the scenes are only r[...]e, for while A Bridge Too Far is an epic war film of rather average quality, it nevertheless demonstra[...]ing battlefield action. He is a talented observer of what .I. Glenn Gray has described as war‘s “fearful beauty". The core of the film lies in the growing conviction that the[...]increase Montgomery's public image at the expense of the dashing American, General Patton. Later, in an estranged briefing scene, the commander of the airborne troops, Lt.-Gen. Browning (Dirk Boga[...]s given the most difficult objective, the capture of the Rhine bridge at Arnhem —— the farthest of the four bridges. The more easy-going American commanders, aware that they form merely a part of an essentially British operation, are given the f[...]ous that Sosabowski has dared question the wisdom of “the biggest operation since D-Day“. The war,[...]or officers to further their ambition. This view of warfare planned and co- ordinated by bureaucrats[...]d do, the newly- appointed Commander—in—Chief of the German forces in the West replies. “End the[...]y commanders gradually deepens to a cloying sense of doom. And while the airborne commanders ineptly plan the operation based on a German defence ofof the British field radios reveals that they are sh[...]officer responsible shrugs off the fact for fear of “rocking the boat“. The commander of the ground force, Lt.- Gen. Brian Horrocks (Edwar[...]a Western film: the parachutists besieged, short of food and vital supplies“; the Germans are the b[...]ermans are waiting for them. Sosabowski's portent of the massacre of his men becomes fact as they float to earth with[...]sy targets for the Germans. This pervading sense of failure is, of course, the rationale behind the film and Attenborough is careful to remind us of the Cinema Papers, October — I77 |
 | [...]nts, however, do not lie directly in these lesson of history, but in Attenboroughs excellent sense of the battlefield. Here, more than in Oh, What a Lo[...]lf becomes a crucial momentary force in the world of the battlefield. One of these aspects is the presence of danger.Death comes quickly and randomly. Britis[...]h the aimed and wild bullet. The lethal potential of a machine—gun is realized in such scenes as. Ma[...]er Good) careful and quiet advance with a platoon of soldiers onto the seemingly undefended bridge at[...]cross the Rhine at Nijmegan into the machine guns of the waiting SS troops; and Sosabowski‘s men att[...]ue is used to convey the timeless and alien world of a battle where two armies stand and fight it out.[...]Caine) armored advance up the road into the range of German anti—tank guns becomes a disordered ugly world of screaming shells, smoke, flames, and cries of the wounded. Here. Unsworth uses his telephoto le[...]ar way to John Coquillon in Sam Peckinpah's Cross of Iron. The battle is a place of no escape — tight. anarchic, claustrophobic, an[...]ttenborough, in an endeavor to cover every aspect of the battle. has cast his net too wide, there are[...]pinned down in a house near the bridge; the death of the old Dutch woman driven crazy by the battle; t[...]; Cook‘s frenetic fight for the German-held end of the Nijmegan bridge; Sgt. Eddie Dohun (James Caan[...]e to wounded British paratroopers in the wreckage of her once neat Dutch home on the outskirts of Arnhem; and Col. Bobby Stout (Elliott Gould) arri[...]but A Bridge Too Far necessarily becomes the sum of parts such as these. Apart from detailing the multi-faceted aspects of battle; the film's greatest strength lies in its demonstration of war as a spectacle, the fascination that accompanies manifestations of power. Herein lies the importance of the airdrop sequence. Whereas Raoul Walsh focused on the expectations of the men of Nelsons command in the parachuting scene of Objective Burma, Attenborough seems awed by the m[...]ers, and such mechanical details as the uncoiling of tow ropes as hundreds of aircraft take off. Attenborough has said his fil[...]t may go far toward explaining the over-statement of “War the Destroyer.“ When, for example. Dr. S[...]enly homeless and frightened. There is the sense of waste, too, when the last of the British paratroopers. the wounded men who cou[...]Me as they wait for the Germans to arrive. Much of the film is concerned with images and scenes such[...]y, Attenborough may have retained the crisp- ness of such scenes as when Urquhart is re- grouping on 1[...]John Palmer. Screenplay William Goldman. Director of Photography Geoffrey Unsworth. Editor Anthony Gib[...]xander Walker notes that Robert Redford once said of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid: “On a gut l[...]me as a fairy—tale. It also fitted in with some of the things I had done in life." Similarly, the screenplay ofof High Rolling, or at least its two male leads, as “a variety of the Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid pair of guys“, the similarities are superficial. The fi[...]m in the Dustin Hoffman-Gene Hackman relationship of Scarecrow (although the bond between the two in High Rolling is more one of convenience than a genuinely human link), but there is none of the romantic Western flavor of the Redford film. The film opens at a North Quee[...]e dope. In Surfers Paradise they have their share of adventure which culminates in them holding up a t[...]are you?", the cinema audience (largely composed of 10 and 1 1-year olds) roars with laughter. Redlich still has a lot to learn about the characterization of women, however, even when they are playing minor[...]eak the Queen's English. From a production point of view, it would appear at first sight that Tim Bur[...]tiative in making a film in which the average age of the produc- tion unit is 24 years, and of which the writer, director and male leads are new[...]nute film, cost approximately $400,000. Quality, of course, does not bear a precise relationship to p[...]e box-office or makes a good profit, the question of whether it was worth it remains. If one were to[...]s are treated as inferiors, and the dramatic form of the film has few surprises. Even the popular rock music of the group Sherbet is merely an addition to the dramatic narrative structure, not an integral part of it. It is also remark- ably predictable, the musi[...]io). does the music add to the introspective mood of the images and action without being simply superimposed upon it. As for the direction of television Logie winner. Igor Auzins. his camera[...]nal. They might not have the captivating richness of a Mauro Bolog- him or the orchestration of a Peckinpah, but they are not obtrusive. More obt[...]Alan Finney. Screenplay Forrest Redlich. Director of Photography Dan Burstall. Editor Edward Mc[...] |
 | [...]m a unique experience overseas to see her old way of life — work. marriage. friends — in a new per[...]at serious principles are at stake.A SMALL BODY OF STILL WATER Prod Company . . . . . . . . .[...]. . . . . . .. September 1977 Synopsis: A study of life in a freshwater pond. TALKING SHOP — DEMA[...]. . . . . August 1977 Synopsis: Speaking habits of teenagers. TUTA Prod Company . . . . . . . . . .[...]. . . . . .. . September 1977 Synopsis: Training of personnel within the trade union. SOUTH AUSTRALI[...]lian Wheat Board Synopsis: To make farmers aware of the problems caused by insect infestation and to[...]Wheat Boarrd Synop:I|:To increase understanding of why quality is important in sales and what factor[...]ls highlighting major developments in the history of the industry and describing it as it is today.[...]ynopsis: Follow up on the music series on the art of the conductor. FOOD FROM THE RELUCTANT[...]16mm Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dept. of Agriculture and Fisheries Synopsis: A film aimed[...]rld countries to show how the Ley Dry Land system of farming from South Australia works and achieves i[...]Lands Commission Synopsis: Historical coverage of creating and building a new estate. HANDLING MEA[...]and community groups showing the correct methods of storing meat in the home. HOW TO GROMBLE A FLUB[...]Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Dept. of Further Education Synopsis: To enlarge awareness. of the changing emphasis in Further Education from t[...]. . . . . . . . . . . South Australian Division of Tourism Synopsis: Julie Anthony features in a pre[...]ers to stimulate interest in the protective value of life assurance. LISTENING Screenplay . . . . . .[...]. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Australian institute of Management Synopsis: First in a series of films about communication used for management tra[...]n Synopsis: Outlines the services and activities of the Mothers and Babies Health Association. NEW R[...]rance Synopsis: To effect a decreasein the number of accidents occurring in playgrounds. PREVENTATIV[...]onsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . Dept. of Public Health Synopsis: To illustrate to the public that good health means making the most of life's potential. PORT Prod Company , . . . .[...]h Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Dept.of Marine and Harbours Synopsis: A film to market the Port of Adelaide. SAFE DRIVING — A QUESTION OF ATTITUDE Prod Company . . . . . . .[...]ickless Ltd Synopsis: A film on the safe loading of trucks. STORY OF A TREE Screenplay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .[...]Hammond Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Dept of Woods and Forests Synopsis: To increase the public's awareness of wood and its uses. THIS LITTLE PIG WENT TO MARKE[...]16mm Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Dept. of Agriculture and Fisheries. The Pig Industry Research Council Synopsis: A film to promote the principle of pig carcase classification to growers, processors[...]. . . ..16mm Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . ..Dept. of Public Health TRANSPORT AND ENERGY Screenplay .[...]6mm Sponsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dept. of Transport (Transport Planning Section) ' « : I- Synopnlu To inform the public of the different types of energy as they relate to transport when the world[...]ster Violin Maker John Ferwerda. WATERBIRDS OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA Prod Company . . . . . . . . Bos[...]vice Synopnls:This film is based on the birdlife of the Coorong. and shows the interaction of three elements; the birds. the landscape and the[...]eet $175,000 Anthony 8350.000 Buckley. The Night of Prowler AUSTRALIAN FILM COMMISSION mm CREATIVE[...]andora Smith $130.000 Samson Productions. Weekend of Shadows $200,000 Production approvals from the AFC meetings of August/September 1977: SCRIPT DEVELOPMENT[...] |
 | The Media Centre PapersLa Trobe University The Centre for the Study of Educational Communication and Media (otherwise known as the Media Centre) at LaTrobe University in Melbourne is, to my knowledge, the first academic institution in Australia to embark upon publication of a series of papers offering commentary about film, television and radio. Though the opinions of the reviewers would seem to suggest that the quality of these papers is uneven, such an endeavor deserves[...]country will emulate the example. 1. A Survey of Audio Visual Facilities in Universities in the U.[...]Patricia Edgar and Tricia Sims in 1970, the first of the Media Centre Papers provides an interesting comparative outline of the status of “audio visual centres“ in the four countries.[...]The former kind seems to emphasize the provision of technical expertise for other departments, while the latter contains “a higher proportion of teaching assistants, research assistants and grap[...]from the respondents on organization, appointment of directors, services provided, and equipment. Most[...]faction at limitations (staffing, finance, degree of autonomy) imposed on them by the institutions to[...]seful booklet for anyone concerned with the place of audio-visual departments in tertiary institutions[...]Edgar Prepared by Patricia Edgar on the basis of research carried out by students in a second year[...]ion programs". The introduction to the main body of this booklet briefly argues that “the human reality of sex role stereotyping is socially constructed reality”, and then concedes the difficulty of locating the degree to which television characters, as a part of that “social reality", provide behavior models for viewers. The question of whether or not they provide models at all is not[...]e anyway as the authors pursue a content analysis of particular programs, shown in peak viewing time f[...]analysis is largely characterized by a reduction of content to plot outlines or to the quoting of a few selected lines of dialogue which are deemed to be significant. Questions concerning the nature of the comedy, or the various contextual tones of particular episodes of particular series, are ignored by research more c[...]“social reality“, this paper provides a model of how not to go about an exploration of the ideological constructs of the material of popular culture. For a much more useful starting[...]sensible chapter, “On the Social Significance of Television Comedy", in the recently published App[...]ke What has come to be known as the wasteland of children's television, ebbs and flows as a topic of public debate according to the results of the newest bits of evidence about it, the report of the most recent inquiry or the opinion of the latest notable. Research into the area inevit[...]rsonal values and his or her own expert knowledge of that child. Patricia Edgar and Ray Crooke made a study of families whose values had led them to the social extreme of jettisoning the television set. The result is ill[...]heir attitudes to television, their children and, of course, themselves. They emerge as well-educated,[...]tural snobs who feel they have solved the problem of television competing with them for their children, simply by getting rid of it. “We refused to repair our television set wh[...]child becoming too absorbed in it mainly because of loneliness . . . she now produces beautiful (need[...]s and other activities —- the normal activities of an adolescent — . . “I just think there are[...]ngs that I want the children to do“. The bulk of the report, which declares itself to be “about[...]quotes from the replies. About a quarter consists of children‘s attitudes; they naturally mirror the attitudes of their parents very closely. “Some parents“, the researchers claimed “had actually been accused of depriving their children by not having television[...]ave been virtually closed off from the mainstream of popular culture in favor of pursuits their parents see as worthwhile. They co[...]ipped to cope with a world where the predominance of visual information is even reaching into higher e[...]period. He argues convincingly that the function of broadcasting in the present social context is to “divert and contain our broadcasting and perception of reality” and that “questions of reforming or restructuring the media cannot be resolved in isolation from the larger context of a society in which the mass media operate and function." His analysis of Australian Labor Party pragmatism points up the divergence between their “rhetoric of policy intention and the reality of policy implementation". A chapter devoted to the machinations of Australian Broadcasting Control Board and Media D[...]m a document outlining the way in which advocates of public broadcasting could be brought into line with the values and aspirations of commercial broadcasters. Griffiths‘ analysis of the McLean Report, Priorities Review Staff recomm[...]tment), all lend weight to the argument that one of the critical priorities for citizens‘ participa[...]tructural change, which’ allows the possibility of “publicly locating the source of decisions, the reasons for those decisions and th[...]ons are consistent with the already prolific work of David Griffiths. Characteristically, the annotate[...]bibliographic resource. The case study treatment of Labor‘s administration of the airwaves, between 1972 and 1975, allows the a[...]context particularly appropriate to consideration of the recently available Federal Labor platform on[...]sed. The hidden curriculum and hidden assumptions of apparently innovative reform in radio broadcastin[...]ematic Synthesis by Ian Mills The description of “the cinematic synthesis“ by Ian Mills is a confused piece of film theory. His synthesis is the marriage of “the reality of the external, material world and the reality of the internal world of the mind“ in film. On the occasion of their union, according to Mills, “film as art[...]aw on external reality to reveal the inner states of characters within their films. Of Sjostrom: “What predominates are the states of the physical world as images of states of soul of the protagonists: the sea, the snow, the mountains, the storm, the manifestations of the physical external world, are objective correlatives for manifestations of man's inner world of the spirit". Certainly this is an acceptable reading of Sjostrom‘s visual imagery, but Mills’ asserti[...]s together, rather than how he does it. Questions of film form, even the most basic ones, seem to be i[...]oes not fit into this remarkably reductive notion of art, than to explore particular examples of its internal workings: ‘‘It was when they added to the romantic inner world of expressionism, the romantically simple view of the external world of everyday objects and people that German filmmakers attained the heights of art. It was then that they achieved what Kracaeur would call “the redemption of |
 | [...]ysical reality‘.“ The single-minded rhetoric of Mills‘ theory is founded, firstly, on a consist[...]“light waves and sound waves", but the details of mise-en-scene seem strangely irrelevant to his pu[...]on a particularly limited and unproblematic view of reality. Of Stiller: “Like Sjostrom, Stiller deals with all of reality, the external world of nature and the inner world of the mind.“ The political and social identity of the films themselves, and of the world in which and about which they are made,[...]we have established and understood the dimensions of any art form, both the material and mental aspects of those dimensions, that we can proceed to establish a mode of perception, a critical methodology, based on thos[...]In these essays, two lawyers discuss problems of Australian broadcasting planning and administration in the context of historical, legal and social precedent. Nicholas[...]Armstrong‘s “Obstacles to Sensible Regulation of Commercial Broad- casting“ * has been an import[...]e recent essay details the structured intricacies of our current broadcasting administration, systemat[...]e renewal process," and while regretting the lack of legal sophistication among media activists, Armstrong points out “there is little likelihood of a major change in the direction of broadcasting law or administration (in Australia) through the courts. At least there is little likelihood of such a change in favor of reform." The problem of limited resources available to community groups,[...]to commercial broadcasters, compounds the problem of conflict-of-interest facing decision makers in the bureaucrac[...]utive on the board at any one time, but, for much of the McClelland period, four out of five * Australian Quarterly, Vol. 46, No. 4.[...]action against friends . . “The embarrassment of the ABCB in sitting in judgment on old friends would have been nothing compared with the embarrassment of Liberal and Country Party Postmasters-General be[...]executing a sentence against coalition figures of much greater prestige and importance than themsel[...]eads him to conclude that “I.abor‘s period in office has now disposed of the myth that one side of politics has a monopoly of wisdom about broadcasting. Even acceptance of the idea that the structure and control of broadcasting are not immutable is an advance on the stultifying inertia of our last twenty years." Nicholas Johnson‘s ref[...]ay. The paper outlines conversations with members of the bureaucracy on the question of the ABCB‘s reluctance to use their powers to en[...]t taking action which might lead to a definition of the legal legitimacy and extent of their power. Turning to the problem of American domination of Australian television, Johnson describes, with ap[...]notices “l0 potential violations in 10 minutes of programming while at the same time getting dresse[...]ccording to standard 39, I presume the similarity of McDonalds commercial to those I had seen in the U[...]hot to be lit and framed precisely from blow—up of US. television commercials. Johnson sees the concentration of control over the medium generally to be “the mo[...]casting bureaucracies with the full participation of the government.“ The “possible courses of action" suggested by Johnson are based on a commi[...]reform. They include support for the development of public broadcasting and for “active citizen participation in the process of making programs, making decisions about programs,[...]suggestion that we work toward community control of the fourth network, where the continuing work of video access centres, Australian mainstream and alternative cinema could be released and the challenge of creating “new popular attitudes and behavior pa[...]ular, is an essential addition to a growing body of discussion on broadcasting in Australia. Essentia[...]their descriptive detail; lacking is an analysis of the contemporary, social and political role of broadcasting. In consequence, the authors propose[...]ch, finally, seems unduly optimistic in the light of their evidence here. John Hughes 7. Australian[...]ing Snr. was Australia’s most prolific director of feature films. Between the opening of his Melbourne studio, Efftee Films, in June 1931,[...]gth features, two 40-minute featurettes, a number of travelogues, and musical and novelty shorts. Pro[...]Unlike his principal contemporaries, Ken G. Hall of Cinesound and Charles Chauvel, Thring eschewed the language of I-Iollywood cinema with which his audience was mo[...]ing‘s films were tied instead to the mainstream of commercial theatre; his camera was seldom more than a rigidly static recorder of entirely Verbalized narratives. The film frame f[...]en with painted backdrops. The literary emphasis of Thring‘s style was evident in his dependence on[...]ans. Thring himself rarely directed the placement of the camera; he was often occupied elsewhere while[...]several films, and Arthur Higgins as photographer of all the features — were veterans of the industry and way past their prime. The cast[...]re important for his contribution to the business of the industry, than for his work as a film director. He was closely involved in the growth of the Hoyts cinema chain, which before 1930 was entirely Australian-owned. In the construction of theatres and in the development of a competitor to the combine of Union Theatres, Thring contributed sig- nificantly in the 19205 to the growth of the powerful duopoly in the exhibition trade whic[...]During this production period, he became a victim of what he had inflicted on local producers in the 19203, and experienced the frustration and humiliation of trying to gain adequate returns from an exhibitio[...]alian product. Thring became a vigorous advocate of government-initiated trade incentives -- especial[...]res and distributors to handle a fixed percentage of Australian footage. He contributed much weight to[...]ectual). Thring’s achievements in the politics of the film industry are easily overlooked in the tangible presence of his work as a film director. The films may lead[...]ng reviews are the first in an occasional series of commentaries on publications which have emerged f[...]ions, local and abroad, concerned with the study of the media. A subsequent. issue of Cinema Papers will, for example, deal with the collection of Television Mono- graphs and other intermittent pu[...]stitute. The New Wave by James Monaco Oxford University Press. Recommended price (hardback) $21. Regular readers of overseas film journals will probably need no intr[...]ke One. Nor will they be strangers to the subject of the nouvelle vague, a term commonly coined and tr[...]this move- ment, which had earlier (in the pages of Cahiers du Cinema) broken with the tradi- tional view of French cinema and which, by the late 1950s, had e[...]was less an organized movement than a collection of individuals who happened to want to make films, w[...]y which to do so. and whose ‘politique‘, born of a common belief in the possibility of the personal in film, with the Hollywood film as[...]Varda, and Alain Resnais, who made admirable use of the availability of finance and the freedom of expression‘, and who, arguably, deserve inclusion in any study of the French “new wave". Monaco's work here is most successful in his discussions of Truffaut and Godard. much of the book being given over to a par- ticularly useful commentary on the form and political nature of their films. Monaco‘s writing reflects t[...] |
 | [...]ically — “At their best they reveal something of that terrifying internal battle between the paralysis of contemplation and the desire for action . . (p.[...]cinates Godard, but micro—politics, an analysis of the basic political unit the human couple" (p. 7[...], Monaco urges that we recognize the implications of Godard‘s concern with film language: “Materia[...]which he uses to make them, but also the subjects of his films If we can understand the system of film, he suggests, possibly we can better understand the system of life. Film is politics.“ (p. 128)in the context of a popular cinema where plot and character provide[...]gued. They provide essential reading for students of those directors, and the flow of Monaco‘s prose and the insights which he offers should be of relevance to readers with less specialized intere[...]ol, Rohmer and Rivette do not sustain the quality of the rest of the book. The chapter on Chabrol in particular su[...]thoroughly that characterizes Monaco's criticism of Truffaut and Godard. This is not to say that his discussion of Chabrol is without insight -— the brief out- lining of the sexual imagery in Que La Bete Meure is partic[...]assertion without analysis. The patronizing tone of his treat- ment of Ophelia, La Rupture (compare Michael Walker‘s excellent analysis in Movie 20) and NADA (his view of the film’s “straightforward style", shows a lack of awareness of the extent of Chabrol’s irony), and his misreading of the final exchange between Helene and Charles in[...]uit are at odds with his introductory declaration of his intention “to participate in the vital dial[...]servations and the outrageous price aside, is one of the most useful and accessible pieces of film criticism available at a time when most serious writing is to be found in the pages of the more amenably priced journals. Tom Ryan Books of the Quarter Compiled by J. H. Reid An unusually small number of books relating to cinema and television were released in the past quarter. The Sydney mail strike was partly to blame. But there is striking evidence of a general winding-down of cinema books in publishers‘ lists. The market[...]ertain areas. Both The International Encyclopedia of Film (Roger Manvell) and The World Encyclopedia of the Film (Cawkwell and Smith) have been remaindered, while Oxford University Press have found sales of their much-touted but inferior Oxford Companion t[...]d their fingers severely burnt. The latest issue of Forthcoming Books lists as many already-announced[...]“indefinitely postponed" as new books. The list of cancellations extends all the way from Bruce Lee[...]area is the book-film tie-in. A whole abundance of books are coming out on Star Wars. There are alre[...]or five scheduled for publication before the end of the year. Oddly enough, one category that is goin[...]ill and the Indians was a flop. So was the script of Silent Movie, despite the film's box-office bonanza. Viking have discontinued their MGM Library of Film Scripts and Lorrimer have switched from scre[...]horror films such as Barrie Pattison‘s The Seal of Dracula and Werner Adrian‘s Freaks: Cinema of the Bizarre. Actors and Actresses Astaire and[...]New York, 1976. $2.45. A well-researched history of the Astaire-Rogers films with a comprehensive fil[...]s, Danny Thomas and Ed Wynn. The Life and Crimes of Errol Flynn by Lionel Godfrey. London, 1977. $12.[...]its catchpenny title, this is an able summing-up of Flynn's life, public and private, relying almost[...]by John Belton. New York, 1976. $3.95. The Films of Robert Redford by James Spada. Secaucus, 1977. $19.95. One of the better books in the Citadel series, with fair[...]notes. This edition is likely to become something of a collector‘s item as the publisher's remaining[...]Mr Redford who has had second thoughts about some of the remarks he made on various co-stars. Valenti[...]ie. London, 1975. $19.95. This is by far the best of the batch. Meticulously researched by a life-long[...]zie‘s, though it does have a greater collection of stills. Botham and Donnelly‘s is a competent piece of journalism drawn from old newspaper files and com[...]olored attitudes as a distinctive art form. Tube of Plenty by Erik Barnouw. New York, 1975. $19.95. An impressive over-view of U.S. television, its history and development, its cultural and sociological impact by the author of Docu- mentary: A History of the Non-Fiction Film. Directors American Film D[...]same authors‘ The Great Spy Pictures. 424 pages of comprehensive credits and reviews from ABout De S[...]y Ed Naha. London, 1976. $8.85. Reviews and casts of 850 horror films ranging from Abbott and Costello Go To Mars to Zotz! and capsule biographies of about 30 per- sonalities. The book, obviously intended mainly for the teenage horror fan, is of little value for the serious student. ‘A’ NE[...]ew Zealand- produced adventure drama. While each of these productions trade on their uniqueness as New Zealand films, and the future of local production depends on their individual succ[...]ture, which, if successful, may unlock large sums of private finance for filmmaking. This, in turn, sh[...]e cash into the industry. it is in the financing of Sleeping Dogs that we see why much depends on its success. Initially, the budget was $300,000 — half of which was put up by the merchant bankers, Broadbank. Of Broadbank‘s $150,000, $100,000 was underwritten by the Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council of New Zealand. This was the decisive factor— Gove[...]rs after the film’s release. The other $50,000 of Broadbank's con- tribution was an interest-bearin[...]Broadbank. $50,000 was contributed— by TV1 (one of New Zealand‘s two television corporations), who[...]Donaldson (producer/director), mentions a figure of $50,000 to $60,000 as having come from his production company, Aardvark Films of Auckland. Of the remaining $40,000, Donaldson has been no more[...]than to say that $35,000 came from other members of the production crew. This accounts for the origi[...]t Sleeping Dogs has gone over budget. At the time of writing, no one seems to know exactly how much ex[...]er, has kept faith, and Amalgamated Theatres (one of the country‘s two cinema chains) has agreed to[...]ng Dogs make a profit at the box-office, $100,000 of Arts Council money (that’s a lot of money for film in New Zealand) shall be released[...]n does develop, we may at last see the continuity of production that has been lacking in the past. Wi[...]. K. Stead’s novel, Smith’s Dream, the rights of which, it is said, were purchased for $5000 and a percentage of profits. First published in 1971, the book has be[...]ing guerrilla war. From this, the age-old fantasy of taking to the hills and fighting evil is given full rein. Perhaps one of the reasons the book has remained popular may be[...]nt dictator, Volkner, can be seen as an extension of Prime Minister Robert Mu|doon‘s political stron[...]isquiet has been a background factor to the sales of Smith's Dream, it will, presumably, also give Sle[...]several well-known local artists, is another part of the overall marketing effort V an effort intended to return as much of the budget as possible from the local market. A t[...]m exhibition history. if New Zealands population of three million is insufficient to support local pr[...]Oates comes in. For the short but important part of the foreign military adviser, an international na[...]New Zealand on Vacation. 80, on a fee a fraction of his usual, Oates joined the party, maintaining th[...]e to carry a weak cast. The line-up includes some of the best available locally, although they are not[...]ized by an Australian audience for the title role of the Australian-New Zealand television co-p[...] |
 | [...]are your feelings about the present proliferation of state corporations?Jim: I think it is quite evi[...]ey continue to be so. I would rather see a number of corporations than just one central body, even though some of these bodies are going through identity reckoning[...]merican state corporations — and there are many of them — have generally opted on the side of logistical support, rather than financial. I thin[...]on, it would be that if necessary the AFC get out of investment and into completion guarantees and pre[...]e moves underfoot. There has been some criticism of the Victorian and New South Wales corporations in[...]ter. production areas, do you see any likelihood of all these bodies merging? Jim: It would be wrong to place the emphasis of our feelings re the AFC as them removing themselv[...]ment funding and completion guarantees. The role of the producer is threefold: he has to gather the m[...]agreement with the AFC in the past about the role of marketing and they are taking a very pragmatic vi[...]estment bodies. I don‘t think a patchwork quilt of the two would be successful. Hal: I don’t thin[...]SAFC was smart enough to be involved in a couple of successful films, that means per se they represen[...]God, there are already 50 production companies in Sydney and l5—odd independent producers. Several producers have been criticized for tossing away the marketing of their films. A marketing branch would surely help[...]. Jim: I don't think you are examining the root of the problem which is that the producer must have the responsibility of returning the investments to the investors. Hal:[...]nch there will be a severe temptation on the part of producers to literally walk away from the respons[...]5 arri b|'s elemack & colortran dollys full range of ianiro lighting (hire & sales) discount rates fo[...]other than just looking at a screen down one end of a rather large hall. We want to bring all the senses together — a combination of tele- vision films and live threatre. Jim: The f[...]gather the audience in an auditorium in the shape of a space craft. There will be a large cinema screen in the shape of a window on which they can see their journey. A l[...]a in the world today. I can say that without fear of contra- diction, because Jim and Michael Falloon,[...]es like Disney World and we know there is no hope of the audience duplicating the experience. A[...] |
 | [...]P. 0. Box 49, Harbord, N.S.W. 2096 1977 FESTIVAL oF INTERNATIONAL AustraliaSPECIALIZED FILMS AND SL[...]ith English sub-titles, and with - , showing time of not more than 30 minutes are acceptable. Includmg[...]”Come then to the 1977 Festival of International Specialized Films and Slides and vi[...]ntact MYRA, Philippine Trade Centre, 37 Pitt St., Sydney 2000 at Tel. no. (02)241 3312. |
 | [...]hroughout the media, there has been no discussion of the health and safety factors, of the relative cost of uranium, or ofof energy needs. There has been no discussion of the ways in which technology changes society, suc[...]the force has only 400 personnel, but by the turn of the century, if the nuclear program goes ahead as[...]ikely to be accompanied by increased surveillance of employees at nuclear plants: upwards of some 20,000 employees in the electricity supply i[...]emocracy itself. In an article in The Herald, one of the consultants to the Uranium Producers’ Forum, Mr Melouney, said:“Many of the anti-uranium lobby are really using this issue to pursue their aim of changing Australia's democratic way of life." The coverage given by the newsmedia reinforces this impression of general disruption. The fact of protest is more important to the media than the specific point of the protest. John Huston to work. The drama was[...]for television, the cameras zoom in on the moment of protest and perhaps its suppression by the police[...]st the police. For television, the original point of the protest doesn’t matter so much; one placard[...]as helped to set the agenda for public discussion of uranium in other ways as well. In particular Chan[...]described in its introduction as “a documentary of public interest”. And the narrator told the aud[...]ought that the film was presenting the viewpoint of the mining companies under the appearance of a respectable, even scientific, documentary. Its centre-piece was a model of the proposed mining site for the Pancontinental C[...]asy it all was, and how much care was to be taken of the environ- ment. The film returned to this mo[...]miners. He was described by the narrator as a man of energy and good geological thinking, and the fil[...]n that the future belongs to men like this. Much of Uranium on Trial featured long shots of lakes and wildlife, and these induced a real sense of relaxation and peacefulness. In general, the film created a sense of tranquillity and order, of peaceful and irresistible purpose, as though mini[...]already a reality. At one point there was a shot of Rum Jungle, an abandoned mining town, and a voice-over saying “this is what the opponents of mining fear”, as though the problem is really one of litter. But then a cut, back to the reliable Mr G[...]a different era; that was a bygone era;that sort of thing could never happen again”. Viewers are i[...]a focuses on a quiet lake, you hear the putt-putt of an outboard motor, and a small boat bursts from t[...]g like Monty Python images. These are the members of the Commission, and the technique of filming them this way allows them no status or authority as the authors of two lengthy reports on uranium. This television special presents misleading im- pressions of what many people regard as the real questions, an[...]e a general im- pression about the media coverage of uranium. The most interesting fact about the cove[...]tical. There is no sense at all that the question of uranium raises issues that are completely different, in their scale of magnitude, in their implications for our society and way of life. Uranium is never presented as a continuing[...]rally. It is, on the contrary, presented in terms of the needs of papers and television for news that is im- mediat[...]g exception has been the replay on ABC television of an NBC documentary on the disposal of nuclear wastes. And even that program led to criticisms that the ABC was wasting the services of its own Four Corners staff, having them stand idle for a week. Of course they are not likely to be allowed to make a similar kind of critical, questioning docu- mentary for Australian television. And none of the commercial channels are likely to try. Their[...]oubt that anything is. I wonder if any great work of art has had any profound political effect, includ[...]reen today? I was raised on the classic concepts of filmmaking. Just like in the theatre there were[...]bit too tightly into a mould. There was the idea of organization, the internal combustion, where everything had tightness of the construction. A theme that you can render int[...]outspoken, and also you stand back in admiration of the way scenes were done. Rocky has taken the best of both worlds, in a sense — the old and the new.[...]as censorship is concerned, to the great benefit of the better films. Did you suffer under censorsh[...]ver my own. However, I worked with the conception of censorship. It was already in the grain of the film, and very often censorship led me to do[...]an I would have done had there not been that kind of censorship. Nevertheless its a fine thing for f[...]n I958 The Barbarian and the Geisha I 958 Roots of Heaven I959 The Unforgiven I960 The Misfits I962 Freud I963 The List ofAdrian Messenger I964 The Night of the Iguana I966 The Bible 1967 Casino Royale (c[...]I969 The Kremlin Letter I972 The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean 1972 Fat City I 973 Mackin[...] |
 | APPLIED MEDIA STUDIES Applied Media, which is part of the Victorian Education Department's Audio Visual[...]a resource centre for the educational application of the media. The centre's particular interests are[...]dia teachers and thosewith an interest in aspects of the media through advisory services, in- service seminars and the publication and production of teaching kits. audio and video tapes on the media[...]elevision School and the State Film Centre. Some of the current activities being sponsored by AMS include the production of a film studies kit, based on the film The Getting Of Wisdom. The kit includes numerous articles. 26 ph[...]for teachers. particularly at the primary level, of the Yoram Gross animated feature Dot and the Kangaroo. A super 8mm film festival of student made films will be held in Melbourne from[...]since the Bubbles Co-operative held at Melbourne University three years ago, have young filmmakers in schools[...]ction in schools. Phil O'Brien. research officer of the ABC's Countdown has produced. with AMS assist[...]zing the interface Screenings and the Association of Teachers of Film and Video (ATFAV). So far this year, there h[...]on to cover the Archival interview Programme, six of the 35 interviews approved with Australian film p[...]e researcher-interviewers, who include 10 members of the Archive Association, the process of interviewing, with future archival needs in mind, has provided some valuable lessons. While the style of each interview is inevitably influenced by the su[...]ear in mind the potential for maximum flexibility of use of the resulting tape and film by future researchers[...]ve interviews on film) were with Vera James, star of Franklyn Barrett's A Girl Of The Bush (1920) and Know Thy Child (1921); Agnes[...]in the late teens; and Shirley Ann Richards. star of six Cinesound films in the 19303 and 12 in Hollyw[...]tele- vision program on Ken G. Hall. Eight hours of tape have been recorded with filmmaker and author[...]l provide the interviewee with a typed transcript of his or her interview. The interviewee can then no[...]es to place restrictions. To aid the flexibility of the interview material's incorporation in films and television programs of the future, none of it will be edited before being lodged at the Nati[...]e its value in a practical sense (such as the use of interviews for research or as actual content in d[...]a “now" and “20 years hence" basis with some of the young and well-known filmmakers of today. The recording of archival interviews with television pioneers should also be encouraged; the list of other art and entertainment fields for coverage w[...]e 1975 by the Publicity and information Committee of the Australia Council. Under that scheme, 35 50-[...]scheme attempted to embrace a vast cross-section of the arts and literature, but only three of these were with film pioneers. A lack of adequate consultation with possible users also fo[...]ational and straight-out entertainment objectives of what emerged as a curiously uninteresting 60 hours of film. Where the Australia Council scheme ground to a halt through its lack of co- ordinated consultation and expertise, the com[...]with film pioneers is diversified. The 14 members of thecommittee, whose backgrounds lie in film produ[...]King from Western Australia. in their selection of pioneers, the archival interview committee have given priority to age and diversity of film production roles, as well as to an adequate[...]epresentation. This has meant that while the bulk of interviews will cover film activity in New South[...]mittee also aims to give fair historical coverage of production in South Australia, Western Australia,[...]has been steadily increasing. Since the release of the IAC reporrt last July, the Entertainment industries Council — a body consisting of the Musicians‘ Union, Actors‘ Equity, Theatri[...]licy and plans to combat the report. As a result of these meetings. a highly successful rally called[...]lbourne City Square and was attended by thousands of people representing all areas of music and art — as well as the public. Speaker[...]n the quota issue from the IAC on September 20 in Sydney. it is hoped to have speakers from the political[...]try at the September 18 rally. Since the release of the lAC's recommen- dation, much support has been[...]the Entertainment Industries Council in the form of letters, petitions, phone calls — and surprisin[...]toria's Premier Mr Hamer, has come out in support of the retention of the quota, and Mr Bruce Gyngell, the man selected[...]television networks, has also spoken out in favor of the radio quota. The Entertainment Industries Cou[...]rt does nothing else but highlight the sad plight of the entertainment and recording industry in Aust-[...]ries Council on this matter, contact Jazzer Smith of the Musicians‘ Union. Phone 5291522 during work[...]the Dancer, now in general release, is a graduate of the 1973 interim Training Scheme, the forerunner of the Fulltime Program. The documentary, called A Space and a Time, is intended to explain the workings of the school's fulltime training . to potential employers of graduates, careers advisers and applicants for th[...]the media. it was made with Bill Constable (head of the school's cinecamera workshop) as director of cinematography, Bob Hayes sound, Ronda MacGregor editor and a crew of fulltime students from the camera and sound workshops of the Fulltime Program. Novelist, dramatist and screenwriter Rosemary Anne Sisson, one of the writers of Upstairs Downstairs, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, Elizabeth R, The Explorers and The Duchess of Duke Street and writer of the Disney feature films Ride a Wild Pony and Esc[...]ade possible by a grant from the Literature Board of the Australia Council. Ms Sisson has met and spoken to writers, producers and directors in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth and Hobart, and has addressed meetings of the Australian Writers’ Guild and the Fellowship of Australian Writers under the auspices of the Open Program. The school will begin a nationwide diploma course of graduate and post-graduate training of lecturers for the 180 media courses currently bei[...]un on assessment, co-ordination and accreditation of courses now available and the scheme will be laun[...]dia courses at any tertiary institution in either of these states will be able to register with the sc[...]become eligible for the schools diploma. The aim of the scheme is to rationalize media training and r[...]vision, titled “Where Do We Go From Here?“ at University House of the Australian National University in Canberra from October 12 to 16. Films and tapes of children’s programs from around the world are b[...]ralian Broadcasting Commission and the Federation of Australian Commercial Television Stations. Abake[...]year's Melbourne Film Festival. NATIONAL LIBRARY OF AUSTRALIA Film Study Collection The Library has[...]darity, Pierre Vallieres and Cattood. Early films of the American avant garde have also been added to[...]by Gregory Markopoulos. In the documentary area of the collection, three of the African films by Jean Rouch have been acquire[...]enegalese director, Ousman Sembene, and a package of features from R.K.O.-Radio including four directe[...]otorious), two by Samuel Fuller (Verboten and Run of the Arrow), John Frankenheimefs The Young Strange[...]om the National Film Collection, National Library of Australia, Canberra. The films can only be used for non-commercial purposes. and many of the titles (eg. the R.K.O. films) are restricted[...]Library. NATIONAL FILM ARCHIVE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF AUSTRALIA During July, Ray Edmondson, Chief Film[...]ially Australian films on nitrate stock. A number of collectors were contacted and the Archive will be[...]so make contacts to further the national function of the Film Archive. HSV-7 Melbourne have deposited approxi- mately 280 titles including several episodes of Under the Big Top, Sunnyside Up, Homicide, Hit Parade and episodes 1-164 of Consider Your Verdict. Chris Collier has donate[...]not previously held in the collection: The Story of the Kelly Gang (1906); Vengeance of the Deep (1937), the U8. release title for Ken Ha[...]Luggers, and Three In One (1956). Jim Whitbread of Cinesound/Movetone has also donated a large number of posters from: squatters Daughter(1933), When The[...]country Town (1971) director Peter Maxwell; King of the Coral Sea (1954) director Lee Robinson[...] |
 | [...]derable promise. But they both lacked the support of a mother university or rich founda- tion, and their life—spans were[...]ne Kael wrangles with Sillitoe and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner in Moviegoer, or that Pe[...]Truffaut; Goodman on Chaplin; Sarris on pop.The University of Dayton’s slim octavo quarterly, Film Heritage,[...]arterly — the two journals often share a stable of first-class critics. A pointer to the type of articles carried by Film Heritage is that it is a[...]in this journal with contributions by professors of English, rather than professors of film history. But this is offset by the excellence of the interviews and the frequent devotion of a single issue to a leading filmmaker. A curious aspect of the journal is a ratings chart with evaluations from the critics of six regional newspapers (eg. Denver Rocky Mountai[...]appeared in the mid-1960s is Action, a bi-monthly of the Directors Guild of America. This journal is primarily concerned with[...]in 1966, it has progressed much from the concerns of early issues where one was liable to find a repor[...]se Intersex bio- cybernetic programs, or a review of John Hofsess‘s Black Zero, describing it as possessing “all the gratifications of vision, hearing, taste, touch, and smell”. Take One is now an entertain- ing conglomerate of news and reviews, book checklists, letters, inter[...]h began in 1967, is perhaps the most intellectual of the radical American film magazines. It concerns[...]merican militant cinema), and questions the value of film theories which put form before function (eg. “Christian Metz and the Seminology Fad”). One of the important ‘sociological’ film journals which appeared in the early ’70s was Journal of Popular .Film, published by the Popular Culture Association at Bowling Green University, Ohio. “Movies are the mirrors by which the Am[...]ts audience, as it contributes to the development of its art form”. This journal has a fresh, fascinating approach seen in such articles as “The Impact of Griffith’s Birth of a Nation on the Modern Ku Klux Klan” and “Why There are no Women in the Movies”. Journal of Popular Film has a “Readers” Forum” for an exchange of views, and excellent bibliographies and checklists of materials for the various film genres. Another[...]omen and Film was an instant success. It became a university text in both film and women’s studies courses;[...]logized, and microfilm copies are available from University Microfilms. Women and Film, despite filling a badly- needed gap in providing information of a specific nature without being propagandistic, w[...]or, and was soon forced to cease publication. One ofof approach: Noel Burch and his film theory, for example, were rigorously examined in 16 pages of interview and argument; the theory and practice of feminist film criticism was expounded; commercial[...]n. It is difficult to characterize the ideology of The Velvet Light Trap which was originally conceived as a journal for the University of Wisconsin’s large and active film scene, and a[...]el Sragow, who writes for the American Federation of Film Societies‘ journal Film Critic, The Velvet Light Trap “mainly prints on topics that are of interest only to those either still part of the Academy, or still heavily influenced by its[...]ment, however, tells one more about the standards of criticism to be found in Critic than those of The Velvet Light Trap. The latter concerns itself[...]er 1977), reprints articles from issues 1-8, many of which are now out—of-print. The Velvet Light Trap is a serious journal which has a variety of contributors and is a far cry from a typical unde[...]bothers to do this is a mystery, for its opinion of its fellow film journals is far from elevated.[...]Review built its reputa- tion on “a fusty blend of comic—strip reactionary and scholarly closet-camp”; Focus! is “just one more of the aimless, feckless, self-indulgent Little Maga[...]across the land like effete mushrooms in the dark of our continuing cultural malaise”. On the other[...]is not yet listed on the International Federation of Film Archives list of approved international film journals, it fills[...]accompanied by full credits and a good selection of studio stills. Dialogue on Film is not a film journal in the full sense of the word, but a record of seminars conducted by the Center for Advanced Film Studies of the American Film Institute. These seminars consist of interviews with those involved with the creative side of American feature filmmaking and television production. Each issue is devoted to an individual or a team of co-workers. Directors interviewed include Aldrich[...]nsen. There is also an issue on the pros and cons of cable television. The seminar-interviews include[...]ut, which first appeared three years ago, is one of the more radical of the recent additions to film periodical literatu[...]and marxism. The political and social critiques ofof film-making and distribution, and the function of film in America today.” Jump Cut is also uncon[...]orm typeface. Each issue contains around 30 pages of lengthy, lightly illustrated articles on subjects[...]contrast with Jump Cut. Its sub-title is Journal of the Film and Television Arts, and it has a typogr[...]ce which is similar to Film Comment. The editors of American Film plan to “roam through the highways and byways of communica- tions, and ever under the surface will be root questions on the role of film and television in American life”. One may[...]urnal Dialogue on Film is now a permanent feature of this new American film journal. at- Cine[...] |
 | [...]to The Film Making Industry via “ _ .' rentals of. . . A young, monster-format magazine , Mos, Even, Type of Antique that captivates with its wealth of Fiream-.5 articles, reviews, large illustrations, 9 Most Every Type of Modern and depth of focus on issues like . Firearmscensorship and p[...]5|, FREE Advice concerning the correct type of firearmls) etc. to correspond with the period -C[...]answers It is the quarterly journal of the Federation of Victorian Film Societies now published with the assistance of the Creative Development Branch of the Australian Film Commission. _ For over 20[...]tial reference journal for the non-commercial use of 16mm film . . . film . societies, schools, adult[...]and overseas films. On request, photostat copies of synopses, articles and reviews will be for[...] |
 | [...]roperty“ or “They violated my land"), and two of the most moving and intense sequences in the dram[...](in the rain, Luke is forced to face the reality of the impossi- bility of his union with her), and then in The Prisoner (on the road, before Luke’s murder of an unwitting traveller who has been serenading himself to the tune of the music-box gift which Luke had unsuccessfully[...]to Jassy).In The Prisoner, the closing episode of the drama, Luke reaches the point where he is for[...]is off-screen (and thus ambiguous) murder by whip of the traveller in his care becomes an outlet for the frustration of his separation from Jassy, but makes him recogniz[...]his quest has brought him into line with the rest of the convict colony. He shouts his defiance (“Y[...]ome to the point where he has to face the reality of the present. Still defiant and passionate, he mus[...]t Elliott (Alfred Bell), Jassy’s husband, aware of Luke’s feelings for his wife, imprisons him and charges him with murder. The innocent of The Surveyor, who had seen his duty, in simple te[...]Dam and The Damned, as he placed expedience ahead of his duty, now privately admits to Jassy, “I hav[...]voc on the Firbeck property, and, despite the aid of the local community, it wipes out all but their h[...]l”?) seeming to impose on Luke his own judgment of his lusts. To Jason’s call to his son for a re[...]ds with Luke and Kate together and the suggestion of a new beginning: Luke has TERRY JACKMAN given h[...]ad been a restrained one up to the closing moment of The Prisoner, but had been felt in their sympathe[...]does with Luke, is made clear in the closing shot ofof writers, directors and performers appear to have worked at sustaining a flow of character and theme; their achievement is of the highest order of television drama. And while it is possible to loc[...]— and thus differences between the realization of individual episodes, that is, finally, a less important exercise at this stage of television criticism than a perception of the way in which this continuous drama is realize[...]133 Now, it has already been mooted by a number of the state attorneys- general that the easy way out of this problem, so far as they are con- cerned, is[...]had explained to them, that this would be the end of the drive- ins, and virtually the end of the industry, because all of us rely on drive—ins for a terrific part of our revenue. Therefore, we are going to have to write and live with some sort of code where the rougher type of ‘R’ film, the more visible, sexual ‘R’ fi[...]screens which can only be seen from the interior of the drive-in? They are trying to develop them in[...]e we have a main road, a sectional fence might be of Nobody in this industry - production, exhibition[...]y knows how tough such legislation could be. One of the areas where the Aus- tralian production situa[...]ities elsewhere in the world, is in the situation of the taxation of production revenue. The AFC is taking the attitud[...]k American companies are being subjected to a lot of misconceptions. I hear figures hf $30 million and[...]and the Treasury will say they are broke because of Medibank or whatever. I believe it would take awa[...]he legislation and there’s an interim committee of which I am a member. The draft Bill will go to P[...]as I can. Will it be structured along the lines of the South Australian Corporation, which is a produc- tion entity, or along the lines of the Victorian, which is basically just a funding[...]fic admiration for the SAFC, I don’t think any of us facing today’s economic condition will attempt to set up that sort of operation. Will there be a residency regula- tio[...]nt in South Australia and employ a certain number of South Australians etc, or can anyone apply[...] |
 | [...]., and Cinema Papers Melbourne‘s largest range of Stage Make-Up including ultra high quality Stein FIL MS out of Theatrical Make-Upfrom USA —— Ken Cameron a[...]available in 16mm "om: are all handled overnight SYDNEY FILMMAKERS CO-OP P.O. Box 217 KINGS CROSS, NSW 2011 (02) 31 6708 Write for our Catalogue '- of lndependent Films — $3 (includes postage). This in addition_to a full range of 16 mm colour and b/w services — Ektachrome. Eas[...]ort Macquarie, Darwin, Albury, Gee/ong, Canberra, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Brisbane. We’ve also got the information, ring Sue—Ellen Doherty (Sydney) 31 0388 for complete information on Trave[...] |
 | [...]addie and Pig in a Poke, reproduced certain types of actors. And the ABC was probably the worst offender, because for years there was a certain type of speaking on the ABC, a certain type of program and a certain type of actor. And it all smelt terribly of middle—class values.Do you think “Newsfront[...]s. As pure entertainment, for example, a newsreel of Richard Nixon making a speech is enthralling. In[...]ented to the Australian people and to the history of Australia, is interesting on a purely entertainment level. The story of the film is also very strong. Its an action story, a love story, a story of the disintegration of a mans relationship; a story of a person who has the highest ideals and who sees around himself the perversion of ideals by fellow workers. The film has a univers[...]stalgia acts as a veil over the true significance of events. We look back to things that have happene[...]y. So the film pin- points the true significance of an event and, at the same time, fosters a nostalgia. Examples would be the miners‘ strike of 1949; the Olympic Games; the Suez Crisis; the coming to power of the Menzies government in 1949; the Redex trial;[...]in the 1930s, there are only a very small number of the film—going public who were actually alive at that time. With Newsfront, there are a large number of people all over the world who were alive in the 1950s. . Of course, their countries were not necessarily aff[...]as inter- viewed on television recently he spoke of an American distributor who said that Don’s Par[...]cause people there had gone through the same sort of influences. They, of course, weren’t sub- jected to American cultura[...]ng out what it is like to be on the receiving end of the boot. Certainly the other influences such as the communist scare, the influence of the church, the way in which the Red Per-il was m[...]lm, but his two feature documentaries — Morning of the Earth and Crystal Voyager — have been sold[...]nd in hand with the marketing people. The problem of state corporations is that they don’t have this[...]isage not being totally involved in the marketing of a‘ product. And if more film producers felt the same,then a lot of Australian features wouldn’t have been made bec[...]is concerning many, however, is the concentration of power in too few hands; that the decisions to inv[...]film and not another are made by the same handful of people. Therefore, one of the possible benefits of a proliferation of corporations is that it might, with a bit of luck and a bit of foresight, lead to some diversity and originality[...]and for the first Yes, probably in the vicinity of $5 first and John Power the second. two years w[...]state opposition. It is only now, with the number of successes behind us and the tightness of the operation evident, that the opposition party[...]the SAFC place any requirements on the employment of South Australian personnel or use of the locations during shooting? One overriding cr[...]olved in at present? We are co-producing Weekend of Shadows which Torn Jeffrey is directing. .We have[...]t relationship: we have a co-producer in the case of Weekend, but with Dawn only an executive producer[...]are financing the television films independently of the network? No, there is a very large proportion of network money. They are deficit financed in con[...]pointed. What are their budgets? In the vicinity of $150,000 each. We are doing them because it build[...]ghput. And we think we can package them with some of our other features, like The Fourth Wish and Stor[...]aven’t sold. We may even combine them with some of the other television films produced locally and[...]the corporation’s involvement in the production of “The Last Harvest”? Within our budget there[...]s can be direct assistance with cash, or the loan of services, etc. It will be a continuing process. Do you have any feelings about the sort of films we should be making in Australia? I see gr[...]film with the amazing gadgetry and sophistication of Star Wars you realize this is obviously an[...] |
 | [...]ducer shall have exclusive rights to the services of the artist during his engagement and the artist agrees that during this time he will not render any services of any kind or for any person. firm or corporation o[...]thout first obtaining the express written consent of the Producer. Such consent will not be unreasonab[...]uire the artist to render any services whatsoever of a hazardous or dangerous nature which involve the artist in any degree of risk or to carry out any stunt unless such specia[...]ly be construed as being dangerous, hazardous and of risk to life or limb or health or as a stunt.11[...]provided all amounts due to an artist in respect of work carried out during the seven consecutive day[...]seven days. (ii) Meal money. and payment in lieu of accommodation shall be paid by the Producer to an artist on a day to day basis. (iii) A personal statement of earnings showing separately all amounts payable u[...]rd from which can be readily ascertained the name of each artist, the hours worked each day and the payment made in respect of such work. (ii) The time and wages record shall[...]n shall not be demanded unless the representative of the Union suspects that a breach of this agreement has been committed. (iii) The Uni[...]ion shall be entitled to take a copy and/or photo of entries in the Producer's time and wages record relating to the suspected breach of this agreement. 19. WARDROBE (i) All propenies, wigs, footwear and articles of clothing not customarily and usually worn by civilians of the present day in this country and any articles of clothing or footwear peculiar to any trade. calli[...]an artist to wear footwear and/or civilian dress of a type which is customarily and usually worn by civilians of the present day in this country then the artist m[...]clothing and/or footwear is not in the possession of the artist or if insufficient notice as provided for in (ii) of this clause is given to the artist, then such clo[...]ll be paid for by the artist. Any damages or loss of clothing or footwear supplied by the artist other than damage caused through the negligence of the artist shall be paid for by the Producer. 20[...]water, clean towels and soap for the convenience of all artists at any place of work which could reasonably be regarded as studio[...]EDITS All actors/actresses playing speaking parts of more than two lines in the film shall receive a c[...]ARACTER The Producer shall not, after termination of an artist's employment prevent such artist from c[...]screen name used by such artist. However the name of a role owned or created by the Producer belongs t[...]delays rehearsal or performance the other members of the cast may not claim payment for the time so lo[...]ed as working time. If the Producer or any member of the Producer's staff (other than a member of the cast (excluding any stand~in) who is a financ[...]roducer shall not be bound to accept the services of any artist who shall present himself without reas[...]not be bound to recompense such artist in respect of such attendance. 24. ARTISTS ILLNESS Should illn[...]ith suspended as from and including the first day of such inability. During such suspension the Produc[...]ist's engagement without prejudice to the payment of such moneys due and owing to the artist in respect of services actually rendered up to the time of the artist's failure to perform his obligations;[...]st's engagement in which case the total liability of the Producer shall be limited to payment of a sum not less than the artist would have received if the terms of the engagement had been carried out. 25. RIGHTS[...]publicise in connection with the film any and all of the acts. poses. plays and appearances of any and all kinds of an artist appearing in the film containing such a[...]or otherwise. and to recordings and reproductions of the artist's voice and all instrumental, musical[...]ublicised or advertised. The rights and benefits of this clause shall apply and be to the benefit not only of the Producer but also of all persons who may hereafter acquire from the Pr[...]ance with the reasonable requests or instructions of the Producer and to abide by the reasonable rules and regulations of the Producer. 27. ARTIST MAKING STATEMENTS. ETC.[...]cement or furnish any information relating to any of the activities of the Producer to any person, firm or corporation.[...]or cause to be taken or published any photograph of persons working on the film or anything connected with the production of the film. 28. PREJUDICIAL CONDUCT If the artist is guilty of conduct which prevents, hinders. limits or otherwise prejudices the success of the film in which the artist is engaged, the Prod[...]cer shall pay to the artist pro-rata remuneration of the amount set out in the artist's contract to the time of termination only. The artist shall have the right[...]tion as set out in clause 33, Arbitration-Dispute of this agreement. 29. GENERAL RIGHTS OF TERMINATION (i) The Producer may terminate the ar[...]an artist's engagement prior to the commencement of production he shall pay to the artist one half of the guaranteed remuneration as set out in the art[...]rminates an artist's engagement during the course of production, the amount of compensation due to the artist shall vary as foll[...]e for any reason whatsoever to perform any or all of the obligations imposed by his contract or this agreement or if the artist commits any serious breach of contract or breach of the terms of this agreement, in particular clauses 26. Artist'[...]cer shall pay to the artist pro rata remuneration of the amount set out in the artist's contract to the time of termination only. (b) If the artist's engagement[...]ted for any reason other than that covered by (a) of this subclause. the Producer shall pay to the artist the total of the artist's guaranteed remuneration as set out i[...]set out in this agreement_ (i) If the production of the film is prevented or stopped by reason of any cause beyond the control of the Producer such as but not in limitation thereof force maieure. Act of God. enemy action. fire, riot, civil commotion, national calamity, order of a Public Authority. epidemics, strikes. bans-on—work. labour disputes, failure of essential supplies such as electricity but expressly excluding weather conditions or failure of the Producers employees other than financial Unio[...]cer may: - (a) Suspend without pay the operation of the artist's engagement during the period of prevention or stoppage of - production in which case on resumption of work on the film the artist's engagement shall be[...]ant to paragraph (i) above, cancel the production of the film and terminate the artist's engagement as from the prrevention or stoppage upon payment of all moneys due and payable to the artist for services actually rendered prior to the date of prevention or stoppage. 31. ACCESS OF UNION OFFICERS Any two officers of the Union singly or together duly authorised in writing shall have access to any place of rehearsal and/or performance to interview artists[...]he Producer for work in the film shall be members of the Union in good financial standing and shall re[...]standing during their engagement in any programme of the film. OR Any non member of the Union engaged by the Producer for work in the film shall make application for membership of the Union on the Union's official form of application not later than the day before the beginning of the said artist's engagement. Such application sh[...]e film. 33. ARBITRATION -- DISPUTE: In the event of a dispute arising between the Union and the Produ[...]rmined under and pursuant. to the Arbitration Act of the State of New South Wales. 34. SOME OF THE DEFINl11ONS APPLICABLE TO THIS AGREEMENT “Artist" shall mean each and all of those persons engaged by the Producer to take par[...]Ins and Stunt Artists. “Cast“ shall mean all of the artists in the film excepting any stand-in. W[...]ll include the feminine gender. 35. In the event of the adoption of an "industry Wide Agreement" for feature films, t[...]y, subject to agreement by both convert the terms of this agreement to such an "industry Wide Agreemen[...]It is specifically acknowledged that the rights of exploitation of supplemental marketsare not incorporated in this agreement. Such rights to be the subject of either further negotiations or an industry Wide A[...]terms not to be reasonably withheld, In respect of the Basic Negotiated Fee (or the Basic Rate which[...]the following percentages shall apply in respect of cassettes, Pay TV. CATV, Hotel Exhibition:— (a[...]an add?t2io%,:l (h) For each additional $100,000 of gross in perpetuity an additi::g1§i o Distribu[...]use shall be included in the above formula at 50% of the actual amount of such gross receipts for all supplemental markets other than "in-flight“: and for "in- flight" at 100% of the actual amount of distributors gross receipts. Signed on the day and year first above written for in the presence of: for ACTORS’ AND ANNOUNCEFlS' EQUITY ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA in the presence of: Star Wars Continued from P. 1 I 9 In some i[...]beams were not simply one color, but were made up of a central white hot section with an outer red fl[...]a major role in the film, a way had to be found of mounting 192 — Cinema Papers, October them in front of the blue screen without the form of support being visible. The answer was to construc[...]The model makers had to construct 75 models ‘of, among others, X-Wing fighters, T.I.E. enemy sh[...]d shape pieces for glueing on to various sections of the miniatures. Many of them were duplicated several times over because[...]fleet. An air cooling system was fed into some of the models through the support column to prevent overheating due to the intense heat of the studio lighting. The credit list in Star Wars, at the end of the film, runs for nearly 10 minutes. It catalogues an almost undreamed of number of special effects technicians. Given the incredible success of Star Wars (Lucas only expected it to gross around $16,000,000, but it has already passed $102,000,000) many of these technical wizards may have a more se[...] |
 | Fourteen films on India today, a unique insight into one of the world’s most ancient civilisations.The real stars of this series, one of the most ambitious projects in contemporary film making, are the people of India—— people like Padma, a dancing teacher[...]living in an industrial complex on the outskirts of Bombay. Fourteen films that explore the fascinating biways of agrarian, urban and cultural life in the India of the Seventies are available singly or at a specia[...]Australian Film Commission, 8 West Street, North Sydney. Overseas to the Commission’s representa[...] |
TXT |
 | iiH aving achieved the distinction of of a country town, a third series of winning an Oscar this year and having c[...]es for television, and a film/production house of the Federal documentary series to be film[...]Just a few of the good things t t i n these days of intense competition for government fund[...] |
 | [...]hant of Jimmie Blacksmith"[...] |
 | [...].......... as a Gift, a year s subscription of Cinema Papers fro m .................[...] |
 | [...]NAL Association of Teachers of Film &Video SCREEN INTERNATIONAL (king[...]ending upon industrial experience, a small number of applicants who do not[...]ill be conducted on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of each[...]Faculty of Art, Swinburne College of Technology[...]A division of Swinburne College of Technology Ltd.[...]THE GETTING OF WISDOM.[...] |
 | [...]Still Photographic Work Thiele the author of STORM BOY. The script is being written at[...]ORPORATION through to exhibition. A wide variety of educational material is FOR FILMING IN OR OUT OF being prepared for use next year. BLUE FIN will be released in each State a few weeks before the end of the school year in 1978. TA[...]BRISBANE ST. HOBART, 7 0 0 0 special favourite. Of course, not everybody has to study the book to b[...]PROJECT. A study kit relating the interest areas of TASMANIA. PHONE-'30 8033 the story across t[...]taries on the pre-production and post-production of BLUE FIN for educational broadcast.[...]Auzins, Don Crombie,Chris Lofven or production of a radio dramatisation, a reading of the book, and interviews with the author, script[...]inking caps to client claps.W here? Study Centre of the South Australian Education Department are pl[...]gations in the fields their stuff. 4194100. * of geography, biology, history, social sciences, dra[...]INTERESTED? C ontact the Co-ordinator of PROJECT BLUE FIN at the ad[...] |
 | [...]operates the Longford Cinema in the development of the art of film. In 1976, the AFI[...]comfortable alternative outlets serving the needs of The AFI is actively involved in developing a fil[...]section of the community. Distributing Throu[...]my opinion, the best place to see w ide variety of 16mm and 35mm shorts, short establish[...]eties and other bodies all extensive collection of magazines, and some vital[...]njunction with the Australian Council assistance of the Experimental Film and Television over 2[...]d throughout the of Film Societies, organises film viewing weekends[...]lm societies to preview new 16mm as a collection of classic features and shorts. The subject inde[...]just released a new catalogue which is run of a number of significant magazines[...]he Library is situated at microfilm every copy of Variety ever published. arranged screenings of Australian films in a 81 Cardigan Street, Carlto[...]number of overseas film festivals. available for use anywh[...]available a Master Index Of Current Film[...]Filminstitute, Melbourne" colourful compilation of early Australian film Distribution & Exh[...]r? It's the easiest way to keep . further series of books and monographs. 19th centu[...]informed of the activities and services of the AFI.[...]ds collection of cinematographic memorabilia[...]covering the history of cinema up to the coming of for Best Film of the Year in the Australian Film The most important annual event for Australian sound. Many of the exhibits are exceptionally rare.[...]the details below and send them to presentation of the Awards is televised nationally opened to[...]Executive Director, Australian Film Institute, of the nation's film industry.[...]I hereby apply for Associate Membership of the Australian Film[...] |
 | [...]Your scenario calls for the hero to be shot out of the sky three times ...[...]You will be doing a lot of filming in a tropical jungle gorge[...]. .Your lead suffers from ophidiophobia (fear of snakes) and has a trick knee as w e ll___[...] |
 | [...]131 Melbourne and Sydney The Last Wave: 147 David Roe[...], Ian Baillieu Melbourne and Sydney Film Festivals Scott Mu[...]177 The Getting of Wisdom[...]Reid, Noel Purdon, Richard Brennan, views of their authors and not necessarily those of the Editors. While every care is taken on manuscr[...]in whole or in part without the prior permission of the Brandes, Paris -- Meaghan Morris, Rome -- Ro[...]ma Papers Pty. Ltd. Main Office: 143 Therry St., Sydney (02) 26 1625; Chris Davis, Melbourne (03) 329.598[...]oria Melbourne 3000. Telephone (03) 329 5983. Sydney Office: 365A Pitt St., Sydney. Telephone (02) 26 1625. St., Nth. Melbourne 305[...]4, October 1977. Pty. Ltd., 168 Castlereagh St., Sydney 2000. Telephone (02) 2 0666. ACT. Tas. --[...] |
 | [...]Phillip Adams' The G etting of Wisdom, Deal, F.J. Holden[...]Patricia Lovell's Break of Day (scripted by Women are rep[...]n Film Corporation, and The funding policies of the Victorian Film Cliff Green), and the Home[...]cil for the Arts. the press, a possible conflict of interest being ground also received distributio[...]Part-time chairman of the corporation is Gil those awarded investments. Two of the most[...]Brealey, former chairm an/director of the vocal critics have been Colin Bennett and[...]elance film Barry Jones MLA*. Mr Bennett was one of Papers No. 11 (page 278), Peter Rankin[...]consultant and lecturer at Flinders University. " In the field of script assessing the Corp A Tale Of One City and the India series[...]script (ABC/Film Australia). up of the corporation and Mr Jones is the asse[...]Other members of the corporation are asssessment by members of the Board." An offic[...]ette education at the University of Tasmania; concept of the VFC into state parliament. Given[...]Barbara Manning, director of the Theatre and[...], the Australian Film manager of Tasmanian Drive-In Theatre a press statement, but it was not picked up by sees this present method of script assessment Commission's L[...]officer with the Premier's Department. M. be of considerable interest, and it is[...]A.P. Smith is also a member of the corporation and reproduced below in full. The members of the[...]announced in Sydney on September 20, during govern[...]seeming increase in funding for the VFC members of being given " most film a national te[...]re successful films. budget of August 77. several organizations grants". The VF[...]One of the most frequently proposed grants. All monies[...]explanations of this state of affairs is the The Melbou[...]that the Commissioner of Taxation treats their subsequently ceased operation. The Sydney[...]mmakers Co-op, however, was granted a The figure of $526,500 has been quoted. It Best Film of the Year of industrial property * which means an[...]to be National Film Theatre of Australia received[...]As a film's $73,000 instead of the requested $98,000 and Summerfield[...]ear but whether this is 10 per cent in In Search of Anna $ 50,000 Best Perfor[...]cutback ($60,000) and this has placed The C hant of Jim m ie B lacksm ith John Ewart in The Picture Show Man of the Australian Film Commission, Mr Ken[...]Adelaide, and the distribution of films through Summerfield was scripted by Cliff[...]Treasury for a 12-month write-off of 100 per the Vincent Library.[...]n Directing cent of investment in film production. It[...]FC. Mr Green Russell Boyd for Break of Day bring Austra[...]ne with Canada, but it is Branch of the AFC and will be run from the[...]new AFC office in Melbourne. owns five per cent of the equity in Best Achievement in[...]In a statement, the chairman of the AFI. Summerfield.[...]leveraged write-off of their investment (ie. they Barry[...]te off two or three times their actual In Search of Anna: Natalie Miller is the William And[...]explanation of the rationale behind its associate producer of this film. Ms Miller Best Original Music[...]increase the amount of withholding tax paid by Budget[...]Picture Show Man licences of film copyright. This amount, which[...]four per cent since the buted financially to any of the scripts Best Achievement in Costum[...]lly scheduled. of these cutbacks and to determine what development costs of Mary and Joe. If the[...]are not available the transfer of functions of the former Film.[...]Radio and Television Board of the Australia have five per cent of the film.[...]luntary' creative aspects of film in Australia.[...]" The recent demise of the Melbourne Film[...]acks to the Institute the press that 55 per cent of the[...]Film Theatre of Australia would seem to run corporation funds ha[...]ed by an "No one, least of all the Commission itself,[...]Act of Parliament, it replaced the Department[...]of Film Production which had been in monolithic body monopolising all aspects of[...]The functions of the corporation, as defined[...]S.M. In each of these projects, the applicant[...]Peter Rose, who as marketing manager of corporation member. They were:[...]reating the Summerfield -- Pat Lovell; In Search of Honourable Mention Here's To You[...]photo SAFC. He is now based in Sydney and is the Anna -- Esben Storm; Mary and Joe --[...]managing director of Hoyts Theatres. Oscar Whitbread and Frank Brown.[...]The director of the corporation is Malcolm MCA vice-president for Australia, New The Chant of Jimmie Blacksm ith: In[...]and its Appli formerly based in Sydney, has returned to reaching the decision to invest[...]15 and president in charge of special projects. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, the[...]licitor Lloyd corporation members were conscious of[...]Gold Award Italy they do now, that The Chant of Jimmie[...]tters From Mr Fred Schepisi is recognized as one of Teralba RoadAustralia's leading dir[...]dditionally, the investment offer in The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith was made[...]comment so far has not referred A group of Australian films are featuring to pre-VFC[...] |
 | [...]Switzerland inter alia, a new form of investment contract.[...]Oct 19-23 Fred Schepisi s The Chant of Jimmie[...]MIFED) employ a foreign publicist. Geoff Freeman of[...]Oberhausen (sports) The September 14 issue of Variety had a[...]Oct 24-28 listing of series on U.S. television and the[...]W. Germany estimated production costs of each episode.[...]Milan television features on budgets of around[...]Italy producers generally spend in the vicinity of[...]Oct 31-Nov 7 coverage of football each Monday night. At[...]Lucca (animation) the "exorbitant" fee of $100,000 for the tele[...]Nov 2-9 The W onderful World of Disney at $800,000[...]make any Australian feature with the exceptions of The Chant of Jimmie[...]home and, the recent example of Pasqual Festa Teheran[...]June 18. This consisted of deleting the original comedy about[...]and Reagan (Linda Blair) walk " out of the energy-starved world -- a[...]couple -- has more than one minute of hard E. Germany Love Boat,[...]s. A prologue where explicitness of The Sex Machine is, therefore, I[...]Why then is L' Empire des Sens deprived of Turkey[...]Prowse is trying to make an example of it. But Florence Festival dei Po[...]plied: " We are victims of audience expecta screens. The[...]..... 160,000 in terms of horror.. There's a wild beast out[...]The Oshima film is the victim of censorship screening a selection of six films from the What's Happening.............[...]politics and is yet another sad example of how recent Sydney Festival at Newcastle on[...]esponse. At that stage, freedom of speech.[...]of a new print order on a film that had already A l[...]each program chosen represent a precis of Barnaby Jones...................................[...]d for The following is a list of world film festivals the larger Sydney Festival. European in flavor,[...]Munch. These are screened in sessions of two[...]The Sydney Film Festival, working in F itz p a tr ic k s ..[...]association with the Arts Council of Australia,[...]opportunity of viewing first-class international[...]film s, most of which would not gain Hawaii Five-0..............[...]screenings at the 1977 Melbourne and Sydney Manheim Logan's R un........[...]ices: Holland New Adventures of Wonder[...]....................... 360.000Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, The............................[...]..................... 180,000 W onderful World of Disney, T h e ................... 800,000[...] |
 | [...]t-dubbing, or in which he or the bracing guise of the Bruce Lee films, made its she will be subject[...]rs. If I look back on all I've King Hu's Touch of Zen was invited to the done in that time I see nothing but a series of Cannes Film Festival and has since appeared at[...]mpest was shown at In Hong Kong a small catalogue of films is the London Film Festival, The Ghost in the widely admired as exemplars of a `true direction' Mirror at Perth, and this y[...]am Film for Chinese cinema. These include a group of Festival included a retrospective of the work of films made for Li Han-hsiang's short-lived dir[...]a Tang Shu-shuen's The Arch. What they have in of Hong Kong from a Western perspective tends common[...]e characterized as an to come down to a matter of backing personal aspiration towards an art cinema with neo-realist enthusiasm with a series of calculated stabs in the echoes. dark. There is a dearth of published information While deploring the narrow[...]ctors are forced to work, and the translations of key articles, one ends up obvious scars which rigorous censorship conscious of reaching innumerable deadlocks in (especially in[...]hile longing to see Shadows proves invaluable, of course, but no real Chinese cinema adopt the stra[...]ast in its substitute for access to the output of, for own terms, of a Wenders or a Syberberg, it is example, the Shanghai studios of the 1930s and- difficult for a Western critic to[...]des old) Hong Kong industry seems so achievements of a vital popular art in the hands firmly rooted. of artists who turn limitations into generic The[...]urther complicated by the strengths. existence of two Hong Kong cinemas: the Cantonese language[...]. It was, however, not at all outside the sphere of influence of the dominant fifties modes: watching some of those films now one is struck by the fidelity with which the ubiquitous It is the films of Chang Cheh, alongside those Italian/Hollywood fetishes of the period were of Bruce Lee and King Hu, that have probably blue[...]contributed most to the Western concept of M an d arin cinem a was d ev elo p ed to Chine[...]nese industry's The New One-Armed Swordsman, Duel of financial limitations by reaching a wider Sout[...]historical dramas and epic for once the vagaries of commercial distribution romances with some pretence of authenticity, have proved apt and revealing. For it is in his (the prime example in this area is the work of Li films that are distilled to a marked degree th[...]spectacular central and vital generic components of the action. It was on these trends that Shaw B[...]n in the industry was important in its definition of certain parameters founded. It would be a mistake, however,to see it of the Chinese experience as the Western does as a purely artificial off-shoot of a commercial in relation to the culture which spa[...]tuses prevent any definitive discussion cinema of nostalgia for a lost China. of the genre's development, although in its recent In its mobilization of traditional subject matter revivification, from t[...]m o f the Red Chamber, Strange made in the shadow of Chiang Kai-shek's 1927 Stories from a Chinese[...]plays, to coup. He sees the stringent censorship of the the popular and pulp literature derived fr[...]subjects that had been in vogue in the service of the present. in 1926 had be[...]a is for the next four years by a Chinese version of one of thwarted perfectionists. A cinema, too, the Weste[...]ion films framed indulging in a certain crisis of conscience. It is around "a synthesis of medieval knight-errant, rare to talk to a dire[...]erina Glaessner heartedly embrace the ambience of commercial The films concentrated on "impetuous d[...]ence, usually To some extent this is a product of an admittedly horrific production situation in which *The cinema of Hong Kong is, however, not unique in this[...]it was a "constant battle to do intimate aspects of a film's post-production as the something fresh.[...]time they Verina Glaessner is the former editor of the film page in want you to knock out som[...] |
 | [...]ly interesting in the specifically at the point of Manchu conquest in light of current trends. China and the collapse of the Ming dynasty, a[...]The simultaneous development of chivalric one which is never tu rn e d to[...]literature at this time in the direction of an propagandist use by the director.[...]common root and that an understanding of the film as director. Shot in studio sets on a place of the `knight errant' in Chinese history minus[...]James Y.J. Liu in his over-view of the subject, with set-piece farewells, and mess[...]figure to sequences shot without the benefit of anything its hist[...]g fighters like the thought-out choreography of the later operati[...]l disruptive forces in a feudal character of the wandering avenger, described in[...]the pre-credit sequence as a virtual force of society.[...]nature, and crystallized in the performance of Unlike the Wes[...]individual freedom, the righting of wrongs, that the film achieves the force[...]revenge and loyalty. In place of the feminine a focus the script overtly ac[...]Action is objects of courtly love of Western tradition, less relevant than the establishment of icono- women appe[...]impresses with its sheer weight of continuity, sequences with the thematic int[...]novels, the `high' art of chivalric verse, theatre, latterly become something of a trademark. King[...]errant as disruptive force and righter of wrongs Drink With Me, is usually credited wit[...]for generic purity, but simply to suggest of sophistication, if not quite the `abstractness', of its cultur[...]urces such cinema, inspired by the popularity of Japanese as the A[...]n a sense, it is, of course, too many. But whether one Chang's Th[...]regards Chang in something of a producer role competent film, but unexci[...]. vis a vis those of his films on which he works with It is notable o[...]co-directors, or as more of a conventional touches generic bases fa[...]the changing group of repertory players around[...]Chang's main preoccupation is with the pull of early films; Ti L[...]exploiting a genre in order to yield a vision of Chang uses his[...]uned errant" -- and amplified the element of fatal scripts wri[...]d prolific author of novels and serials, the subject, developed the e[...]y and sensitivity of surface and a psychological In the ne[...]ere further his ability to italicize aspects of' his in Chinese c[...]performers' personae. The real diegesis of the[...]For parallels one reaches to the films of more an almost sculptural interplay of character Peckinp[...]Chang has expressed his through a series of pregnant relationships which admiration), the Ray of Johnny Guitar, the themselves translate[...]ritualized circles of pain in Leone. creasingly epic di[...]ed choreo All of Chang's really substantial work that I graphy of action. Golden Swallow is a con[...]more or less recent past of the Republican era, of hinging around its three main characters --[...]rthern Sung Dynasty in the killer with some of the `wounded' resonance of case of The Water Margin trilogy.) Usually Brando of The Wild One) and Lo Lieh as[...]tussle situation (of corruption, moral dissolution, against the forces of constriction, corruption and[...]and carrying out of an intellectually conceived[...]n the The films of his Taiwan period (between 1973 figures of his archetypally disruptive seekers of and 1975 he produ[...]independent aegis of his own company in Many of his films admittedly accomplish little |
 | [...]c like Vengeance, however, conjures with notions of cosmic pessimism of Jacobean tragedy. While the Water Margin Trilogy[...]in a mosaic in which exposition takes the place of narrative, and plot, character, theme are all explored through combat sequences of extra ordinary power. In Blood B rothers, Chang turns in an impressive investigation of the knight errant personality under the aspect of romance in a tradition which treats love and her[...]Taiwan films, which all focus on the adventures of disciples of the Shaolin temple displaced through treachery, the depiction of the martial arts becomes, under the direction of Liu Chia-liang, more literal (a legacy of Bruce Lee's realistic precision) and also more h[...]heroic gesture attached to a developed sequence of movements. Films like Heroes Two, Men from The Monastery and the wonderfully Hawksian Disciples of Shaolin, all explore the arts in relation to the[...]nre's peplum influences are left behind in favor of a specifically Chinese interpretation. The series confronts its subject and the genre at its point of (historical) origin -- the temple -- and conflat[...]k up the theme and Liu himself directed a series of films which mined areas similar to those explor[...]Empress Wu, Li Han-hsiang's reworking of a typically Shangai film, &m me ^O[...]opportunities this offered, including a new mine of classical, historical subjects, were largely at the hands of the studio's golden boy, Li Han- hsaing. And it was very much his blend of statuesque sophistication that provided Shaw[...]ners that made their reputation. A graduate of the Peking Art Institute and actor whose attempts to enter the somewhat charmed circle of the Shanghai studios had foundered, Li's eye was[...]eer spans some 30 years, beginning with a series of intriguing black and white, more or less sociall[...]same informal `repertory company', both in front of and behind the camera, for substantial periods of time). His work ranges from the epic, to the co[...]he period drama, satire and erotic compendiums of dramatic and comic tales. |
 | [...]rd (Li Han-hsiang), which is set in the aftermath of the Republican revolution. several films in his[...]History of the Cluing Court, of course, gained a In a way his oeuvre represents the yin to Hsi Shih: Beauty of Beauties mobilizes land certa[...]for a more appropriate director for a costumes of the studio films and manages to Reviewed today, many of the costume subject of epic scope than this genuine hedonist embue the weighty deployments of the battle romances can yie[...]xtravagant sequences and the moments of surprising Kingdom and the Beauty, the story of the love prevents his treatment of the genre from intimacy with an enthus[...]of grandeur, notions of a crushing social Any director working within[...]The Girl who saved her Father, collective arena of commercial cinema needs a despite being som[...]rtain determination and stylistic resilience to of the Taiwan censor,' wraps a tale of court Concubine (a story als[...]may somewhat come to grief around the figure of and counter-plotting by the rival bands of the Emperor, too much a tabula rasa for the certainly true of the arrantly commercial and medical special[...]gly senseless weighty rituals of court life and its concomitant interesting directors like Chu Yuan, of Intimate[...]figure of the son of the royal household, manages Confessions of a Chinese Courtesan and the to suggest the foreignness of a past age and the a way that de[...]illiant The Magic Blade, or Sung essence of a baleful corruption that is not finally[...]nt grit to exorcized by the romantic vision of filial piety sustain themselves, in these circum[...]the film version of Eternal Love, a Huang Mei Li, on the other ha[...]rt Ch'ing dynasty drama The history of what has tended to be labelled, t[...]ibits these qualities par with a hint of superiority, "Shaw spectaculars",[...]assuming the a powerful grasp in his mobilizing of mise-en- less lavish guise, is slightly less shrouded than guise of a youth in order to partake of an educa that of the martial arts genre, primarily because scene and detail towards deliberately expressive of the genre's obvious upfrontness about its[...]Eternal Love achieves an amazing richness of moments stick in the mind: the group of women ranged about the weeping Ti Ying (in the film of Leyda, who treats the genre's Hong Kong[...]ng to distress; an elegant and unexpected flurry of that of the sword-stroke-action film, finds its recasting of a theatrical form in cinematic terms, fabric and[...]with a sequence roots in the Shanghai studios of the period of and its flowing lead performance all make it of biting irony and wit in Scandal; the sense of Japanese occupation when, again, to paraphrase, something of a landmark. physicality that makes Li's ghost in Bliss, one refuge in the past provided a `safe' way of dealing episode in Four Moods (to which King Hu[...]patently sensitive and informed handling of supposedly flesh and blood protagonist.[...]As Leyda remarks, much of the Shaw find in the[...]is independent company in Taiwan, consisted' 'of films which reworked subjects deliberate simplicity of The Winter, which he providing a refreshingly be[...]made for his own company, something of a in which some of the Hong Kong cinema's most Cham, Empress[...]in the tightly sources. budgeted confines of the studio. One gropes for The most intere[...]Rayns has characterized it as notable for its of Kings, perhaps in some of Huston, in the undoubtedly that of Li's brilliant 1976 film, The massive confidence of some of the more Last Tempest , a film based[...]narrative passivity adheres to much of Li's work.[...]It seems that it was not until the collapse of his[...]company -- something of a locus classicus for[...]the industry's crisis of conscience -- and Li's[...]the nature of power. Both, centring on magnetic[...]the aftermath of the Republican revolution, and[...]they reveal a society arrested in a state of odious[...]The concomitant of the admiration for Li's[...]Hence, choruses of disdain as he tackles `yet[...]tokenness of many of his post Empress Dowager[...]recalls Pasolini in its careful marshalling of[...] |
 | [...]Leon Saunders (Sydney) " Grejgf* and " Mick" both indicate Phil Noyce is probably the best-known of Australia's six months we were to lo[...] |
 | [...]y night, travelling in the car -- all the sorts of things F.J. Holden might have been.BACKROADS[...]Caravan Shooting Backroads. Director of photo Backroads, Noyce's look at unmotivat[...]creenplay, and the actors and I miles of traffic stacked up behind changed that along the[...]audience to feel sympathy for the Aboriginal of 26 to 30 who had film it. Gary, how[...]e was The realism and forcefulness of white society under the influence of always seen as an allegory of the the characters have also tended to[...]d by their attitudes to What was the involvement of the as we know, has been ultimately[...]tragic for the Aboriginals. So, Gary of the film? felt th[...]to find a way of pointing out to them many at that time who were[...]Pierre Rissient, the director of our Aboriginal was more urban.[...]seen Gary Foley enough resources of money and publicist, used to make successes of around town for a couple of years, manpower to do the sort of ending films that looked like sleepers. And so I asked him to play the part of that we finally compromised on.[...]important. He did this on an ideological control of the black only changed it at the last[...]nsisted on your ending? this side of filmmaking as well. . . W a s i t a g o o d w[...]the same amount of energy, or to film their own stories.[...]In filmmaking there is a degree of changed. . .[...]m for any viewer to come to grips among a mass of vehicles, and with. The characters are gen[...] |
 | [...]with other people's money, and you success of Philippe Mora's Brother the Opel. y[...]ilm, Let the' Good There has been a lot of criticism know you are making something[...]fact, David initially lately about the number of period be sold -- it's not just an esot[...]at is why in a capitalist to a large section of the community.[...]his last film's cause it was only $25,000 worth of with Andrew Fisher, then Bob Ellis come[...]nherited a second draft screenplay examination of the social fabric and it to television because of the this could be an answer. You could which already has a certain number the public events of the near past, to subject matter and language, so I then make films that may have of characters and a plot line, some make statements about the evolu had to make the most out of the commercial potential but which you of which I agreed with and some I tion of present day attitudes and theatrical sit[...]ng was an event which It went okay in Sydney, but great[...]embellished a fear in a lot of in M e lb o u r n e , th ough in[...]ewsfront" basically Australians -- that of communism. Melbourne it was released at[...]"Newsfront"? It's a dramatic story of the the film -- we.just hear something[...]inasmuch as it is appealing to a very golden era of the newsreel from Labor Party and the formation of opportunity.[...]hing different -- i.e. to make a mentary footage of the public Can you see yourself making m[...]t these events are films with the budget of " Back- adopt a revolutionary structure. A[...]will be trying to the fictional private lives of the men tive, and the film is not, at least on[...]narrative -- the story of a family which have a political or socia[...]It's the story basically of one and of two men. nature.[...]e info the social comment into this type of had written. I thought the idea quite Cin[...]he rival company, Only inasmuch as some of the You can do things that you can't[...]as Movietone was, an Australian rhythm of the cutting is often quite m[...]sub-branch of an international dissimilar to the way i[...]of what happened to Australia story in a d[...]during that time of great change.[...]Between the end of the war and One must remember that te[...]the make-up of our society. One And television was, of course, a[...]international further nail in the coffin of so-[...]Americanization of this country. washing. That's why in the f[...]One of the early events of the Mouse Club on television. After all,[...]film, and this typifies much of the our cultural heroes generally have[...]launching of the first Holden. The Ginger Meggs is less k[...]symbol of nationalism, a reminder[...]of a more naive time of peculiarly How involved have you been in[...]profits from the sale of Australia's know that people like, say, Hilary[...]r. Linstead, spend most of their time[...]keeping abreast of the latest[...]The launching of the Holden was, productions on the stage and[...]of Australian economic and, as it of any emerging talent and of the[...], cultural independence. It wide cross-section of actors and[...] |
 | [...]possibility of a man's resistance to his[...]The increased honesty and wide frame of[...]reference of Ascent postulated a moral[...]political gesture. In Berlin of all places, in[...]open market between the nihilism of[...]tions of loud ideologies, it is important to[...]s Another illustration of the way fascism frightened pursuit of his own death." Robert Bresson's Le Diable Probab[...]ll international film festivals, the Most of the arguments were focussed established suc[...]director for Manuel Gutierrez Aragon, any time of day and most times at night. moments of emotional stress, we look from Spain.[...]jury, because Bresson " ... examines with of a trouser-leg, the shape of a shoe, the Holidays of '36; in tu rn , Borau[...]glint of metal on a railing or a lift'door. The collaborated on the script of Black Litter, The parallel events included th[...]averted eye, and the so the similarities of approach and treat competition, the International Forum of[...]ment are not surprising. Young Films, a program of new West world in which the choice of life and noise-polluted air. German films[...]In both films there is a threat of tion section, several major retrospectives[...]g: the harsh -- including an almost complete one of respect."[...]thematic in Charles's calvary. The tension of the scenes in which resentments and anger[...]udden fights, and love without local association of art cinemas. analysis of the film, says in the festival in this combination of alienation and sub tenderness. Borau and A[...]the spiritual progression on the part of the even our shame that in view of his meta dignified, who communicate by inflicting standard of the main competition. The audience,[...]ed first by to upgrade it by advancing the dates of[...]from July to-early audience forms part of an over- March -- two months ahead of the[...]ry message, offering redemption guidance of their mother. They attack remains: will there be[...]rohibition. He films in the main section, and 25 of these sickened by the world; " ... unders[...]artisans develops, Schepitko's conditions of membership -- secrecy, a sign of the overall lack of quality that ing that any useful act in t[...]e revenge, and the willing sacrifice of his the same four or five were shortlisted by[...]s his frightened pursuit but the relationship of the inner self to the fails on secrecy, and bu[...]vangelicals, and so on) and argued by of his own death." However, like the outside[...]similarly suicidal heroines of Bresson's by fascism, the other is not. And f[...]but now it is an invisible w ar... and film of the competition, rivalled only by[...]camerawork of Elemer Ragalyi. But the[...]played a communist boy of about 18 symptoms of anorexia nervosa. Naturally[...]trying to escape, after the failure of the[...]masterly: even the lyrical beauty of the[...]Many of the competition films were[...]genre which most critics consider out of[...]faults, Break of Day would have been[...] |
 | [...]BERLIN FESTIVAL of the Citadel), by Bernhard Wicki, and Die Vertrei[...]contrast to everyone else in that static comedy of the absurd. Lily Tomlin was chosen as best actress for her portrait of a neurotic but tough, charmingly phoney all-American girl in The Late Show; but then, none of the other films had plum parts for women.[...] |
 | [...]Storm I n MATT Binili What was the genesis of "Sunday "Storm Boy" is one of Australia's great success stories, It I was c[...]has already accrued a gross in excess of $1,000,000, the Brealey though it didn't b[...]Cannes and has been Gil hadn't been part of that, NSW, where shearers had been a awa[...]having had to run the corporation at fantasy of mine, I thought the idea then associated with[...]beginning of all the problems you feature.[...]version from the director's cut? beginning of being able to tell a small but very important part of the "Storm Boy".[...]It was shot very closely to the beginnings of a nation. It has Carroll's position at[...]time, bound up changes after the appointment of John Morris as two hours and it just didn't work. with the ethos of the sheep shearer. corporation director and the departures of Jill Robb and Gil and Ken agreed to disagr[...]then instructed Rod made, I think, is the story of producer in charge of feature and television production. Adamson[...]Boy", "Sunday", and the role of the SAFC. Sunday Too Far Away. Jack Th[...] |
 | [...]small part of the box-office for a lot[...]of advertising time. Jill then went[...] |
 | [...]successful; the pic-a- With the advantages of hindsight, It is in profit -- we broke eve[...]from Storm Boy. We don't Meillon's agony of seeing his son The SAFC appears to have the[...]ie. flexibility of a small Hollywood So, in fact, you were the init[...]Probably far more people had seen expertise of the people who have work. But by the time Don's[...]There are signs of this happening. screenplay writer who loved[...]arner and the film was television series, and one of our It was actually lower because of released in London where they telly films has bee[...]a set text? mailings, and a couple of those before it opened, and while if'got Is the S[...]prime time spots in Sydney. We also had problems with the[...]film to market, We also knew exactly the sort of French release where the so we decided to u[...]lly, when it No, though th e re is an system of the various states to when material was pa[...]absorbed by Adelaide, where we found there One of the other things we learnt wasted, and the film w[...]c service should we fold. was a desire on behalf of the on Storm Boy was the importance as a filler.[...]ged on terms and education department to involve of test marketing. That was why we because it was a[...]We got no advance for service. All those outside of the process of going to see a film but What we also do, and what the other it, but they paid a lot of the costs clerical staff, like myself, are on also in a whole range of fringe distributors never do, is prepare a and we got a direct split of the box- short-term contract. educational activi[...], as well as tying office, but no one has thought of Do ym feel it should have been proliferation of film corpora ourselves in with Rigby. And the ta[...]is reacting to a film. For Fortnight is the kiss of death? likewise. Tasmania is very special case of every school for itself. So we example, we didn't[...]because they already had a docu did a series of direct mailings. release of The Fourth Wish in No, It did an enormous amount of mentary film unit there and the The resources th[...]asn't working with help, because the announcement of c o r p o r a t i o n is v i r t u a l l y a pro[...]unction with the audiences; but we knew what sort of being in the Directors' Fortnight hit rationalization of something that South Australian Education audience it was attracting and had a Australia just at the time of the hadn't been very efficient in the Department were eagerly snapped good idea of what its fate would be. film's release and it did[...]The other thing about the there is danger of the federal[...]lot of European markets, and responsibilities; after all[...]would have sold a But doesn't this proliferation of[...] |
 | [...]ctor George Lucas, the Wookie and crew on the set of The seven foot 100-year-old Wookie, Chewbacca,[...]upervisor John Dykstra. year-old writer-director of Star Wars, George warehouse in Van Nuys,[...]tar Wars is hours a day to keep up the flow of production moves through the same[...]this time the undoubtedly spectacular in its use of special necessary to have everything comp[...]a system would be Three pieces of film have so far been exposed. photographic effe[...]at, X-Wing miniature in front of the blue screen but his reputation has quickly b[...]y into the computer During the pre-production of Star Wars it Several servo motors dro[...]control. became obvious that a large number of mounted on a crane, along a strai[...]atures and other related effects shots needed of track, simultaneously raising or lowering,[...]otor- black and white shots, one of the X-Wing and started to combine all the facili[...]echanism. All this was then the other of the T.I.E. ship. The pieces are laid need for th[...]ing 18 in. scale models. film became somewhat of a nightmare due to its quick chase scene six separate pieces of film[...]ighters and the enemy T.I.E. In many of the scenes, laser beams are being[...]cience fiction fired by either one or all of the space ships in equivalent of the Bullitt chase sequence. It was rapid[...]rld War 2 matting processes. The length of laser fire, its[...]air-to-air combat footage as it was this type of point of origin and impact area had to be syn[...]screen. chronized to match the movements of the[...]scene of an X-Wing fighter being pursued by an[...]been placed in front of a translucent blue[...]and pitch gives the illusion of the camera[...] |
 | Tom Ryan Luke's Kingdom was shot in the foothills of central thrust of the series is towards romance -- extension of their life in Britain which they have the Blue Mountains of New South Wales during a conventional hero figure each week exercising left after the death of his wife. Luke, on the other 1974 and 1975. The[...]his power and wisdom to provide the means of hand, is better equipped to tackle the savagery of came from a former BBC documentary man, the[...]Only in one the colony, denying the relevance of the past and late Tony Essex. Costing $2,000,000[...](written by seeking to achieve his vision of the future -- his program is an Anglo-Australian[...]tion. issue of resolution need not be the defining one if T[...]one is concerned with critical estimations of practical amorality -- provide a backgrou[...]ceptions being value, and qualities of visual and dramatic style which each of the dramas is placed, either Oliver Tobias, in the role of Luke Firbeck, and can provide their own standard of excellence. directly or by implication, a[...]The Australian Unfortunately, none of the Australian series I demanding and disturb[...]have mentioned (at least after a single viewing of Hannam and Peter Weir, have since made im[...]Too often intelligent working through of particular Kingdom within the framework of television Far Away, Break of Day, and Summerfieid,[...]motifs at the script-level. The standards of Leave It To Beaver to Bonanza. And while[...]there are, for all their differences, a number of[...]iewing these as relations, if not The writers of the series, as far as I have been severely restricted by the uneasy blend of as members of the same amorphous family, it able to gather, are Australian, and include videotape and film, of studio and location work. ought to be noted[...]ke's Kingdom, however, is shot completely of "continuous dramas" * which seems to have Certai[...]wrote on film and sustains an evenness of surface been born in Britain, (Upstairs[...]l to con The Search for the N ile, A Bouquet of Barbed[...]'s Kingdom ought to be first seen in the of the 19th century in New South Wales, it is those other, so far, turgid adaptations from context of what can be loosely described as characterized by a harshness of tone (the human novels), but which has foun[...]sh and Company, and conception of settling the new land (evocatively Roots, Th[...]nes from a Marriage, Moses with a particular era of Australian history, using[...]Pialat's and Fassbinder's work in the background of the developing country to references[...]oblem situations. while there is a sense of the closure of a particular story at the end of each episode, this is These dramas, like the series,'are for obvious The best of these, Rush, initially an Australian rendered irrelevant in terms of the broader reasons centred on a particular group of people, production and then a French, Scottish, context of the drama as a whole. Australian co-production i[...]e these dramas as "mini- followed the adventures of a police constable Beyond the collision between man and series", but the thrust of my argument demands an (John Waters) attempting[...]s between Luke and his father, Jason latter part of the 19th century. (James C[...]naval lieutenant, of genteel disposition, sees his Despite occasional concessions to the presence of political corruption in the colony, and to the and his family's future in terms of the past, as an tensions between the mine[...] |
 | [...]LUKE'S KINGDOM often a family of filially unrelated individuals Far left: The[...]e Australia for the the dramas, the girl reads of the Firbecks'voyage forced together by social ci[...]olony. A cut transfers us to However, while each of the episodes of a series Condon), Luke (Oliver Tobias) and Jassy (Elizabeth the past, and an overhead shot of the family[...]and starts again, as it were, taking no account of what[...]Kate Bell. parts of a "continuous drama" need to be seen[...]the subject of the episode's title, playing cards together as a[...]oor Man Book 1 ends after Rudy loses Episodes of a series can be, and often_are, his family[...]abin is a relaxed one, shown in any order; those of a continuous drama achieved is finally irrel[...]y drunk and his abrasive manner disturbs writing of each part demands an overall concep (Helen[...]ether and look beyond tion and that the material of previous parts be the ashes of the Firbeck property to the future; the tone of the gathering. Here, and throughout taken as a s[...]ward at the waters that have pursuit of civilized rituals, and often deliberately[...]erved in Movie 21: forward to their hope of being able to start again. upsets the unity[...]The sighting of the Australian coast-line finds of destiny for every character and what the It is worth looking closely at the beginning of resolution will be, and then you devise stories Luke's Kingdom, the episode entitled A Sort of the family together on deck, eagerly straining for which will advance that in a sort of progression." Gentleman (written by Keith Raine[...]the way it introduces motifs, a sight of their future. Jason's observation -- "A Luke's[...]communal, pioneering mood of the moment, and and their context and moves towa[...]a room littered with old history, a progression of years (Luke's Kingdom photographs and furniture -- remnants of an era Though Jason sees himself as[...]ovide the sub-title, and more than 20), a number of sub-plots which serve framework, for the subs[...]Pages past. Bound by the moral codes of the Mother to evoke the mood of the period as well as From A Squatter's Journal, New South Wales, Country, the ethic of the `gentleman', the course provide a collage of reflections of the central 1829-1836." She is played by Hel[...]is by Luke's he endeavors to pursue is out of tune with the clusion which offers a format endi[...]s, the dual role undercuts any traditional sense of resolution by suggesting that the girl is a descendant of Kate's reality of the colony. pointing forward to an ambiguous future. (and, perhaps, of Luke's) and binds together the The Ed[...]pages that she is to read. waters of the bay has much more in common with attempts to[...]gdoms", have been ruthless in their exploitation of those The diary is Jason's -- .. I beli[...]und them, whether friend or foe, and both of God to be with us . . ." -- a fact which adds a "Pandemonium: an abode of devils") which has men have been finally forced[...]n, no room for moral niceties. Jason, of course, is recognition of their own limitations as human and hostile[...]awareness of the inadequacy of his principles in perspective is shared[...]son Luke's Kingdom closes with the destruction of recalls a face of history which is moulded in his varying d[...]substance of most text-books about Australia's[...]the convicts laboring in the streets of Sydney, as A ploy of the dramas as they progress is to[...]'s words Jassy finds herself the object of crude suggestive and the sort of history which conceals the ness, and of mockery for her lameness. The moments of brutality and anguish by submerging brutal response of a guard to the convicts is as[...]them within a broader historical movement. Of disturbing to the family as the initi[...]here is one of placing that fiction within a period the fr[...]of history.[...]atmosphere of the town offers little respite from Amid the echoes of voices from the past, voices the sense of a country divided into nobs and[...]guaranteeing him possession of government land,[...]inappropriate to the needs of the settlers. First[...]prospective ticket-of-leave employee being[...]interviewed by Jason, warn him of his error in[...]Sydney.[...]of those who know better than he what is[...]his resentment of his father's authority: "Does he[...]Jason's generous offer of wages, he usurps that[...]at the head of the family, directing the route it[...]etiquette, kindness and diplomacy (the mode of[...] |
 | [...]) after Roberts has been tricked into killing one of Luke's enemies. behavior most likely to appeal to an audience of popular television). Luke, on the other hand, while aware of his place in the family, is little concerned with it or with any other of the conventions on which a civilized community[...]Below: Kate working at the Firbeck homestead. of any resolution to it, the placing of sympathies[...]-is in A Sort Of Gentleman, and, as I mentioned[...]invalidating that of the gentleman, forces Fogg to problematic for th[...]the alternative of confessing and thus alleviating does little to p[...]s serve to underline it. The threatening mystery of[...]who has seen the references to the broad vistas of mountains and[...]Firbeck . . . You'll do well. This is a bastard of a forests, a reading of these images being directed[...]a bastard to lick it." by the orchestral surge of the soundtrack music[...]boundaries of the colony. As he asks, "Whose emphatic and intr[...]his Victoria Anoux as Rosie, one of the "girls" at the Border land is that?", director Hannam places a group of suggestion of a romantic adventure into the[...]in the background the immediately hostile, sense of place. unconquered beauty of the Blue Mountain[...]foothills invites the entry of those who dare. "A This feeling is illustrated b[...]o movement, from left to right, across the trunk of propriety, characterized by a ruthless pursuit of a decayed tree, the Firbecks and their newly- hi[...]land around him their new home. The implication of this image is than to the human family to which he belongs. a dwarfing of the individual, his boundless hopes Side by side with the Firbeck saga in A Sort of for the future (this includes Luke as well) being Gentleman is the introduction of the first of a situated within the confines of his immediate series of periphery characters whose stories location with[...]direct attention, in terms of narrative, away from As the travellers settle down for the evening by the central conflict of Jason and Luke, but serve the camp-fire, the con[...]r emphasized. to sharpen our focus on it in terms of the As Samuel reads Shelley to an attentive Jassy, a aesthetic structure of the particular episode. disinterested Luke casts[...]sius Fogg (Barry Hill), the Firbecks' activities of the shepherds around the wagon travelling compani[...], during which time he expressed his love nature of these activities too late -- Charlton has for Jassy, arrives in Sydney to set himself up in a robbed them.[...]and finds that the banker to whom he The moment of rest, of distraction from the had forwarded his money is n[...]ding full and constant attention, is on the brink of suicide. sufficient to sabotage their chance of success. In desperate.straits, he meets up again with the Luke alone seems capable of realizing the need Firbecks on their way to their[...]himself treated kindly by Jason, but rebuffed by of the thief demonstrate this. He beats infor Jassy and mistrusted by Luke. Jason sees him as a mation out of the shepherd who has remained "gentleman" and Fog[...]uation want to stay with you."), bribes it out of the with Jassy and his financial plight result in an occupants of the inn/brothel (its sign carries the untoward advance upon her, which is rejected, temptation of "Bed and Bawd") in the scanty and the removal of a sextant from the Firbecks' township to which h[...]s evidence on his captive to have him his pursuit of Charlton. punished appropriately by the local[...]en forced by his Charlton has made an occupation of robbing own impulses and the uncompromising circum prospective settlers, disposing of his goods so that stances of life in the colony, to a situation in h[...] |
 | [...]rosby and director Ken Hannam during the shooting of the A Sort of Gentleman episode. ting to the safety of a belief in "God's will" .[...]For Jason, the situation becomes a crisis of Luke explains to Jassy how he needs more land fo[...]intention to settle outside the legal boundaries of humanitarian impulses and his belief in the need the scriptures of Australian history by those the colony,[...], legally, as his own), he echoes an dictates of the law, but is persuaded to protect Luke ret[...]d to them by royal signature has charge of the local soldiery, "Liberty is riches Caes[...]n to grow -- and the law with Jassy is one of several between the two in of the opening one, Luke re-enters the family[...]find Jassy reacting circle, drunk with his dream of the way that lies against his nostalgic recall of Britain and of her ahead, intruding on their depression with hi[...]places Luke and mother, accusing him of having failed to give her passionate outburst, u[...]Jason is thus linked with Skelton in terms of[...]as been their response to the hardship of their present Such a venture requires that th[...]ing with dignity against squatters, their tenure of the land an illegal but kingdom!", to which Luke replies, to her dismay, the injustices of the colony, both aware of the condoned one, their statute that of stinking that he now needs "more land", that their stock humiliation that the destruction of their commoners, their kingdom of Luke's design, of sheep will have to be tripled in a year.[...]ct that they shouldn't look The connection of the two sequences in the held dear. bac[...]Jassy momentarily prologue, the placing of the two men at the centre As the wounded S[...]ted by Luke's enthusiasm. of the drama in each, and the sentiments offered end of the episode, his departure witnessed by[...]eply moved, Jason's I have suggested that one of the most the title to the episode s[...]an has at least been able to interesting aspects of Luke's Kingdom is the way comparison of them. face death with the comfort of having been in which each segment serves to illu[...]than with the morti characters and relationship of Luke and his That Luke is ostensibly the hero and that fication of being forever imprisoned "on the father. The pat[...]n Doyle is the villain (the later intrusion of his men island" . of a character linked by behavior or context with L[...]into the Firbeck land can be likened to that of the The method of construction of Luke's clarification or qualification of our perspective Cleff family into the Mormon wagon train in Kingdom around the interruption of outsiders on the two men, and intensifying it.[...]) does nothing to change into the life of the Firbecks is an intelligent one,[...]take in the way it, in line with the pattern of the For example, in the prologue to episode 5[...]continuous drama, shifts the centre of interest in Man Worse Than Cormac (written by Br[...]each of the separate narratives, while at the same Wrigh[...]order town, which is located about ticket-of-leave convict, Jack Skelton, has gained 32km (20[...]becks. Expressing his The appearance of relative innocents, like resentment at the treatment of convicts by the Fogg, Skelton, Cope (in T[...]savagery of Australia has done to its inhabitants, Enemy[...]pathetic Jassy willing to listen to presence of Britain and her values and the motif his tale of woe and to understand his yearning to of (in the words of Jason's diary) "pygmy mortals[...]As a result of an incident at the inn (an attempt savagery" .[...]ment of one of the local ruffians), Skelton finds The intrusion of the lawless, like Cormac[...]contract of his ticket-of-leave by working outside Man) and the Reveren[...]the legal boundaries of the colony. The corrupt Too Many), underlines the impotence of those[...]he escapes custody and flees to the basis of an alien morality. In Luke's words, "We[...]lives quoting the books of law. There are no laws[...]Any discussion of Luke's Kingdom must[...], not for anyone."), his father retrea heart of this continuous drama. With his[...]that line of anguish-ridden figures found in the[...]John Wayne characters of Ford films; in the[...]James Stewart characters of Anthony Mann's[...]1920s and 1930s environments of Raoul Walsh's[...]films; or in the tormented heroes of much of[...]in satisfying his own desires, his methods of[...] |
 | Eric Rohmer is one of the most uncompromising His book on Hitchcock, co[...]ors in France today: uncompromising in his choice of critical milestone. subjects, in the actors he[...]he has remained faithful to his original project of interests are far-ranging: apart from his acti[...]director, Rohmer also lectured in film at the University of completed in 1972. Paris 1, and has made a number of programs for French Since then, he has made (in G[...]von O . . . " ("The Marquise of O") which is a rigorous, Rohmer's film activit[...]1950s but never suggestive and beautiful staging of the Kleist tex t No small really was a part of the explosion which was the New Wave. amount of credit for the pictorial accuracy and harmony of Despite this, his early films involved working[...]Comolli, Barbet Schroeder, Jacques Rivette -- all of At present Rohmer is preparing and researching a[...]erent directions since based on the medieval text of `Percival' by Chretien de those early days. Ro[...]tical articles Troyes. for the " first period" of `Cahiers du Cinema', and it is The following inte[...]cally cinema. May this year. Was "The Marquise of O" a long- a foreigner to make a f[...]make it in Latin. thing I kept in the way of narration that. I like characters who are on[...]were the inter-titles, which were the limits of the diabolical and the My intention was to make[...]g now, which is "The Marquise of O"? dates, or titles such a[...]two That is to say, a certain way of narrate what they are doing; they[...]grating narration with the will speak of themselves in the third will be comic or where t[...]in order to learn a language -- action; of allowing the dialogue to person. For examp[...]film in English (Providence are a lot of things narrated by As for its psycholo[...]indirect speech * -- and Are you conscious of these? someone who liked to introduce[...]there is a lot of it -- into direct[...]h is very funny, though have such a personal way of making example, Chloe doesn't say, "I[...]at the office tomorrow", but and an absence of clear-cut judge fact, it is construct[...] |
 | [...]Die Marquise voit O "is theatrical in the type of acting called for, in its construction, but not i[...]theatre (in theatre, characters written version of the "Moral process__[...]ted. The text is only from an experimental point of which we pick up again behind the[...]l. Or at least if it is, it is It is somewhat of a paradox. Even took the text, and had people say it. experimental point of view I would despite myself, becaus[...]there is only one type of music used In the cinema, however, the script[...]It is theatrical in the type of acting wanted to include something which[...]ilm made ambitious -- it was the ambition of which goes in all directions. The[...]ws you to renew your lasts the length of the performance. In The Marquise there is n[...]stage. There is no point of view treat only their own subjects present Also, I find that theatre the world which would be that of a theatre I want to remain obj[...]he wrote his stories with his "back that of Bergman. I find that it is between the two[...]s better for the cinema to turn its end-on view of a corridor -- which you should laug[...]t lean one way or In another Interview you spoke of own rules, its own cliches, and it can have only three walls (the position of the the other. "The Marquise" as a performance[...]g fourth wall being taken by the audience), of the Kleist text, rather than a don[...] |
 | [...]to divide the narration into two -- the character of Jerome, who Bernard Verley as Frederic and Zouzou[...]r example, Frederic point of view is not necessarily that television I widened my interests visual or a moral point of view? mentions a previous passionate of the narrator's -- I film someone considerably[...]d Well, what I studied in Murnau type of situation interest you? ther[...]to rediscover German was a certain organization of space, story: the character of Jerome, who literature. Now with Percival, I am and in particular the presence of I don't know. She is alluded to in[...]e novelist, who studying not only the literature of certain motifs, such as the expan order to show a certain richness of is going to try and write it. Wh[...]which was narrated, but without the of a book than in a cinema. way, but that is someth[...]I like to show that these use of the voice-over of a narrator. is not aware of. characters have a life outside of the[...] |
 | [...]SERVICE AGREEMENTS - 2 In this seventh part of a 19-part series, Cinema print of finished film for private use; first class feat[...]en situation); personal Baillieu discuss another of the service make-up man,[...]the press; specialized diet; develop a number of clauses and attitudes which he has secured finan[...]to be the contracting party Equity's form of agreement (an example of A number of differing forms of service with the producer.[...]edent 10A) begins by as the Equity standard form of agreement which contract for the artist's services and may want the considering the ambit of its agreement and feature film producers within[...]ttempts to prevent Australian enter into because of the union situation. The performance by the service company of its producers from the reality of exploiting their Equity Agreement sets out basic[...]similar forms of distribution. The union's ground formers from le[...]nd addition to the requirements of Equity, discussed The form of the agreement contains many clauses "extra agree[...]s, default clauses, any amount of withholding tax from the artist's grant of rights clauses and general covenants salary and/or share of profits as determined by In the U.S., however, the number of actresses clauses are drawn. the Commissioner of Taxation. The producer and actors avai[...]k and in the British and U.S. models in a number of ways. if the salary, or part t[...]ry to be paid overseas, Reserve Bank of filmmaking. argue greatly about the whole grant of rights approval will be needed. The producer may also Basic rates of pay are set out for various sets of clauses that their clients frequently sign.* wish to consider the form of currency the com[...]ctice, too, salary package instead of a mere cash fee. This The basic rates of pay set out in the agreement for artists oversea[...]iving expenses and deferred out of first producer's profits paid pari apply only[...]ts passu with (or sometimes ahead of) other defer rights. Like the SAG agreemen[...]or the ments as well as a piece of the producer's net or need to be negotiated f[...]payments over a number of financial years or The concept of free time is a negotiating ploy pay[...]ay encounter when attempting total amount of these loadings have varied from which local producers should be aware of. An to contract talent are spe[...]tment) and Aboriginals bargaining power of the producer. Query be drawn setting out the fee negotiated as for (refer the Department of Aboriginal Affairs). whether 16mm rights[...]Equity call weekly rate calculated at the amount of the total a blanket production agre[...]) but Equity refuse to fee divided by the.number of working weeks. Announcers Equity Association of Australia, the approve the exploitation of ancillary rights[...]ough the Experimental Film Clause 36 of Precedent 10A sets out a form of[...]ing for ancillary rights, similar in *The grant of rights clause outlines those rights in the Development branch of the AFC, have generally rate to the curre[...]producer is faced with the problem of either producer. The performer may argue that he[...]paying all (or most of) the loadings at once certain rights, e.g. merch[...]be remedied, that there is no standard some of these rights, or waiting until there is need[...]form of equity agreement which each producer to[...]discussion by representatives of Equity and based on the prevailing basi[...]prevailing at the time of entering the general[...] |
 | [...]5. Extras Agreement joined for the duration of a production only, if in Part 6 of the series: the Directors Agreement The e[...]rs are accordingly referred. These than the cost of the quarterly membership. provisions[...]his is Detailed provisions, as to the effect of inter operation by the 2nd assistant director[...]clauses can a sufficiently comprehensive grant of rights and[...]a producer and should be strongly exclusion of liability for certain hazardous acts, Producers may want to widen the grant of negotiated. The need is to minimize th[...]s clause (clause 25 in Precedent 10A) to of time an artist may be disabled, disfigured, in[...]the production. bring it into line with clause 4 of Precedent 10B: default, or suspended; or the[...]r is required to pay first At the speed of schedules Australian they are virtu[...]nterstate artists producers work on, a period of more than two or can also be a negotiable point.[...]completion of the film. The question of the The clauses concerning alteration of calls; compensation payable to the artis[...]T entered into this day of holds; overtime and Sunday rates should be care[...]Billings clauses are only beginning to be of frequently make or break a film's budget.[...]ETWEEN ACTORS' AND ANNOUNCERS' EQUITY ASSOCIATION OF[...]ing importing a artists. Different sorts of billing requirements AUSTRALIA of 72 Stanley Street, Darllnghurst, New South Wales[...]Equity's reflect the supposed stature of the star. The form approval (as well as making application to the and size of the billing is generally related in size (hereinafter called "the Union") of the One part AND Commonwealth Immigration Department for a and positioning of the films title card, and there work permit and[...]of strong convincing that a local performer could[...](hereinafter called " the Producer" ) of the Other part relating to the minimum[...]muneration to be There is a strong atmosphere of chauvinism O ccasionally in " all star productions" paid to, and the conditions of engagement of artists engaged by the prevalent in Equity which[...]ar's name or incidental to the production of a feature film as hereinafter defined and as pro[...]r referred to as concern itself with intricacies of billing, but in other stars' names or likenes[...]" the film") tentatively known as the event of a foreign performer being similar[...]1. APPLICATION OF AGREEMENT restrictions on any attempt to bill th[...]rmers. Particularly, in the previous part of this series. In an acting contained no performance of an artist in connection with the said they objec[...]r transferred to television video cassettes cent of the above the title billing. Again the untrammelled right to reduce the size of the or cartridges or the lik[...]ement as to remuneration producer will find ways of negotiating here. artist's performance.[...]es or the like is effected solely for the purpose of normal A form of such agreement is set out in produce[...], which is contained in the sub and law of contract clauses. There is also a other purpose or in any other manner or disposed of such as for but scription service. This style of agreement will be savings clause which provides that in the event of not in limitation thereof retail s[...]B. The Producer agrees that any agreement of engagement between particularly important if the[...]Query the Producer and any member of the Union or other person local or imported, is of some box-office value. whether this clause[...]etarily not The agreement sets out the period of employ One concluding reality that a p[...]onetary amounts hereinafter set out in this ment of the artist, which may or may not include to[...]agreement and that the conditions of engagement of each artist a stop date by which, regardless of over schedul which this agreement protects him in the event of shall never be more onerous than[...]this agreement. The Producer agrees that all of the terms of this pensation clause will differ in complexity[...]visual or oral or both) in the film irrespective of the weekly or or some salary package.[...]ause 3 provides for the artist to make himself of behavior,[...]THAT it is distinctly agreed that all of the monetary terms set out after shooting ends f[...]herein are minimum terms and all of the hours set out herein are provided the dates[...]maximum ordinary hours and that the number of days work per work.[...]week set out herein is the maximum number of ordinary working[...]frequently slips into Australian version of the long form agreement 10B. Unlike[...]agement with the Producer for the film during is of dubious merit. American law precludes provides for a breakdown of the salary total into the currency of this agreement and that the Union will not call or specific performance of a contract for personal various component[...]overtime, order any stoppage of work by artists engaged by the Producer for serv[...]work in accordance with the terms of this agreement. PROVIDED Section 526 (5) California Code of Civil fee.[...]THAT the Union may order a stoppage of work by artists if it be Procedure and Labour Co[...]omply with the Equity breaches of this agreement. Australian courts, of course, are loath to enforce standard form ag[...]out a breakdown of various loadings the 2. DURATION OF AGREEMENT by specific performance contracts for[...]period of one year or until the completion of the said film whichever is The grant of rights clause is a standard release the sooner. The grant of rights clause is extensive and coupled w[...]deemed to be included. There is a 3. BASIS OF MINIMUM RATES OF PAY, ETC. clauses; merchandising rights, dubbing[...]o comply with basic The minimum rates of pay set out in this agreement are based on the doubling rights, full cutting rights (a reflexion of Equity requirements.[...]ease the minimum rates payable rights; ownership of any literary material artist in compe[...]'clause which may or may not be upheld of operation of such Award increase. film library rights and mus[...]4. FEES/WAGES -- SCALE OF MINIMUMS PAYABLE and the like rights.[...]sal, The general covenants clause has a number of[...]performance and work incidental to the production of the film shall be:[...]minimum of 4 hours and not[...]two lines of dialogue[...]photographed in a manner which avoids recognition of the[...] |
 | [...]loading of an artist w ill take place as a consequence of that[...](i) For weekly engagements time worked in excess of nine hours on residing wh[...]Producer shall pay to the artist a meal allowance of $1.50 for Plus Minimum Loading[...]any one week in excess of fifteen hours shall be paid for at[...]basis be required to work of residence, the artist shall be provided with firs[...]ion or the Producer shall pay to the artist a sum of Plus Minimum Loading[...]sixth day in a week he shall be paid at the rate of time-and-a- $15.00 per night for[...]e worked on such a consist of an unshared room with bath or shower room and toi[...]facilities therein except in cases of emergency. The artist shall D. DSTi uUmNT[...] |
 | [...]Leon Saunders (Sydney) I don't think we will see much Terry Jackman, managing director of Hoyts Theatres It is being done, an[...]nge during the next 12 to 18 Ltd., is one of the new style executives now running some of will play in three or four different months. I think the effects of the[...]atres there before it finishes. The introduction of color television and the major exhibition and distribution companies in Aus- whole idea of the C entre is the economy will still be with us[...]an lias indicated that depends on the type of film you period and next year is going to be[...]as openers. For tough also. I hope that the end of he is willing to challenge previously-held a[...]like 3 Women has next year will see us come out of it and about the conservative film distributio[...]in one of the two small houses,[...]Cousin Cousine was such a success One of Hoyts' major expansive Jackman joined[...]y jo b There have been rumors that one Sydney. How is that working? within the company, and was finally appointed general of the theatres is going to be[...]ensive centre, costing $14 million. That's a lot of editor, Antony I. Ginnane, about Hoyts, its re[...]xhibition this job that we may be stretching of the few theatres in the world that trends.[...]an idea- One of the aims of the Entertain ment Centre, by virtue of the scale[...]In Melbourne you have two three- and size of the theatres, was that it[...] |
 | [...]The new 7-cinema Hoyts Entertainment Centre in Sydney. Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, the first Australian film that[...]ricans As there is no deal outside of the probably will twin two of the houses The three suburban houses we have[...]t in Hoyts' There have been a number of[...]being made locally, about the exact amount of Hoyts'[...]diences, the investment in "Jimmie Black Sydney if we twin one of th |
 | [...]Italian horror film, Suspira (Dario Argento), one of the independent films of where we are going and with money you sh[...]the sake of it -- we'd like to get our national censorship.[...]ecause censorship is such a number of people. has the Australian f[...]s. I think Sandy has spent a lot of time with matters In the past?[...]that he was a big help in the pre- years of watching the production Two to three years ago it was When the " Story of O" was production stage. So Sandy'[...]stribu Hoyts, and the question of the possibility of contesting the tion were magnified out of all restrictive and exclusive ruling of the Queensland Board of Peter Rose, formerly of the South proportion by a general refusal to[...]What percentage of Hoyts box- If I remember correctly, the of a desire to build up expertise in I don't mi[...]n't have the time, nor production area some idea of our year Fox had The Omen an[...]arrie, and A Bridge Too mind the feelings of the Govern Peter Rose will certain[...]th Roadshow, and see and the attitude of their[...]tion rights. There are a couple of going to continue to rely on Fox's I can't explain the attitude of the[...]great length to all of them in the[...]about in some way by the number of[...]ia, which we have films screened around Sydney in[...]OF THE UINKN'QIVN,[...]THOUSANDS OF STARS. overseas for lo[...]out of context with what the market[...]ices asked are There is no easy way out of it. We[...]based on the boom period of two or are going to need some form of self[...]sight unseen. becoming a big one, with a lot of[...]form of censorship. The Queens and there is goi[...]land Board, of course, I grew to cries of "Why me, why not you?"[...] |
 | [...]MELBOURNE/SYDNEY FESTIVALS bother by their insistence. B[...] |
 | MELBOURNE/SYDNEY FESTIVALS Harvest: 3000 years is of particular audience to fully accept her madness. As Max Havelaar, Fons Rademakers' lucid account of colonialism in the Dutch East Indies in 1855. Peter interest in its observation/recreation of well, her erotic fantasies (apart from one[...]e Red Indians stand menacingly in a significance of the title -- that life has forest while she masturbates in a canoe language; a widespread distrust of Shirin's search for .Mahmud, a girlfr[...]filled with blood) are too reminiscent of centuries -- is easily grasped. A calm, s[...]different to denote insanity. depriving Germans of work; etc. It is then, which Mahmud may frequent. And it is monotone photography of Elliott Davis.[...]Most of this miscalculation can be after a period of intense loneliness the pimp. However, a[...]lieved only by shared sympathy at the adaptation of Dekker's book on the Dutch suspect it is in[...]hostel, Shirin begins a search for her of Mahmud, why did she not show it to her East Indi[...]the forces it very close, an absence of critical Unfortunately, the film tr[...]This loading of the dice is most evident stern, bureaucratic overlords, only too However, this possible lack of in Sanders' manipulation of Shirin's Clearly, Sanders is concern[...]lone woman in a foreign country is at the of the East India Company. And into this the film's moments of sexual imagery. The descent into prostitution. Hearing of situation comes Havelaar, an impulsive scene of intercourse between Normande but gentle man who[...]reshingly all. His efforts, naturally, fall foul of the natural and extremely erotic -- con Regent[...]ise, are Sens. shown to foster the injustices of Dutch rule to suit their own, corrupt ends. In t[...]semblance to British India where dimension of craziness which helps in considerable injustice was meted, out by part to offset the sketchiness of Indians, safe in their lower position. N[...]sculptor Also interesting is the examination of moulding a caste of the naked Normande; the motivations of the Dutch, both in East as is Renee Girard as[...]rying out God's will. This latter proof of the inadvisability of marginal film insensitivity -- though at times u[...]films, Partners is an uninvolving piece of commonly held. Thus, the film's last l[...]ce, all the tries to invest some strains of sig more given the church's deliberate nificance (the diary extracts which promotion of colonial rule as a Christian parallel Americ[...]delightful glance at the inhabitants of Rue attempt at combining epic cinema with[...]insight. oldest part of Paris. It is full of rundown,[...]ked shops, each with its peculiar The success of Pierre Rissient's One style: the millinery[...]only sortie captures, and delineates, that sense of being to the butchers each evening. The d[...]eeling fumes, but whose greatest skill must be of refuge and loneliness one experiences his a[...]hotels; the lounge and bar engorging mass of cardboard boxes and areas where people attempt b[...]s-- but even this is doom ed by the impermanence of one's stay. Varda is clearly fond of her subjects,[...]as in the sequence barrenness with brief flashes of genuine, where each shopkeeper tells of meeting communication: the encounters between his wife. Rather than being dismissive of Paul (Richard Jordan) and the lift operat- t[...]Wood), though at times these alternating moments of illumination somewhat slight, is a comedy of manners is an occasional stiltedness of dialogue. about a city family who takes on t[...]m abounds with cinematic and realities of country life during a vacation. literary references and these provide a Some of Menzel's observation is sharp -- level of conversation once removed from particularl[...]ghts his long-stemmed pipe whenever expectations of the story. visitors approach[...]is most apparent in the easy manipulation of his city tenants. scenes between Paul and the Co[...]Gilles Carle's intriguing but St. Onge (The Head of Normandie SL (Shirin's Wedding) begin[...]Once in Germany, Shirin is bundled Part of the problem is that Carole into a migran[...]forces of oppression: class con syncrasies too pers[...] |
 | [...]MELBOURNE/SYDNEY FESTIVALS Inside the cottage, with its carnivo[...]tation on the F. Scott Fitzgerald story. mercy of any depraved and base men It is in the realm of the private that one and the physical details of the Japan it her social position, and then ag[...]the can confront the forces of repression, depicts are conve[...]assert her possession of Kichizo, on[...]Bernice Bobs her Hair -- unquestionably the best of the be subverted. The boundaries of such recreate an historically accurate look, as her contested security. The motif of shorts -- is stunning. Based on a slight[...]mbitions are simply the knife, and Sada's use of it, thus but charming short story of F. Scott[...]militia, supported by a line of flag- her social identity. and excellent[...]inema. the course of history, though the Th[...]rld is briefly evoked by the social identity of adulterer, an particular dimension of its quest can the class stru[...]identity which is condoned only as long Of the others, Fassbinder's Chine-[...]e) is a Sens ( In the Realm of the Senses/Empire questioned by[...]t she is as it remains a secret. The question of very minor work. The camerawork is of the Senses) sets in sharp tension this[...]Matsuda) and pleasure of their men, and by the the elderly prin[...]Pacific) has a certain charm in its depic tion of the downstairs world in a large[...]and the austere nature of the dwellings, built on when he says of their relationship, " If hotel. Gori, Gori, Moja[...]myself." Ever Bright, My Star), a labored piece of and their suggestion of enclosure regressive Soviet propoganda, was en[...]to continue their affair inevitably performances of Oleg Tabokov and ha[...]mmel's Adolf in the context of director Nagisa less rad[...]Kichizo's shame, and und Marlene, a silly parody of Adolf Oshim a's other a[...]A ccepting the v a lid ity of her[...](The Ceremony) and SnThe Realm of The exclusively on the two lovers and their cerning Kichizo's consciousness of his[...]stantly preoccupied with the question of is a mistake, I think, to see them singly word of the telephone call from his wife[...]omantic rebels,- then, in his only outburst of violence, " it is the spirit of the Japanese, rather treading a di[...]the real subject of O shim a's Certainl[...]for pleasure, This, combined with the threat of the[...]The period of In The Realm Of The him, again carrying weight of estab[...]-- Kichizo chooses the manner of his[...]lished social meaning because of her[...]death, in search of a final pleasure, use of it, serves to remind Kichizo of his[...]10). conventional nobility of the hara-kiri or vention, rather than in any p[...]wever, Oshima's insight demands a mation of his pleasure it is nonetheless[...]e ca u tio u s response, his expected of him, is lent an extra[...]imposed isolation from it, a part of the tion of such individuality. Against a[...]world in which they exist -- their motiva of the images (especially of those which[...]sting an present, portrait-like the scenes of[...](again, often of copulation scenes, and[...]equality of their sexual relationship, also of the buildings through diagonal[...]of Oshima's observations), but must The absence of a resolution to that[...]very existence almost symmetrical overhead shot of[...]of those taboos. The past constantly the prone figures of Sada and Kichizo,[...]aspect of her drive to possess Kichizo[...]and his sex, is born of her place in a[...]significant that she makes use of a knife[...] |
 | [...]ent production do the two of you work together? Yes, within limits. I think of directed by W illiam Richert and also starr[...]the interview. It was H uston's last week of shooting, and book, so when[...]ago you shot "Asphalt Jungle" and "The Red Badge of Well, I learned a good deal a[...] |
 | [...]r and the atmosphere. When you pan the actions of people what their camera you are making the space[...]t implies I know a Bergman script was suspense of some kind, or that published, and he does go i[...]ugh the you. Every time the camera moves minds of people. But I've never had there should be a real[...]puts one hand to his ear like a THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE person who has trou[...] |
 | [...]out of it!" I was sure this was[...]actually one part of Bogart, and it[...]It was a bit of a travesty -- we[...]were making fun of ourselves.[...]great an emotion, but a kind of[...]overall sense of the fitness of what's[...]THE INFLUENCE OF FILM On the set of The Misfits. Clockwise from Marilyn Monroe are Cl[...]) influence? On the set of The Mackintosh Man -- Huston with Paul Huston's[...]battler (right). In a superficial sense, of course. Newman.[...], Look at the enormous success of[...]manifestation of a change that has[...]the attitudes of the very people that[...] |
 | [...]ding and Canadian universities. Chapters of forth A remarkable feature of Films in Review is its with a Close-up of a Human Navel" gave an coming books are[...]s in its pages. long biographical career studies of Hollywood missiveness. stars, especially[...]is (Penguin, 1974), for example, had drafts of columns" (Peter Cowie) but the biographical[...]addition to film literature. several of its chapters in Cinema Journal and information i[...]ilm where. The journal also prints short reviews of Film Facts covers all feature films rele[...]nals provide full notable for a high standard of critical appraisal.[...]st appeared on newsstands in brief synopsis of the plot and a critical Film Comment[...]has emerged as one of the leading American film became compulsory read[...]' not magazines. Published by The Film Society of with the production side of the American film from its own team of writers but from 17 daily Lincoln Center, Ne[...]d weekly reviews that have appeared in U.S. of graphic design in the arrangement and that he an[...]popular journals. Thus one finds presentation of visual material. Its contributors writing sessio[...]eviews which have appeared in include some of the world's leading film critics: Hollywood Repo[...]been preceded by an additional The scope of the reviews and articles is inter anchor among sleepers and flops"), Variety's summary of nationwide opinion, followed by a national[...]nsensus" (eg. "five favorable, six with some of the younger, more radical are useful indicators of the tastes of the time. The mixed, five negative"). Film Facts[...]useful AFI in Melbourne is to acquire a full run of while published by the American Film Institute, cumulative contents list of back issues (Jan/Feb Variety on 16mm microfilm f[...]Division of the University of Southern Film Culture, begun by Jonas Mekas, i[...]re several years When the Beverly Hills firm of Spectator mid-1950s, is essential reading for the student of in arrears.[...]periment in graphic design than a the form ation of the New Y ork-based During the[...]ge in forum for argument and discussion. Many of the Filmmakers Co-operative in 1962 and is a new film periodicals in the U.S. One of the first covers and the photographs were overt[...]ing underground filmmaker (Grand Street of the new breed of scholarly publications was their exploitation of the female face and figure, 1953; The Secret Passions of Salvador Dali Cinema Journal which was launched with a but gradually the staff of Cinema -- "photo 1961, etc.). The early issues of Film Culture are double-number in Winter 1961[...]a and Arnheim. By the '60s this scholarly of current American film journals. Its con[...]r professional Gerald Peary's captivating study of Dorothy such as his typographically unreadable "Script critics; they are selected from university Arzner (The Bride Wore Red) in issue 34,[...]VERLY HILLS) The Division of Cinema, Jump Cut Associates,[...]University of Southern California, Box 865 Berkeley, CA 94701. Directors' Guild of America, Spectator International Inc.,[...]CINEMA JOURNAL University of Dayton, Salisbury State Co[...]Angeles, CA 90028. TV-Film, Temple University, Retrospective Ind., Film Lit.[...]I University of California Press, Unicorn Publi[...]Film Society of Lincoln Center, Quarterly, $6 p.a.[...]National Board of Review of Motion Variety Inc.,[...]American Federation of Film Societies, Monthly (Oct-May), bi-mont[...]Indexed: Int. Ind. Film Per. 333 Avenue of the Americas, (June/July; Aug/S[...]M CULTURE JOURNAL OF POPULAR FILM Old Hope Scho[...]Profit Corporation, Center for the Study of Popular Culture, Quarterly, $4 p.a. Quarter[...]New York, Bowling Green State University, Circulation: 3,000. Circulation:[...]NY 10001. 101 University Hall, Bowling Green, Indexed: In[...] |
 | [...]comedy version of Hound of the Sam Fuller's project The Big Red One[...]short story by Robert Graves about a member of the platoon. Peter[...]manipulation of a young girl competing in Universal. The film st[...]arrie Snodgrass. film of the Harold Robbins novel The Method, for[...]both deal with aspects of Buddhism: The New York and Los Angeles (for Warn[...]stars Alain Cuny, Nelson Villagra, relation of power and Buddhism. Comes A Horseman from a scri[...]urado, and Dennis Clark. The film centres on one of[...]da rand James Caan. Voyage of G. Mastornofor Penthouse, in Critic Jean-Louis Comolli is making a Han-hsiang (of The Last Tempest) will be[...]mmune in 1871 able to make his version of the classic John Milius and Paul Schrader are[...]Commune. More novel Dream of the Red Chamber for directing from their own scr[...]he of multiple murder who died in a lunatic Simon,[...]mily. Joseph Losey's film since The Empire of the Senses. and Lightfoot, has shot The Deer Hun[...]new film, Roads of the South (from a Claude Chabrol is di[...]Relatives from the Ed MacBain novel, as one of EMI's slightly controversial U.S. Comencini'[...]number of key Italian westerns and who Lido; Still B[...]n and Dyan Cannon. The film Sandokan -- the Tiger of Malatta, which BFtSTAIN is being m[...]Artists), Mel Brooks' High Anxiety Milan, one of a string of films he has Powell, Jane Seymour and Simo[...]and the Peter Sellers' Prisoner of Zenda as the chocolate manufacturer. F.I.[...]Law. making Howard Hawks' 1946 version of Joe Esztehas and Stallone. St[...]some police commissioner in the last years of quarters as a feminist director in the[...]ary on the roller derby is little with a cast of non-professionals. It is about the life of peasants at the end of seen, is shooting For More Than Money, the last[...]about the lives Carver's The Moon Beam Rider for of a group of young nuns, and has Universal, with David Carrad[...]ng a feminist feature film, I Belong in a number of Z-budgeted features, is to Me (Donna in Gu[...] |
 | [...]binder Please send me CH copies of Volume 3 (numbers[...]lavishly illustrated pages of |
 | [...]2 Copy(ies) of Number 1at $3.50* 13 Copy(ies) of Number 2at$3.00* D Copy(ies) of Number 3 at $2.75* Copy(ies) of Number 5 at $2.75* Copy(ies) of Number 9 at $2.50* Copy(ies)of Number 10 at $2.50* Copy(ies) of Number 11 at $2.50* Copy(ies)of Number 12 at $2.50* Copy(ies) of Number 13 at $2.50* Copy(ies) of Number 14 at $2.50 *[...] |
 | [...]Wave" is the latest film by Peter Weir, director of "Homesdale", "The Cars That Ate Paris" and "Picnic at Hanging Rock". Returning to the pre occupations of Weir's earlier films, "The Last Wave" is a psychic thriller about a lawyer's premonitions of the future. The cast includes Richard Cha[...]ichard Chamberlain) watches in horror as the roof of his house collapses Cinema Papers, Octobe[...] |
 | [...]eir. It follows basis of that committed $50,000 on in 1974. It was in qu[...]of United Artists and mentioned the mystery.[...]regard because of the McElroys9 breakthrough in pre Hal: No, it[...]We started features in Australia and the role of the independent[...] |
 | [...]c Leon Saunders (Sydney) note as collateral. Prod[...]fortunes out of Picnic, and they are Hal: No, that was Jeanin[...]s fallen about 30 per cent, while because one of them might be the doesn't get it until the credi[...]e up. The exhibitor's return paying becomes part of the terms, United Artists have offe[...]nce film hire and we, as producers, of David Burton and not an Aust The second thing[...]production costs in Australia. And choice of Chamberlain was valid. negotiated with UAhad a t[...]because, as we the UA deal wasn't a matter of Burton is a happily married solicitor payment: one on a signature of all know, box-office grosses aren't selling our soul, giving up to the living in Sydney who has, by contract; the other on completion of very good at the moment. Ameri[...]n our UA has allowed for an exchange of like an American in Paris. AFC guaranteed[...]in all areas, including the bank on the strength of our contract grabbed the money and run -- it[...]. we have done is cut down the risk of three of them were American, the[...] |
 | [...]problems. After all, it is time we of any Australian actor who would have been as good[...]tant. substantial sums of money to[...]David Burton is very much the Both of you are actively involved organizati on will[...]yet he is subjected to terrifying of independent producers. How industry by be[...]The first aim, as I see it, is to all of a sudden the AFC has an would be just a looney o[...]e Film and communication, and that is one of permanent staff who will be able to helps greatly. Of course, the Television Producers' of Australia the things most lacking in our[...]nd great in the film. division of it. Therefore, in future[...]gets co-billing Producers, a division of the insane. So it is really great to be[...]nment to ensure with Richard. She will get a lot of F and T P A".[...]We have been meeting on a fairly some of their films and I am equally going to do very we[...]we can all sit down over a cup of the AFC that independent[...]increased, and instead of some Jim: Equity, by embracing this[...] |
 | [...]HE LAST WAVE T h e Last Wave, by the nature of its theme, 1. Monty Fieguth attends to a[...]out the crucial areas relies heavily on the use of special effects. For ground swimming[...]in on him. Sydney. because the fog nozzle we used[...]-- am ma a a asimaaam-- -- a-- years, visions of a city underwater, black rain,[...]effect of gusts. Then, if needed, we would put[...]situation where if you produce six metres of following is their version of how they did it. *[...]So in some situations we devised a system of m am m sm a[...]ground take care of itself. RAM[...]perfected and a burst of wind would appear and adequate method of producing it was found.[...]happen often. We fire departments and to a lot of pump[...]in that it didn't rain once. So companies. Out of these discussions came the none of the rain you see in The Last Wave is decision t[...]From cameraman Russell Boyd's point of[...]position of our monitors. It wasn't really a monitors which[...]to within a few air, we could control the angle of fall to almost inches of the lens. Coupled with a drip runner vertical ([...]terview recorded with Fieguth and Hilditch in Sydney by Scott Murray.[...] |
 | [...]photo 9 for the making of the hailstorm.) 4. Rail freight[...]ng about. support. There must have been hundreds of metres of hose and the streets looked as if they[...]STREET We thought of back projection, but felt it were covered in spa[...]enough swimming pool was found two single spots of light as the car appeared at the end of the street. The rest was just blotted[...]d this was then film, not all the rain was to be of the everyday[...]of a bus (photo 7). a spiral spurting up hundreds of metres. As the interior of the car is supposed to be The biggest single[...]distance of less than a metre to the perspex As these[...] |
 | [...]PURES.. . . O U T OF I T . . . All made with assistance from the funds operated by the CREATIVE DEVELOPMENT BRANCH of the Australian Film Commission . . . A ll reachin[...]r assistance from the Creative Development Branch of the Australian Film Commission: Applica[...]e information is provided for a proper evaluation of their project. To arrange an appointment cont[...]Thoms (Experimental Film and Television Fund) at Sydney (02) 922 6855. M elbourne applicants for all fund[...]Sydney, NSW 2001 FILM P R O D U C T IO N FU N D p[...]akers, whether employed in govem- rate of payment. assistance for small-budget projec[...]to experienced and promising with lots of promise but limited experience. The Project[...]is fund is open to all over a specific period of time at an approved experimental work.[...] |
 | [...]............................PhilNoyce THE BATTLE OF BROKEN HILL[...]and both play their game of pretend until[...]Synopsis: The epic story of the Anzac[...].......................... 120 min THE LAST RUN OF THE KAMERUKA[...]TIM The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith[...]Synopsis: The story of a young half-blood Kenne[...]Synopsis: Newsfront is the story of two Progress............................... Pre-[...]golden era of the Australian newsreel Synopsis: The adventures of a 15-year-old place between the hours of 4.30pm and boy In the tuna fishing town of Port Lincoln. midnight one Friday night. Most of the actionCROCODILE is on board a Sydney Harbour ferry and Prod Company........ Pisces Productions P/L aborigine, who is made conscious of his between 1948-1956. It is a unique feature fil[...]involves eight people who, because of their Director...................................[...]played out against the backdrop of the real Prod Company........... Jenbur Films pr[...]Trial, the Maitland Floods, the birth of rock-[...]............................. Feature no fault of his own and explodes in a fateful[...]" declaration of war" -- the white man's way, the Ye[...]as he has learnt, of acquiring a licence for Elizabeth[...]........ .Matt Carroll THE CHANT OF JIMMIE Photography..................... Alan Gri[...].KenHannam WEEKEND OF SHADOWS Art Directors...........................[...]illiken Casting................. Mitch Matthews (Sydney), Length.........................................[...]airns), Helen Synopsis: Adventure story about the Sydney Asst Prod Designer...............................[...]hospital, a relationship, a sense of the usual[...]..................... David Hipkins stage play of the same title by Sumner[...]n Mulligan 1942, it concerns a group of men in an Laundry M[...]............................... GeoffFreesmtoarny of Australian swimming champion[...] |
 | [...]ard Joy Verity, Wilson Irving, Frank Geary, Betty of Production..................................... P[...]eup......................... Debbie Maxwell (LA). of people during a time of change and the for a murder suspect by a group of men in a Prod Company... .......................[...]Nan Dunne(Melb) effect of that change on the lives of one[...]reston family in particular. It is also the story of one " Rabbit", an awkward introverted man who Di[...]d loved . . .the central theme: the readiness of any Music.......................................................... RoyRitchDieirector of Therese O'Leary[...]........PhilSterling Synopsis: The deflowering of a myth -- a Color Process........................[...]........................... Robbie Young history of Australian sport interwoven in a Progress........[...]............................. Tony Hunt build up of the myth -- and a look at the Carman, Janis Hayes[...]r........................ Michael Lake a question of survival more than choice.[...]...... Brian Probyn IN SEARCH OF ANNA Editor.....................................[...]Synopsis: In many m arriages a state of truce Producer............[...]the m arriage of Elizabeth and Robert. Boom Operator.............[...]Elizabeth's realization of unfulfilm ent In her[...]ines penetrating the contradictions of personal Prod Ma[...] |
 | [...]n Robertson, Synopsis: Yvonne Arthur is a mixture of[...]and humour, spontaneity and spunk For details of the following 35mm films in[...]ment reunion with an old schoolmate, The Getting of Wisdom[...]Moya Iceton where Yvonne grabs at the opportunity of a High Rolling[...]ing Consultant..................Liz Mullinar life of leisure. Journey Among Women[...].a..n...J..a..mieNsooenlMcDonTaHldE IMPORTANCE OF KEEPING The Green Machine[...].......................... Mark Ruse For details of the following 35mm films consult the previous[...]The Importance of Keeping Perfectly Still[...]introduces many of the unique people they Progress...........[...] |
 | [...]LindaDrakeSynopsis: A study of refracted and reflected Runner. ................[...]..... CarolBelrirgyht above and below the surface of the sea Book-keeper..............................[...]ppleton dimensional character like a natural form of Location Catering............... Movie Munchies[...]...........AdrienFortSisynopsis: A "serio-comedy" of a motivation Standby Props.......................[...]l Photography.......................... Jean More of a persistent nightmare. Electrician...........[...]... WendyAdnsatamr, she becomes involved in games of Budget...........................................[...]man Neg. supported by past and present natives of Special Effects................ Lachlan Wilson[...]...Peter Lipscombe Synopsis: The extermination of the Tas Gaffer...................................[...]reality clashes with idealism. recent times of a genocide so sw ift and Asst Art Director.......[...]........................ Roger Bayley THE LEGEND OF YOWIE[...].................PeterOakSmyannopsis: An allegory of death in the form of[...]Synopsis: Story of today's people enjoying Length...................[...]the history and things of yesterday. Progress...[...]..................Peter Maxwell Synopsis: A group of young people have just Progress..................[...]obinson, Synopsis: A story of the evolution and[...]Mercer, Steve Feher, breeding of the Murray Grey Beef Cattle. Trever Spicer.[...]. PerrySandwoiwfe, which dramatizes the situation of a wife[...].......................... Dan Jenks WAYS OF SEEING[...] |
 | [...]e.......................September 1977 Producers of television series and films are Script...........[...]promoterequested to forward complete details of Producer..................................... Jac[...]Synopsis: The lives and loves of the young Dist C om pany....[...]Technical Facilities................. T.P.F. Sydney staff In a big city hospital[...]Synopsis: A compilation of five films to re Producer.......................[...]............................ JohnMcdPrheaaiml ing of making the big time, but Prod Company............[...].................Denise Hunter close look at some of Australia's sporting Grip.......................[...]......................... John Oakley development of community libraries, where[...] |
 | [...]other things merely parts of her life. appeal of the film? for over ten years[...]manager on most of the Hexagon features, and is a freelance story of a 16-year-old undeveloped It is no secret that we are making director of commercials. His documentary, "I f s Time . . .[...]the icing on the cake. In the case of slightly broader appeal, having got[...]tasm could be wrong. of children's films. I have fairly Comes Again[...]recorded while Dimsey was supervising the editing of was A Minute Before Mornin[...]minutes of cut film a day and that is[...]of production value we were trying looking at?[...]therefore, become a matter of accompanying adult level, so that[...]Acting is something that has grandmother end of the scale.[...]this is a result of tough schedules? and "Ride A Wild Pony" were not[...]nk it has a considerable effect has this history of failed children's[...]and it operates in a couple of ways. films influenced you?[...]trustworthy in terms of technicals[...]n more leisurely lack an intrinsic honesty. Part of[...]lot of insert cutting, which means kid to the court cas[...]a dolly movement. Perhaps it is Lady" has a lot of ingredients: the[...]the influence of television series. horse that no one but the gir[...]ress, a hard worker and very by making the story of Jenny the core of the film and by making the164 -- Cinem[...] |
 | [...]lden. 3rd After working with Mark on Blue ahead of me. You must remember top: Ross Dimse[...]on record. The big problem with the character of Jenny was to make it[...]consciousness of his image have appeared a petulant, horse-[...]film? important to give her some sort of roundness, or charm.[...]in the early days of rehearsal but winning over adults, but I think[...]et that he hasn't really acted showing a glimpse of themselves.[...]fore because he is the first to And I think part of the success of[...]make commercials between Kids can see a part of themselves,[...]I don't believe it is a problem if So, one of the things I had to try and[...]If you get totally absorbed into the scrub a bit of the gloss off her and[...]of your time selling yourself,[...]good and very little of your time very useful in doing this. There is a[...]feature film. I have had to do a lot of equally nervous, but in charge of[...]advantages, though. Because of the Cathryn H arrison is a[...]influence of television, kids have sophisticated young actres[...]to retain this aspect of my person, but just because an actress[...]same time ridding myself of an it doesn't necessarily mean that[...]Vince's feature experience helped part of their ammunition. I believe[...]is, particularly early on. that it is still part of Cathryn's[...]Instead of going for a cut-around ammunition and she uses i[...]piece of action by theatrically quite capable of convincing age[...]o it, rather than changes. In fact, during a lot of the[...]n't often get the opportunity to pull her up out of it a bit because[...]of two to two-and-a-half minutes[...]lm with racehorses, all I can say is: the making of the film. I feel they[...]I believe they lack a certain vitality in terms of coloration and style.[...] |
 | [...]BLUE FIRE LADY The changing face of Cathryn Harrison. Top That doesn't mean they[...]I think, an awful lot of strain up on analysis isn't necessary, unless[...]ituation by situation. Director of Photography . Vince Monton[...]pace. It was a very orchestral sort of This also seems to necessitate a Clapp[...]thing where you had to slow down period of time before doing a take Sound R ecordist.[...]something that was clear-cut tight schedule of an Australian Best Boy.................[...]One of the basic, concepts of feels in this film are fairly simple;[...]ng about with difficult was the Witches of Pendle, Stills Photography............. Davi[...]^motions. A lot of it is very funny, a television play I did for[...]on't know whether they ought to situation of which I had no under Unit V e t..........[...]ing or not. So there is a sort standing -- that of being an Editor.....................[...]rson of giggle, then an apology. adolescent[...]nse to the There were very few parts of me e[...]middle-class English girl of the Barry................... ...........[...]tries not to get stuck on one thing. number of interpretations of how G us..................... ..........[...]ver a wide range, doing the different ways of looking at a given Receptionist........ ....[...]type of character all my life. I think Ross[...]I must say, however, that when I side of my personality which is Girl No. 2 ....[...]it more easily than adults. . . lot of your time travelling around[...]full of symbols that don't tie certain way of dealing with people.[...]The symbolism of the film is What happens to her in th[...]justification for all of it. But then I[...] |
 | [...]ce Monton has introduction of Kodak stock which be shot on 16mm American East-[...]e. was up to the standard of the fixed the clarity the film needed.[...]lue Fire Lady". 35mm, but it isn't much in terms of[...]How would you compare the the percentage of the budget. And Director of Photography, Vince Monton, with Cathryn Harrison. effect of using a light fog on 35 mm considering the budget of the film[...]le flesh tones better justify the possible risks of out-of They are only very subtle under[...]differences and it isn't a question of when shooting very late in the day importa[...]to poor blow It really depends on what sort of be[...]is that it doesn't appear blown up, sharpness is of great im We didn't actually do any blow[...]ors tend ups, we made the decision purely on of winter, so there are a lot of stock. When we originally got t[...]ss and it is, therefore, im basically a question of sharpness on making a film about horses on[...]They had been portant to introduce some form of a very large screen. Now sometimes farms, so there are a lot of greens. printed on the lights recommended[...]overcast stock a quarter to a third of a stop example, if I was going to use a No.[...]where greens usually more exposure. Part of this could be 1 fog on 35mm I might use a No.[...]based on American chemicals. It's of preference and I don't really bust Yes. We tr[...]not a problem of course; it's just my guts to get the crisp,[...]something to be aware of. images that are so easy to do the[...]at motivated you to magenta. But a lot of it would have No, I hardly ever use a naked[...]act that we are using lens. I suppose it is one of those opposed to American? th[...]There are a lot of exteriors in the could get. However, the final[...]because there is very little you can 30,000 m of film stock of the one[...]You are at the mercy of the[...]We are also trying to achieve a like the look of it. It wasn't a[...]movements of the camera are also shoot my next film on[...] |
 | [...]e first Fox Perhaps the most obvious example of ignoring John O'Hara[...]li agent that in 1968 he had Television coverage of the uranium issue has accepted means by which hig[...]n be directed the disappearance of 200 tonnes of[...]There has been no further mention of that[...]Government about the adequacy of control coverage of any issue. But television has also What concerns[...]he been used to mount an expensive and sustained of the uranium issue, but the ways in which[...]ialadvertising program, disguised as a series of information has been disseminated, particularly[...]o see the issues in a particular light. And side of the case about uranium.[...]t, granted the biased and the constraints of the news gathering process[...]e uranium mined. Producers' Forum, in a series of questions and In general, the press coverage has[...]side of the fence. For instance, accidents at answers wi[...]entirely unreported. One of them occurred in persuade the public that the subject of uranium is of political and economic priorities; and corre[...]e Browns Ferry simple, clean, and basically none of their spondingly, information has been channelled[...]se the flame to flicker. The with the assurances of a procession of experts, and businessmen have been the sources of many sealant caught fire and the[...]years in the stories about uranium, and the style of the stories different safety systems we[...]eir viewers that has been determined by the style of the sources. brought under control,[...]own. The total cost to the Tennessee the process of mining uranium is routine and Information has als[...]nstrations against nuclear energy have been sale of uranium, and that atomic fission is simple which has had by far the best coverage of the unreported. And there has been[...]all, except in The F inancial R e v ie w , of overseas and easily understood. uranium issue, has a circulation of only about inquiries into uranium processing[...]ranium, the media for television alone in excess of $500,000, and relatively little about the issue,[...]their case. Take the sustained from the release of the second Fox combined circulation is well over[...]media reaction to the release of the first Fox[...]report. This was received as an endorsement of report to the present. Curiously, the news {H er[...]a ld read: "The Way Open to reporting techniques of press and television have Where these papers have[...]ut?" The press hardly often mirrored the effects of the advertising they have tended to treat it in w[...]mentioned subsequently that the members of the[...]ful," said the report, "whether, as the a series of half-truths; statements that may be protesters. number of facilities increases, it will be possible[...]ery true in themselves, but which tell only part of the Or, more im portantly, the kinds of installation safe against[...]numbers of well-armed, trained men." Or on story, and by ig[...]nuclear overall picture. This has been the style of uranium issue are mercilessly (and no doubt[...]by the miners, unconsciously) parodied in a kind of rapid-fire real and will tend to[...]spread of nuclear technology." the Government and the medi[...]ons an advertisement by the Uranium Producers' of mushroom clouds, of genetic accidents Forum, in The A ustralian on[...]can be done with high-level waste even plants or of people fried to a crisp by some from the reprocessing of nuclear fuel? thing they don't even understand." Fuse it in a special form of glass, encase it in If these lurid fantasies are[...]constructed in France, and other contains a total of 127 press stories, from the countries are well advanced in similar beginning of January to the time of the release of techniques. Scientists believe that safe and t[...]This total covers the five permanent disposal of nuclear waste is daily newspapers available in Me[...]period, when the public was debating The form of this sharing-out of information is the issue, 57 of these stories appeared in The rather like a co[...]the uranium clustered into five groups: the visit of a disposal of atomic waste. And what they believe Japanese trad[...]lia; overseas is also ambiguous, that disposal of nuclear waste trips by Australian government lead[...]in ALP policy on uranium; the release of a book There is no time suggested for the achievement called Uranium on Trial (described in The A ge of this disposal of waste, although it is implied as "a book of timeliness and significance"); and that once t[...]Granted these focal points, the process of Against this misleading kind of assurance gathering and selecting news appears se[...]ts, and official news sources; and pre Institute of Technology and was a media commentator for[...]occupied with the novelty value of today's story, the ABC. irrespective of whatever has gone before. |
 | [...]ELEVISION Tyler Moore Show is the quintessence of every Publicity shot of the cast of Welcome Back Kotter.[...]series impinge on our experiences of the world at W om en 's W eekly picks up Sue-Anne's idea of an he remarked, that would combine the worst of[...]One thinks, for instance, of Sergeant Fish (Abe Preston performs in a televis[...]fictional creation, of course, and provides the fatal and incurable Fel[...]voice of cynicism which so many of the series Big `F').[...]contain. Yet, he is uncomfortably like a lot of An episode of The Tony Randall Show[...]ut convinced beyond recall that he is films, one of which rejoiced in the title Crazed[...]at the end of the line. Plagued with piles and Housewives on t[...]joints, he has been sunk by the ultimate titles of a number of The Odd Couple series called this media awarenes[...]futility of his job and the dreariness of his Flight of the Felix; They Serve Horse Radish,[...]marriage. When he accuses Wojo (Max Gail) of Don't They?;Bunny's Missing And She's Down[...]nd up alone . . . ", it is more than a a complex of familiarities, some intrinsic to the[...]figure speaking in a fictional context. formulae of the series, some extrinsic to them and part of a wider circle of common experience.[...]ies, the people who episode), they do so because of a sharpness of[...]twin blights of failure and loneliness. bonds of companionship which appear to me to be the most singular characteristic of the[...]though the moments of individual bleakness are The insights may be v[...]d by the communality within the stories rattle of a failed dinner party in Friends and[...]ned by his colleagues and start to swap accounts of the petrol mileages they[...]rendition of "The Darktown Strutters' Ball"), we Barney Mille[...]have had moments of dark reminder.[...] |
 | [...]Susan Dermody I suspect that every piece of critical The escape from the penal settleme[...]or more apparently " m iraculous" powers of community outside the terms of the society it relationship to the original film. Piaget has possible parts of the story, but they do not regeneration. For[...]th is "re-humanized" pointed out the common root of the words need to be `fitted' into anythi[...]male domains, by that peculiar life force of women, or by equation. you discover/invent[...]you like what the fdm is "trying to symbolism of the film, and the way shots of danger of mixing myth with `plot', open- And as[...]fferently handled to shots ended structures of meaning with closed "middle section" I[...]to be even further removed from the of men. The men (all soldiers in a glaring nar[...]are quite a few women move completely out of historical original.[...]n bush) points in the film where it falls short of what tim e, just as by journeying to the[...]belong to the world of the story, in long shot; I read as its mythopoei[...]d uncharted wilderness, they moved out of My rationalization for this process in the the women belong to the world of the poem, collapses into untidiness. This seems historical place. The exposition of images, case of Journey Among Women is that I in many kinds of--descriptive camera particularly true of the first and last sections that is the centre-piece of the film and of its consider the film an "essay" , in the literal movements and every kind of shot, including of the film, before the escape, and after the meaning, detaches itself from the period sense of the word. It is an attempt (and, very clos[...]to recapture them, when the mythic setting of the plot as the women lose the last therefore, incomplete, not exhaustive of the and the realistic planes of the story seem out shreds of their period clothes. possibilities)to do someth[...]When the women begin to survive in the of control and in mutual contradiction. "essays" a[...]rather than bush, to form their community of women, However, it must be admitted that all of epistemology). It attempts to be heroic, there is a long passage of shots that are The period setting of the film seems to them, whether they repre[...]sly utopian, in edited, not for the illusion of action in work well, as a distancing device. Instead of bourgeoisie or female felons, from the its exploration of a society of women in continuous time and locatable sp[...]ure. It hints at archetypes that the exposition of ideas through juxtaposed to live vicariousl[...]Journey liberated women who, from the vantage of a go back to the heroic militancy of the images.[...]ion, have opted Amazons, the dionysiac `madness' of the[...]scrutiny -- and finds it a for the look of a declasse state. Even if Bacchae.[...]s simultaneously hold in his mind a picture of the cliches, of women's liberation in the way It is also firmly in the tradition of seeing with each other; they learn to hunt and[...]and music; they his (contemptible) lusts, and of women like seen as further distancing the p[...]ess. But the habit Elizabeth as another class of objects and the trappings of plot, or as faking the primal natural forces of birth and death, of thinking in (quite beautiful) images, and alt[...]ency on gradually developing an aesthetic of women[...]creative and administrative realms creatures of nature, who have more of her world when she sees, for a moment, the one that failed. of men, on the other. hum[...]than exists between the intolerable nature of that contradiction,[...]y, perhaps, the noticeable The identification of women (and blacks) reversion to the story, the world of men. Meg, her former servant, to help her remove stiltedness of the dialogue, which was with natural forces give[...]wn oppression restricted mainly to the world of the plot, world of imagination, but severely handicaps Elizab[...]pe and oppresses other women. She is part of the filmmakers to frustrate the realism of the handicaps the potential of the film -- quite then went with them, goes unwillingly back very knot of the contradiction that she past, or it[...]film, fits in with its suppression of plot The film is also interesting for the way[...]om, patriarchal society to another class of her m otivation, period evocation, and tri[...]are her dresses, hanging strengthens the power of her own remains impossible to be[...]ntable plot, Journey attempts to on the back of a door. oppression. of these effects was intentional. be mythopoeic rat[...]rings me back to what I think is strange terrain of a world determined variable number of red-coated soldiers; but of convict women, and as it becomes a th[...]n's sentience, and perhaps the The handling of narrative structure is a critical problem in myt[...]Move too far away from the story, from a thread of events, and you lose the capacity to generate rich ambivalences of meaning. Move too close to classic film narrativ[...]men makes some interesting attempts to break out of the constraints of plot, of cause and effect, of a chronologically ordered and explainable world. The first two shots of the film initiate the viewer into an exposition through images, rather than through the logic of events in time and space. Shot one is a red-coat[...]green world. Shot two closely traces the descent of a feather through the air as it lightly touches the bare shoulder of a woman standing in a room. Neither[...] |
 | [...]to veer between plot and I like the idea of a mythopoeic treatment Susannah Fowle as Laura (right) in Bruce Beresford's film of Henry Handel Richardson's The Getting of myth, instead of steering a course that of women coming out from under an collides with nei[...]rue identity, by mingling the actual story of Journey Among Women to notice persecution only when it is of that the public is being prepared for the with the primal forces of the wilderness. frustrates what I see as[...]a good yarn rather The inhumanity of man to man shown by the By making the women j[...]ilized wilderness, the film opts for made of the film, might find that its larger in rounding up the Jews, is the guilt of every the hidden branch of the Klein family -- the being a lyrical celebration of women's ambitions frustrate the film's story. man, of every Mr Klein. Dutch Jews -- and the von Ostade painting apprehension of nature, instead of an[...]he becomes increasingly fascinated in. analysis of the sources of their oppression in JO U RN EY AM ONG WOMEN: D[...]ay cold-heartedly purchasing works of art from Mr Klein is a parable of involvement and[...]ay be argued that the film is, cast. Director of Photography Tom Cowan. Editor arrives[...]itable -- it is never therefore, celebrating one of the most John Scott. Music Roy Ritchie. Sound Recordist ("I think I am a victim of a practical joke"), something that can be disowned. Klein's fundamental of those sources, since the idea Jeff Doring. C[...]ice have all the subscriber journey in search of his double can therefore of the closeness of women to nature has been Martin Phelan, Rose[...]e police, and finds there is be seen, like that of Nicholas Urfe's in John one of the mainstays of patriarchal ideology, Campbell, Lisa Peers, J[...]laborately staged excluding women from the world of Production Company Ko-An. Distributor Greater another Mr Klein, but is not told of his truth game, each turn in the labyrin[...]covers by scratching in a growing awareness of everyman's film is myth-making in ways that may[...]The search begins and a trail of clues, beginning of the story. from a photo of a girl on a motorcycle to Who after al[...]Jews or the jealous Nicole? This central idea of the film also widens[...]is inevitable fate -- involvement. The trail of clues laid by Franco Solinas and the gap between[...]" I saw them leave. The morning of July 16,1942[...]dressed narrative directions it takes. The world of we had been awakened by the unusual noise of At first, believing a report tha[...]ich is left lying on .the the plot and the world of the women making buses being driven round the Paris avenues at a Jewish member of the Resistance, is dead, doormat. As the po[...]al exposition through there were children of our own age among them, but arrives t[...]ss card images cannot answer. The central `poem' of squashed tight and still, their faces pres[...]exquisitely photographed bush is not a of slumber. 1 thought their round, black eyes were[...]off to the Velodrome been thought of before the film begins. necessary and sufficient answer to the millions of stars in the night . . . '' d'Hiver where he ignores his chance of contradictions that drove them there. When[...]freedom (his lawyer is there with proof of Slowly one pieces together the puzzle;[...]Resistance group is ferrying wealthy Jews of patriarchy, they must journey to a[...]t down a dark tunnel to where trains out of Paris, using as a half-way house the radically n[...]u at Ivry-la-Bataille. The other Mr deeper layer of sentience underlying the old[...]Klein is a member of this group and it is one.[...]s likened by Florence to a less faded areas of wallpaper therefore The totally female utopia of the women in a political and moral parable of considerable vulture, fhe symbol of greed. But in a suggesting that paintings are being sold off to the bush lacks a critique of what it is richness. The recent excesses of the Losey tapestry Klein has earlier thought of buying, finance the operation. It is also pro[...]d with precise, there is an image of a vulture punctured the motorbike in the[...]his through the heart by the arrow of remorse. used by Florence's "husband". future. It cannot be more than a passing use of space (notably in Klein's stair-well) is[...]-- to his unimportant because the message of the film Is the successful military defeat of the[...]ce excludes the sustain two levels of interpretation simul the women's breakaway? It w[...]atic Florence (Jeanne possibility of compassion or pity. It is also an taneously that[...]ve Moreau) explains to Klein the uniqueness of[...]rewarding. terms, confusing the cause and effect of a man; for while there are various species of, indifference increasingly typical of man closed narrative with the cause and effect say, insects, there is only one species of man. today -- Mr Klein is certainly no[...]y and beautifully the film For many of the French in 1942 there[...]n-Pierre La Brande. Executive handles its images of women casting off the were two classes -- t[...]ucer Ralph Baum. Screenplay Franco Solinas. rags of their oppression, the total is a retreat Jews. R[...]his distinc death as a realization of his own involvement Director of Photography Gerry Fisher. Editor into lyricism a[...]the lesson of Mr Klein is that while we tend doub[...]interest in those with him, not even of the Delon, Juliet Berto, Jeanne Moreau, Su[...]The first clue of Klein's guilt by Films/Mondial Te-Fi.[...]At First, he is amused by the crudity of its[...] |
 | THE GETTING OF WISDOM[...]CRIA CUERVOS THE GETTING OF well as many m[...]wards a literary orientation, ap Like most of the Australian films of the mother's death), and she and her two sis[...]worst. And this is a pity because many of past few years, The Getting of Wisdom servant Rosa.[...]What music lovingly photographed interiors of muted At first the film may seem confusing, for the credits on Bruce Besford's film of The means to Laura is never integral to th[...]act/fiction dichotomy that is often bursts of harsh landscape, rolling coast-line, Geraldine[...]th Ana's mother respect for the informing spirit of the book. hinted at easily could have been.[...]claustrophobic aspects of the school's life. I events of her childhood. However, the adult but where it g[...]ry bridges -- most violence to Richardson's view of life; in something much less substantial than[...]d -- and relinquishing the essentially grim view of her might have had. Beresford and Witcombe[...]it's a mindless there is such a strong unity of place that the square-peg heroine and the kind of success have elected to present an awkward[...]a restless cameraman rather than to pleasure of just watching can accept the badly bruised in the process of getting make any useful narrative or them[...]F WISDOM: Directed by The `doubling' of Ana with her mother is The point is that the fil[...]controlling ironic concern for its heroine for of her; and, equally, there's not enough Screenplay Eleanor W itcombe, Director of Chaplin, but also through matching verbal a purely episodic treatment. It is easy to see evidence of her ultimate resilence for us to Photography D[...]cess with the Lite hypocrisy and cynicism of the school and its Desmond Bone, Gary Wilkins.[...]Susannah Fowle, die" in that terrible moment of crisis when winning the literature prize is no h[...]tory told by her settle for the showier business of turning her Possibly the role of Laura is like that of Monica Maughan. Production Company South[...] |
 | [...]But it only surprises because of its improb[...]ability. Surely the revelation of David and[...]suggest a deeper level of narrative. When[...]choice of living together, they are seeing[...]a degree of character analysis and by doing functions well, perhaps too well. None of the Saura has also spoken of his wish for a It is to be hoped that other films by Carlos so, tries to satisfy the rigors of genre and moral or ethical traumas that give[...]ween Australia: we have been ignorant of them for[...]Saura. D irector of Photography Teodoro David's suggest[...]milia. Editor Pablo G. del Amo. Sound of an obtrusive `foreigner'. But at the same insistence on Summerfield as a place of Cria Cuervos is such a film, and there are[...]". Magical domains, as Alain many such instances of wordless com Geraldine Chaplin, Monica Randall, Florinda avoid any suspicion of closeness between Fournier has shown in[...]lnes, munication. One can recall the fascination of Chico, Hector Alterio, German Cobbs, Mirta[...]directorial or authorial insistence. vision of herself at the top of the building -- Spain 1976. invasion of their domain. does her smile suggest complicity[...]in Cliff the contrast between the ordinariness of the what she encounters? Is it suicidal or is sh[...]finally on the exact nature of the film and at height of intellectualism is the weekly card are there.[...]biguity is in her smile island off the coast of Victoria, where Jenny concern should have[...]the landlady have intercourse, at the beginning of the film, when she Abbott (Elizabeth Al[...]suspense. Instead it looks as if and that of Jenny and David at the end. And watches Amelia r[...]these two worlds father's room: is her gaze one of accusation? Sally (Michelle Jarman). It is a p[...]fearing audience disapproval or disbelief, of satisfaction at a deed accomplished? or ret[...]Part of this is due to a solid performance way, watching mere mortals scurry after she island, once a topic of speculation, is now of Over-helpful hints abound -- the has d[...]not understanding, the privacy of its rich combinations of high and low carriers of Waters and Elizabeth Alexander (they[...]olmaster, Simon Robertson (Nick Tate), of one's bets minimizes the possible tension. ni[...]the only possible basis for than in Break of Day, and though kiss her dead father, and eyes A[...]ered position. If Ana has her processes of luck and persistence, he[...]finds the gates of Summerfield locked), her grandmother, whose closed world of This precipitates the film's tragic cli[...]complex and haunting film, and a close analysis of Saura's editing would be most rewarding. In his other films he is interested in the idea of the double, and in the self and its relat[...] |
 | [...]manages to keep the film pacey -- the climbing of the cliffs, for example, is a well- cut and effective piece of sub-textural tension. Hannam is also helped by a[...]partially successful thriller. There is evidence of much thought and care; if a little more intuitio[...]cer Pom Oliver. Screenplay Cliff Green. Director of Photography Mike Molloy. Editor Sarah Bennet. M[...]Taylor The assumption that an appreciation of Dr Spaander (Laurence Olivier) and Kate t[...]ke A Bridge Too Far is vital to an understanding of the Sgt. Eddie Dohun (James Caan) orders an[...]asted with the dem oralized, but plot is typical of the genre. Films such as[...]erman army commanders. Objective Burma and Cross of Iron open[...]rst this predilection arises from the part of an essentially British operation, are economical orientation in terms of place, competitive relationship between t[...](Wolfgang Preiss) is under no date and the state of the war up to this of field commanders.[...]ed appointed Commander-in-Chief of the The technique is believed to be important[...]peration at war you fools." the decline of the fictional war film, since the desire to[...]n Berets, most image at the expense of the dashing[...]e estranged briefing scene, the commander of position, Sosabowski instinctively recoils sense of doom. And while the airborne only really safe wa[...]grily predicts a based on a German defence of "panicky old[...]or refitting. It is these such a ubiquitous part of the war film that its difficult objective, the capture of the Rhine of "the biggest operation since D-Day". The[...]bridge at Arnhem -- the farthest of the four war, then, becomes merely a public eve[...]report German tanks near the planned drop of an aircraft dropping a stick of bombs, This view of warfare planned and co zones, Bro[...]pre-operation testing of the British field credit sequence goes on to exp[...]responsible shrugs off the fact for fear of Rhine bridges in Holland and thus allow an[...]The commander of the ground force, Lt.-[...]parachutists besieged, short of food and vital Unlike the traditional fictional[...]ad guys; Bridge Too Far is episodic, a patchwork of[...]he way to the scenes illustrating a large number of the[...]rescue". facets of the resulting battle.[...]portent of the massacre of his men becomes noting the decreasing distance.[...], for while A Bridge Too Far is an epic war film of rather average quality, it[...]This pervading sense of failure is, of nevertheless dem onstrates Richard[...]Attenborough is careful to remind us of the battlefield action. He is a talented observer of what J. Glenn Gray has described as war's "fearful beauty". The core of the film lies in the growing conviction t[...] |
 | [...]over-statement of "War the Destroyer." Basil Gilbert[...]ion a few years ago lie directly in these lesson of history, but in Olivier) travels through the w[...]a orgasm, man!"). Attenborough's excellent sense of the on the way to a ceasefire meetin[...]ly homeless that Robert Redford once said of Butch he timidly asks Arnold, "You ain't a queer, world of the battlefield. One of these and frightened.[...]cinema audience (largely aspects is the presence of danger.[...]pealed to me as a fairy-tale. It also composed of 10 and 11-year olds) roars with There is the sense of waste, too, when the fitted in with some of the things I had done laughter. Death comes quickly and randomly. last of the British paratroopers, the wounded in li[...]hart that he Similarly, the screenplay of High Rolling characterization of women, however, even to both the aimed and wild[...]hey are playing minor roles in an old- potential of a machine-gun is realized in outside the[...]bitions to join a commune advance with a platoon of soldiers onto the story of High Rolling, or at least its two and al[...]undefended bridge at Arnhem; Much of the film is concerned with male leads, as "a variety of the Butch tute, has no memorable dia[...], with Cassidy and the Sundance Kid pair of completely one-dimensional. Some c[...]confused this negative quality with machine guns of the waiting SS troops; and Attenborough m[...]wski's men attempting to cross the ness of such scenes as when Urquhart is re type[...]ve escaped from a nearby relationship of Scarecrow (although the[...]Rolling is From a production point of view, it would In all these scenes, Attenboro[...]ey dance among the trees, more one of convenience than a genuinely appear at[...]rush human link), but there is none of the Hexagon are showing initiative[...]zing their equip romantic Western flavor of the Redford film in which the average age of the produc[...]tion unit is 24 years, and of which the writer, In contrast, a different te[...]o feature to convey the timeless and alien world of a[...]Rolling, only an 83-minute film, cost the range of German anti-tank guns becomes Producer Jo[...]approximately $400,000. a disordered ugly world of screaming shells, Goldman. Director of Photography Geoffrey is more interested in boobs than bullets, smoke, flames, and cries of the wounded. Unsworth. Editor Anthony G[...]s sacked for seducing the cus Quality, of course, does not bear a precise Here, Unsworth u[...]eaks even at the box-office or Peckinpah's Cross of Iron. The battle is a James Caan, Michael[...]makes a good profit, the question of whether place of no escape -- tight, anarchic, Edward[...]s, study its seminological to cover every aspect of the battle, has cast Artists. 35mm. 175 min.[...]Paradise they have their share of adventure then the answer would probably[...]inferiors, and the dramatic form of the film near the bridge; the death of the old Dutch[...]music of the group Sherbet is merely an paratrooper who r[...]not an integral part of it. It is also remark red berets) and is shot by[...]ub bouncer Ernie (Gus Mercurio), German-held end of the Nijmegan bridge;[...]mood of the images and action without being apparently d[...]As for the direction of television Logie Kate ter Horst (Liv Ullman) rea[...]olished, and the framings, although the wreckage of her once neat Dutch home[...]repetitive in the landscape se on the outskirts of Arnhem; and Col. Bobby[...]the captivating richness of a Mauro Bolog- Bridge just as the Germans blow i[...]nini or the orchestration of a Peckinpah, but "Shit!" he says belatedly. The[...]Joe Bottoms which is necessarily becomes the sum of parts such as[...]However, High Rolling is not a f ilm aspects of battle; the film's greatest strength[...]y a light-hearted old- lies in its demonstration of war as a[...]isfactory return on the financial manifestations of power. Herein lies the[...]investment. importance of the airdrop sequence. Whereas Raoul Walsh focuse[...]m Burstall. Associate Producer Alan expectations of the men of Nelson's[...]Finney. Screenplay Forrest Redlich. Director of command in the parachuting scene of[...]ph Bottoms, Grigor Taylor, Judy Davis, uncoiling of tow ropes as hundreds of[...] |
 | [...]Synopsis:- To inform the public of the[...]activities of the Mothers and Babies Health different types of energy as they relate to[...].. Film Australia Synopsis: To make farmers aware of the[...]Sponsor............................. Dept of Economic D[...]Bennett S ynopsis:To increase understanding of why Prod M[...]WATERBIRDS OF SOUTH[...] |
 | [...]have lend weight to the argument that one of the[...]solved the problem of television competing critical priorities[...]The introduction to the main body of this getting rid of it. allows the possibility of "publicly locating[...]the source of decisions, the reasons for those Papers[...]reality of sex role stereotyping is socially when w[...]ild becoming the decisions". La Trobe University constructed reality", a[...]s the too absorbed in it mainly because of[...]difficulty of locating the degree to which (needle)[...]consistent with the already prolific work of[...]television characters, as a part of that ". . . boys who would be intere[...]", provide behavior models for activities of an adolescent -- . . . " relevant bibli[...]there are too many more The Centre for the Study of Educational viewers.[...]ant the children The case study treatment of Labor's[...]administration of the airwaves, between Communication and Media (otherwise The question of whether or not they The bulk of the report, which declares 1972 and 197[...]particularly appropriate to consideration of[...]quarter consists of children's attitudes; they the recently available Federal Labor University in M elbourne is, to my the issues introduced are[...]naturally mirror the attitudes of their platform on media and informati[...]"had actually been accused of depriving piecemeal and confused. The hidden Australia to embark upon publication of a analysis of particular programs, shown in their[...]ion". curriculum and hidden assumptions of[...]apparently innovative reform in radio series of papers offering commentary about peak viewing tim[...]ed". closed off from the mainstream of popular to my knowledge, the major study so far. opinions of the reviewers would seem to Unfortunately, however, the content culture in favor of pursuits their parents see[...]John Hughes suggest that the quality of these papers is analysis is largely characterized[...]the predominance of visual information is 5. The Cinematic Synthesis uneven, such an endeavor deserves en reduction of content to plot outlines or to the ev[...]ragement. Hopefully other institutions in quoting of a few selected lines of dialogue[...]The description of "the cinematic this country will emulate the exa[...]of film theory. His synthesis is the marriage[...]Questions concerning the nature of the by David Griffiths of "the reality of the external, material[...]world and the reality of the internal world of comedy, or the various contextual tones of David Griffiths' revised submission to the the mind" in film. On the occasion of their[...]particular episodes of particular series, are Administration detai[...]ed for the way in which they draw on 1. A Survey of Audio Visual Facilities in ignored by research mo[...]ith convincingly that the function of external reality to reveal the inner states of Universities in the U.S., Canada, collecting det[...]are deemed to be self-evident. perception of reality" and that "questions of Of Sjostrom: "What predominates are the[...]g or restructuring the media cannot states of the physical world as images of by Patricia Edgar and Tricia Sims[...]ved in isolation from the larger states of soul of the protagonists: the sea, the[...]the way in which it endorses a context of a society in which the mass media snow, the[...]ion." manifestations of the physical external[...]His analysis of Australian Labor Party manifestations of man's inner world of the provides a model of how not to go about an pragmatism points[...]between their "rhetoric of policy intention Prepared by Patricia Edgar and Tricia exploration of the ideological constructs of and the reality of policy implementation". A Certainly this is an acceptable reading of[...]chapter devoted to the machinations of Sjostrom's visual imagery, but M ills' Sims in 1970, the first of the Media Centre the material of popular culture. For a much Australian[...]ning the way in which does it. Questions of film form, even the[...]advocates of public broadcasting could be most basic ones, seem to be irrelevant to outline of the status of "audio visual turn to Sinclair Goodlad's provocat[...]aspirations of commercial broadcasters. man and natu[...]Griffiths' analysis of the McLean Report, He finds it easier t[...]tion for the outline is drawn from a Significance of Television Comedy", in the Priorities[...]plan for remarkably reductive notion of art, than to questionnaire sent to 194 instituti[...]ions were explore particular examples of its internal[...]ernment-controlled, romantic inner world of expressionism, the[...]ions owned and romantically simple view of the external which the centres supply: the servi[...]ed by the Media Department), all world of everyday objects and people that[...]German filmmakers attained the heights of (Britain, Australia and Canada), and the[...]Kracaeur would call "the redemption of academically-oriented centre (U.S. andCanada). The former kind seems to emphasize the provision of technical expertise for other departments, while[...]elevision latter contains "a higher proportion of by Patricia Edgar and Ray Crooke teachin[...]recommendations from the respondents on wasteland of children's television, ebbs and organization, appointment of directors, flows as a topic of public debate according services provided, and equipment. Most to the results of the newest bits of evidence centres shared a dissatisfaction at limitations about it, the report of the most recent inquiry (staffing, finance, degree of autonomy) or the opinion of the latest notable. Research imposed on them b[...]nce apart from personal concerned with the place of audio-visual departments in tertiary instituti[...]owledge Tom Ryan of that child.[...]study of families whose values had led them 2. Sex Type Socialization and Tele to the social extreme of jettisoning the vision Family Comedy Program[...]sis response from 298 families; they filled in of research carried out by students in a questionnai[...]se, this paper is television, their children and, of course, primarily concerned to expose t[...] |
 | [...]. Any essential addition to a growing body of and experienced the frustration and The single-minded rhetoric of Mills' action against friends[...]broadcasting in Australia. humiliation of trying to gain adequate "The embarrassment of the ABCB in Essentially, the papers'[...]been nothing compared with the analysis of the contemporary, social and Australian[...]ght waves and sound embarrassment of Liberal and Country p o litic a l role of b ro ad c astin g . In waves" , but the details of mise-en-scene Party Postmasters[...]ceful Thring became a vigorous advocate of seem strangely irrelevant to his purpose),[...]arly limited and coalition figures of much greater prestige finally, seems unduly op[...]a quota obliging theatres and unproblematic view of reality. and importance than themselves." of their evidence here. distributors to handle a fixed percentage of[...]Australian footage. He contributed much Of Stiller: "Like Sjostrom, Stiller deals[...]weight to the pressure which drove the with all of reality, the external world of in office has now disposed of the myth that[...]to conduct an inquiry nature and the inner world of the mind." one side of politics has a monopoly of 7. A u s tra lia n Film S tu d ie s; E[...]te for a quota The political and social identity of the films wisdom about broadcasting. Ev[...]system (albeit ineffectual). themselves, and of the world in which and acceptance of the idea that the structure and about which they are made, are thus control of broadcasting are not immutable is by In[...]Thring's achievements in the politics of excluded from the discussion, because they an advance on the stultifying inertia of our[...]in the early 1930s, Frank tangible presence of his work as a film Mizoguchi, Rossellini, Godard[...]1974 visit remains a useful director of feature films. Between the to repudia[...]ent to Armstrong's essay. The opening of his Melbourne studio, Efftee Bertrand'[...]s observes, "It is only after we have of the bureaucracy on the question of the 1936, he was responsible for seven ful[...]Andrew Pike of any art form, both the material and mental[...]e standards and their resistance number of travelogues, and musical and aspects of those dimensions, that we can aga[...]proceed to establish a mode of perception, a definition of the legal legitimacy and extent critical methodology, based on those of their power.[...]ynthesis, Turning to the problem of American about his work as director is that it was occasional series of commentaries on scarcely a cinematic one, offers no help. domination of Australian television, Johnson idiosyncratic[...]initial principal contemporaries, Ken G. Hall of institutions, local and abroad, concern[...]arles Chauvel, Thring with the study of the media. A subsequent.[...]eschewed the language of Hollywood issue of Cinema Papers will, for example, 6. Two Ref lect[...]ence was most deal with the collection of Television Mono c a s tin g[...]econd channel was running a the mainstream of commercial theatre; his by the British F[...]I turned to the public static recorder of entirely verbalized The New Wave[...]ers on an by James Monaco problems of Australian broadcasting t[...]rops. planning and administration in the context of radio. Each station was playing an[...]Oxford University Press. historical, legal and social precedent.[...]." The literary emphasis of Thring's style Recommended price (hardbac[...]ough nothing by Regular readers of overseas film journals A ustralia, sponsored by[...]" 10 potential violations in 10 minutes of technicians. Thring himself rarely directed[...]hile at the same time getting the placement of the camera; he was often on film and tel[...]as associate director on several subject of the nouvelle vague, a term Already, Armstron[...]films, and Arthur Higgins as photographer of commonly coined and translated to describe Sensible Regulation of Commercial Broad He continues[...]evised all the features -- were veterans of the the films which emerged from this m[...]ment, which had earlier (in the pages of to the broadcasting debate. This more recent[...]e tradi essay details the structured intricacies of our presume the similarity of McDonalds The cast were drawn directly from the tional view of French cinema and which, by current broadcasting[...]ing tribunal's precisely from blow-up of U.S. television vaudeville by interacting[...]s and organized movement than a collection of Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act and[...]Johnson sees the concentration of control the camera and became ill-timed, flat[...]to do so, and whose 'politique', born of a community control.[...]common belief in the possibility of the[...]ework for Monaco's and while regretting the lack of legal participation of the government." of the industry, than for his work as a film b[...]ittle The "possible courses of action" growth of the Hoyts cinema chain, which in France at this time. It ought to be noted, likelihood of a major change in the direction sugges[...]though, that there are others, such as Jean of broadcasting law or administration (in[...]re include support for the development of In the construction of theatres and in the wife, Agnes Varda, and Alain Resnais, who is little likelihood of such a change in favor public broadcasting and for "active citizen development of a competitor to the combine made admirable use of the availability of of reform." participation in the process of making of Union Theatres, Thring contributed sig finance and the freedom of expression-, and[...]rams, nificantly in the 1920s to the growth of the who, arguably, deserve inclusion in any The problem of limited resources and making[...]l duopoly in the exhibition trade study of the French "new wave". available to community gr[...]ccessful in broadcasters,, compounds the problem of toward community control of the fourth his discussions of Truffaut and Godard, conflict-of-interest facing decision makers in network, where the continuing work of video In the 1930s he sold his controlling much of the book being given over to a par the bureaucra[...]ny, the Fox Film political nature of their films. Monaco's "Until Senator McClelland was appointed challenge of creating "new popular attitudes Corporation,[...]period, he became a victim of what he had referring back and forth between the two to any one time, but, for much of the The publication as a w[...]ion between their McClelland period, four out of five Armstrong's paper i[...] |
 | [...]severely burnt. The latest issue of Forthcom ing[...]" as new -- "At their best they reveal something of books. The list of cancellations extends all the way Warren Oa[...]from Bruce Lee to Christian Metz. paralysis of contemplation and the desire for[...]nd enlighten A whole abundance of books are coming out on SL[...]The film is based on C. K. Stead's analysis of the basic political unit . . . the publication before the end of the year. Oddly released in New Zealand this year. They novel, Smith's Dream, the rights of which, human couple" (p. 79).[...]wi mythology by the rock group percentage of profits. First published in Arguing that, des[...]g fraternity; that we recognize the implications of (and author's) B uffalo B[...]e: flop. So was the script of Silent M ovie, despite the Solo, Tony Willia[...]make them, but also the subjects of Film Scripts and Lorrimer have switched from Roger Donaldson's New Zealand- of his films . . . If we can understand the[...]guerrilla war. From this, the age-old system of film, he suggests, possibly we can[...]fantasy of taking to the hills and fighting better understand the system of life. Film is and Werner Adrian's Freaks: Cinem a o f the While each of these productions trade politics." (p. 128)[...]films, and the future of local production In the context of a popular cinema where[...]their individual successes, Perhaps one of the reasons the book plot and character provide[...]York, 1976. $2.45. A well-researched history of successful, may unlock large sums of developed in New Zealand during the med[...]extension of Prime Minister Robert[...]lley Berman, It is in the financing of Sleeping Dogs been a background factor to the sales of essential reading for students of those Jack Benny, Joey Bishop[...]t will, presumably, also directors, and the flow of Monaco's prose Carson, Phyllis[...]en it and the insights which he offers should be of Gregory, Bob Hope, George Jessel, Jerry Lewis, $300,000 -- half of which was put up by is released around Octo[...]the merchant bankers, Broadbank. Of interests.[...]$12.95. Despite its Arts Council of New Zealand. This was featuring several w[...]catchpenny title, this is an able summing-up of the decisive factor-- Government money is another part of the overall marketing quality of the rest of the book. The chapter Flynn's lif[...]ffered as security. The settlement date much of the budget as possible from the carelessness all[...]on the original characterizes Monaco's criticism of Truffaut The other $50,000 of Broadbank's con $300,000 budget would need[...]Secaucus, 1977. $19.95. One of the better books in tribution was an inte[...]story. This is not to say that his discussion of the Citadel series, with fairly co[...]k nevertheless 1f New Zealand's population of three lining of the sexual imagery in Que La Bete edition is likely to become something of a claim that they are prepared to[...]he Government has analysis. The patronizing tone of his treat second thoughts about some of the remarks he Apart from Broadb[...]so far found no cause to counter this ment of Ophelia, La Rupture (compare[...]contributed- by TV 1 (one of New circumstance with subsidies (or[...]sion corporations), Movie 20) and NADA (his view of the film's V alentino: The[...]e Sleeping "straightforward style", shows a lack of Peter Donnelly. London, 1976.[...]Dogs must take their chances on the awareness of the extent of Chabrol's irony),[...]arket. In that situation, the and his misreading of the final exchange V alen[...](producer/director), mentions a figure of the same sales push and other audience declaration of his intention "to participate in[...]For the short but important part of the and the outrageous price aside, is one of the by Robert Oberfirst. New York, 1977. $2.95. of Auckland. Of the remaining $40,000, foreign military adviser, an international most useful and accessible pieces of film[...]Jack serious writing is to be found in the pages of Mackenzie. London, 1975. $19.95. Thi[...]riced journals. the best of the batch. Meticulously researched by a other members of the production crew. Oates' manager had r[...]is accounts for the original $300,000 fraction of his usual, Oates joined the[...]though it does have a greater collection of stills. budget, but Sleeping Dogs has gone over party, maintaining that he was simply Books of the Quarter Botham and Donnelly's is a competent piece of budget. At the time of writing, no one trying to outdo his friend[...]o finish the film. An unusually small number of books relating to Bro[...]The line-up includes some of the best quarter. The Sydney mail strike was partly to TV :[...]r t by H orace Amalgamated Theatres (one of the available locally, although they are not blame. But there is striking evidence of a general Newcomb. New York, 1974. $3.95[...]erally known outside New Zealand -- winding-down of cinema books in publishers' lists. is an[...]1975. $19.95. An impressive over-view of U.S. the box-office, $100,000 of Arts Council for the title role of the Australian-New remaindered, while Oxford University Press have television, its history and development, its cultural money (that's a lot of money for film in Zealand television co-production found sales of their much-touted but inferior and sociological impact by the author of D o cu New Zealand) shall be released[...]last see the continuity of production that credit is Michael Seresin, the[...]Spy Pictures. 424 pages of comprehensive credits[...]1976. $8.85. Reviews and casts of 850 horror films[...]Zotz! and capsule biographies of about 30 per[...]the teenage horror fan, is of little value for the[...] |
 | [...]hat are your plans for the present proliferation of state[...]Jim: I think it is quite evident that likelihood of all these bodies corporation. I think[...]into m ulti-m edia presentations a number of corporations than just the emphasis of our feelings re the[...]in filmmaking and, hopefully, the of these bodies are going through for invest[...]d rather be placed on their companies in Sydney and 15-odd time. Therefore, it would be most[...]marketing of their films. A will cont[...]l with them. For example, you The role of the producer is marketing branch woul[...]stors. If corporations examining the root of the problem also an extraordin[...]producer is going to have the responsibility of returning Hal: By multi-media[...]down one end of a rather large hall. should these corporations f[...]e bum together -- a combination of tele cover the difference in airfares,[...]-- and there are many past about the role of marketing and the moment flogging A Bridge Too which we are calling "Space-Trip" of them -- have generally opted on they are t[...]where we will take an audience the side of logistical support, rather[...]auditorium in the shape of a space a viable alternative to investment.[...]y and screen in the shape of a window on It is clear to everybody that fil[...]d collapse to resemble necessary the AFC get out of should be down the line one way or[...]lms or being severe temptation on the part of meteorite storm and the crew[...]eas the commercial think a patchwork quilt of the two from the responsibility. It may[...]can say that without fear of contra operating in this area in Australia. a couple of successful films, that[...]ner and architect, There has been some criticism of[...]no hope of the audience duplicating without marketing branc[...]full range of ianiro lighting[...] |
 | [...]P. 169 the moment of protest and perhaps its era; that was a bygofte era; that sort of thing could[...]roughout the media, there has been no discussion of the health and safety factors, of the Familiar stereotypes are at work, and fam[...]incidentally introduced to the Fox relative cost of uranium, or of the commitments sympathies are engaged, ofte[...]police. For television, the original point of the Territory. As the camera focuses on a quiet[...]much; one placard looks you hear the putt-putt of an outboard motor, and countries that perhaps ca[...]e reeds bearing three have quite different sorts of energy needs. There same anyway.[...]ike Mionty Python images. has been no discussion of the ways in which These are the members of the Commission, and technology changes society,[...]s helped to set the agenda for the technique of filming them this way allows governments have dealt with the new risks public discussion of uranium in other ways as them no status or authority as the authors of two associated with nuclear power; for example,[...]its introduction as "a documentary pressions of what many people regard as the real terrorists o[...]the U.S., France and Argentina. In June last of public interest". And the narrator told the pression about the media coverage of uranium. year Britain created a permanently arme[...]have thought that the film that the question of uranium raises issues that are has only 400 personnel, but by the turn of the was presenting the viewpoint of the mining completely different, in their scale of magnitude, century, if the nuclear program goes ahead as com panies under the appearance of a in their implications for our society and way of planned, it could rise to around 5000.[...]centre-piece was a model of the proposed mining This increase in the polic[...]continuing accompanied by increased surveillance of Northern Territory, with the firm's m[...]needs to be employees at nuclear plants: upwards of some Tony Grey, explaining how easy it al[...]ty supply how much care was to be taken of the environ on the contrary, presented in terms of the needs industry in Britain alone. And the rec[...]nt. of papers and television for news that is im propos[...]Grey has been the replay on ABC television of an It is being said that people who protest agai[...]. He was NBC documentary on the disposal of nuclear uranium mining are protesting against described by the narrator as a man of energy and wastes. And even that program led t[...]ertainly that the ABC was wasting the services of its own of the consultants to the Uranium Producers'[...]week. "Many of the anti-uranium lobby are really Much of Uranium on Trial featured long Of course they are not likely to be allowed to using this issue to pursue their aim of changing shots of lakes and wildlife, and these induced a make a similar kind of critical, questioning docu Australia's democratic way of life." real sense of relaxation and peacefulness. In mentary for Australian television. And none of general, the film created a sense of tranquillity the commercial channels are likely[...]given by the newsmedia and order, of peaceful and irresistible purpose, reinforces this impression of general disruption. as though mining uranium w[...]l interests tie in with the constraints The fact of protest is more important to the At one point there was a shot of Rum Jungle, an on their news and current affairs programs to media than the specific point of the protest. abandoned mining town, and a[...]"this is what the opponents of mining fear" , as favorable to the Uranium Pro[...]though the problem is really one of litter. But[...]tinuedfrom P. 141 tightness of the construction. A films suffer under it,[...]furnished the plot as worked with the conception of if any great work of art has had any well as the characters, so[...]whole thing was like an internal grain of the film, and very often Beethoven, Scarlatti, P[...]day more I done had there not been that kind of 1941 The Maltese Falcon universal impact. S[...]at there is no longer that 1944 The Battle of San Pietro TOMORROW[...]some film I had 1951 The Red Badge of Courage what you see on the screen today?[...]ul; so she had 1954 Beat the Devil concepts of filmmaking. Just like in which is very comp[...]1958 Roots of Heaven mould. There was the idea of admiration of the way scenes were You are going to direct[...]Rocky has taken the best of both Yes, it is the Hemingway story 1963 The List of Adrian Messenger[...]the River and Into the Trees. 1964 The Night of the Iguana[...]concerned, to the great benefit of year. The story takes place in 19[...]1972 The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean[...] |
 | [...]will cover all Applied Media, which is part of the Harwood, Ian Davidson and Bill Tr[...]chair a centre for the educational application of the National Film Archive in Canberra. Acc[...]ned for Sunday, Do We Go From Here?" at University House of film, television, photography and radio in[...]E xh ib itio n the Australian National University in Canberra Victorian schools at primary, secon[...]from October 12 to 16. Films and tapes of technical levels.[...]terviewee with a the IAC on September 20 in Sydney. gramming executives and creative producers of the media through advisory services, in- typed transcript of his or her interview. The[...]t is hoped to have speakers from the production of teaching kits, audio and video which he wi[...]and television To aid the flexibility of the interview[...]n in films and television Since the release of the lAC's recommen the Australian Broadc[...]m Corporation, Australian Film programs of the future, none of it will be edited dation, much support has been received by the Federation of Australian Commercial .and Television School and[...]. Directors wishing to incorporate the form of letters, petitions, phone calls -- and[...]kanowicz, a film by final year student Some of the current activities being rather t[...]rt prize sponsored by AMS include the production of a this archival practice, the interview m[...]Victoria's Premier Mr Hamer, has come out Of Wisdom. The kit includes numerous[...]whittled away by successive use. in support of the retention of the quota, and Mr NATIONAL LIBRARY OF AUSTRALIA articles, 26 photographs, daybills and[...]networks, has also spoken out in favor of the The Library has continued to expan[...]rporation practical sense (such as the use of interviews nothing else but highlight the sad plight of the been acquired: Wavelength, Back and Forth[...]clude Rat Life and Diet in at the primary level, of the Yoram Gross interviews on a " now[...]t and the Kangaroo. basis with some of the young and well-known ment Industries[...]his matter, contact and Catfood. Early films of the American filmmakers of today. The recording of archival Jazzer Smith of the Musicians' Union. Phone avant garde have also been added to the A super 8mm film festival of student made interviews with television pi[...]urne from November be encouraged; the list of other art and[...]the rarely seen feature length film at Melbourne University three years ago, have to be limitless.[...]finished shoot In the documentary area of the collection, with other filmmakers or teacher[...]minute documentary on the school's three of the African films by Jean Rouch have super 8mm p[...]Publicity and Information Committee of the Fulltime Program just before leaving[...]he disturbing Phil O'Brien, research officer of the ABC's minute films were produced. The sc[...]attempted to embrace a vast cross-section of general release, is a graduate of the 1973 Frederick Wiseman, Meat, is al[...]the arts and literature, but only three of these Interim Training Scheme, the forerunner of the from the Library. show which is being[...]A lack of adequate consultation with The doc[...]Time, is intended to explain the workings of include the first feature, Mandabi, by th[...]al straight-out entertainment objectives of what employers of graduates, careers advisers and package of features from R.K.O.-Radio centr |
 | [...]excellent bibliographies and checklists of events in the U.S. It also carries[...], listed on the International Federation of Film siderable promise. But they both lacked the[...]-Beh and Saunie Salyer Archives list of approved international film support of a mother university or rich founda and published at Berkeley,[...]ents, therefore, are not recorded in the university text in both film and women's studies fil[...]esson in Seventh Art, or that Pauline from University Microfilms. Kael wrangles with Sillitoe and The[...]The film reviews in Cinefantastique are of the Long Distance Runner in Moviegoer, or[...]on needed gap in providing information of a specific selection of studio stills. Truffaut; Goodman on Chaplin; Sar[...]ogue on Film is not a film journal in the The University of Dayton's slim octavo and was soon forced to cease publication. One of full sense of the word, but a record of seminars quarterly, Film Heritage, is in a simil[...]ivals throughout the world. Its Studies of the American Film Institute. These stable of first-class critics. A pointer to the type contr[...]and women -- were seminars consist of interviews with those of articles carried by Film Heritage is that it is noted for their intellectual grit and freshness of involved with the creative side of American abstracted in Historical Abstracts and[...]xes. of interview and argument; the theory and of co-workers. Directors interviewed include practice of feminist film criticism was Aldr[...]anski; cinemato with contributions by professors of English, material for a regular feature,[...]igmond, Laszlo Kovacs and rather than professors of film history. But this is Massage" ; there was[...]ch as Liv Ullman, Peter offset by the excellence of the interviews and the tions and soon.[...]lle Ball; TV producers such as frequent devotion of a single issue to a leading[...]en. There is also an filmmaker. A curious aspect of the journal is a This periodical had much to teach the male- issue on the pros and cons of cable television. ratings chart with evaluations from the critics of dominated traditional journals and one hopes i[...]It is difficult to characterize the ideology of Jump Cut, which first appeared three year[...]ap which was originally ago, is one of the more radical of the recent conceived as a journal for the University of additions to film periodical literatu[...]rated program: mid-1960s is Action, a bi-monthly of the aimed at largely local consumption. According to Directors Guild of America. This journal is Michael Sragow[...]rned with lengthy interviews Federation of Film Societies'journal Film Critic, as[...]as "The Woman Director" that are of interest only to those either still part of The political and social critiques of people (July/August 1973) which was delicately p[...]1966, it has progressed much the standards of criticism to be found in Critic Fil[...]l and political context -- its from the concerns of early issues where one was than those of The Velvet Light Trap. The latter practical and political uses, the economics of liable to find a report on Japanese Intersex bio[...]nd the function cybernetic programs, or a review of John criticism and each issue is on a particular topic. of film in America today." Hofsess's Black Zero, de[...]luded Warner Brothers in "all the gratifications of vision, hearing, taste, the Thirties; John For[...]at and a uniform typeface. Each ing conglomerate of news and reviews, book in Hollywood; S[...]; The issue contains around 30 pages of lengthy, lightly checklists, letters, interviews[...]articles, interviews and news. most intellectual of the radical American film many of which are now out-of-print. The Velvet magazines. It concerns itself[...]ecially revolutionary society (there variety of contributors and is a far cry from a ena[...]than a dollar. cinema), and questions the value of film theories which put form before function (eg[...]Its sub-title is Journal o f the Film and One of the important `sociological' film sayin[...]ppeared in the early '70s was its opinion of its fellow film journals is far from eleganc[...]The editors of American Film plan to "roam University, Ohio. Here[...]and through the highways and byways of communica[...]mes on like a questions on the role of film and television in American culture surveys[...]as it contributes to tion on "a fusty blend of comic-strip reactionary and Third World people, gays and lesbians' the development of its art form" . and scholarly[...]more of the aimless, feckless, self-indulgent[...]ngs, has an seen in such articles as "The Impact of Griffith's effete mushrooms in the dark of our continuing important role to play. Birth of a Nation on the Modern Ku Klux cult[...]le on Fellini's "Readers' Forum" for an exchange of views, and that it reprints film criticism[...]nd film Film is now a permanent feature of this new[...] |
 | [...]Elliott (Alfred Bell), Jassy's husband, aware of Kate, a convict girl, had been rescued by Samu[...]but less charges him with murder. The innocent of The Gentleman (written by John Dorsman, di[...]ated Damned, as he placed expedience ahead of his see her grow to, perhaps, the stronges[...]up to the closing moment of The Prisoner, but ("They raped my property" or "[...]eir sympathetic exchanges and my land"), and two of the most moving and He has, as Jassy[...]with her now, Luke is forced to face the reality of the impossi[...]s it does with Luke, is made clear in the bility of his union with her), and then in The Hypocrites (written by John Dorsman, directed closing shot of her giving her assent to Luke's Prisoner (on the road, before Luke's murder of by Hugh David) who have found their princip[...]o their needs in the colony. himself to the tune of the music-box gift which[...]ownship combine to Throughout, a combination of writers, directors Jassy).[...]orked at In The Prisoner, the closing episode of the into diagnosing that Luke's victim had died from sustaining a flow of character and theme; their[...]than from the whipping -- achievement is of the highest order of television drama, Luke reaches the point where h[...]ern with intimate thus ambiguous) murder by whip of the traveller the Firbeck property, and, despite the aid of the drama, expressed by his emphatic and recurr[...]. zooms to close-up, isolating individuals with of his separation from Jassy, but makes him[...]yor and An Enemy Too him into line with the rest of the convict colony. seeming to impose on Luke his own judgment of Many) -- and thus differences between the[...]realization of individual episodes, that is, finally, way for l[...]a less important exercise at this stage of he confesses his awareness ("We built a prison")[...]ed family television criticism than a perception of the way[...]"), Luke responds with an ambiguous "God reality of the present. Still defiant and has bee[...]and the suggestion of a new beginning: Luke hasTerry Jackman[...]without trying to force the Govern lines of the South Australian by a number of the state attorneys- -- should underestimate[...]which is a produc general that the easy way out of this problem; if we don't do something sys[...]tion entity, or along the lines of problem, so far as they are con ourselve[...]they changed the taxation this would be the end of the drive-[...], we will have a very ins, and virtually the end of the One of the areas where the Aus Treasury finance[...]ture -- I'd rather see the industry, because all of us rely on tralian production situation[...]screen. We need to drive-ins for a terrific part of our appears to be at a disadvantage we'[...]le have to go to the SAFC, I don't think any of us facing sort of code where the rougher type situation of the taxation of Treasury to get their money and the today's economic condition will of `R' film, the more visible, sexual production r[...]hey are broke attempt to set up that sort of `R' film, is either -- and I am only taking the attitude that this ought because of Medibank or whatever. I operation. guessin[...]Corporation. employ a certain number of South that the industry is making an effo[...] |
 | [...]INESS Out of It BOOKSHOP[...]Pure S a wide range of carefully selected scripts from Samuel French,[...]Melbourne's largest range of Stage Make-Up including ultra high quality Stein SYDNEY FILMMAKERS[...]63 7508 of Independent Films[...]This in addition to a full range of 16 mm colour and b/w thelocation.[...]Ph: 439 3555 Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Brisbane.[...]the information, ring Sue-Ellen Doherty (Sydney) 31 0388 for complete information on T[...] |
 | [...]Noyce story, a story of the disintegration of spoke of an American distributor Newcombe, a film ab[...]a man's relationship; a story of a on for the North American market es[...]around himself the through the same sort of influences. idea was first suggested to me by with a few exceptions like Caddie perversion of ideals by fellow[...]They, of course, weren't sub wonderful script. We are producing certain types of actors. And the workers.[...]in fact, raising the money at was a certain type of speaking on significance and there are thin[...]like to be on present. the ABC, a certain type of program it that anyone in any country will be the receiving end of the boot. and a certain type of actor. And it interested in. The film examine[...]It is also being m ade in all smelt terribly of middle-class way in which nostalgia acts as[...]over the true significance of events. such as the communist scare, the[...]influence of the church, the way in draft. He will also act[...]points the true significance of an Yes. I may have given the impres event[...]but all the events can be taken miners' strike of 1949; the Olympic[...]an 1969 Better to Reign in Hell newsreel of Richard Nixon making to pow er o f the M e[...]etc. of the Earth and Crystal Yoyager 1973 That's S[...]resented to the Australian small number of the film-going David will be able to tap it. people and to the history of[...]are a large number of people all 1974 God Knows Why, But It Works The story of the film is also very over the world who were a[...]Mick Of course, their countries were[...]for the first Yes, probably in the vicinity of $5 first and John Power the second.[...]only now, with the number of Williamson can't really start. SAFC,[...]In the vicinity of $150,000 each. hand in hand with the marketing tightness of the operation evident, What other projects i[...]doing them because it builds people. The problem of state that the opposition party has co[...]We are co-producing Weekend some of our other features, like The[...]of Shadows which Tom Jeffrey is Fourth Wish a[...]h it is being shot even combine them with some of bankers. employment of South Australian entirely in South Aust[...]ld, therefore, support the personnel or use of the locations also shooting three televisi[...]with Joy Cavill's involvement in the production of[...]sage not being totally involved in the marketing of a * One overriding criteria is that we[...]ssistance to producers felt the same, then a lot of industry in South Australia. The in the case of Weekend, but with experimental filmmakers.[...]-- Joy Cavill has total creative loan of services, etc. It will be a made with a marketin[...]We did this with The films independently of the the sort of films we should be[...]e when a film like however, is the concentration of requirement on it -- one third I proportion of network money. They Rocky works so well, bec[...]alia, the second a gadgetry and sophistication of Star not another are made by the same What is th[...]Wars you realize this is obviously handful of people. Therefore, one in "The Last Wave"?[...]also despair when I see films like of the possible benefits of a[...]Shampoo, which are based solely proliferation of corporations is We are the major investor.[...]rnhill is shooting the that it might, with a bit of luck and a bit of foresight, lead to some With a creative sa[...] |
 | [...](i) If the production of the film is prevented or stopped by reason of[...]reasonable any cause beyond the control of the Producer such as but not in[...]limitation thereof force majeure, Act of God, enemy action, fire, Continuedfrom P. 130[...]delays rehearsal or performance the other members of riot, civil commotion, national calamity, order of a Public[...]failure of essential supplies such as electricity but expres[...]excluding weather conditions or failure of the Producer's[...]any member of the Producer's staff (other than a member of the are concerned; then th[...](a) Suspend w itho u t pay the operation of the a rtis t's[...]engagement during the period of prevention or stoppage of[...]production in which case on resumption of work on the film[...]roducer shall not be bound to accept the services of any production of the film and terminate the artist's engagement The Producer shall have exclusive rights to the services of the artist[...]as from the prrevention or stoppage upon payment of all[...]rendered prior to the date of prevention or stoppage.[...]time and place fixed for not render any services of any kind or for any person, firm or corporation[...]artist in respect of such attendance. other than the Producer without first obtaining the express writtenconsent of the Producer. Such consent will not be unreasonab[...]his contract and/or this agreement whatsoever of a hazardous or dangerous nature which involve the[...]forthwith suspended as from and 31. ACCESS OF UNION OFFICERS in any degree of risk or to carry out any stunt unless such special including the first day of such inability. During such suspension the Any two officers of the Union singly or together duly authorised in[...]writing shall have access to any place of rehearsal and/or performance services are specif[...]construed as being payment of such moneys due and owing to the artist in respect dangerous, hazardous and of risk to life or limb or health or as a stunt. of services actually rendered up to the time of the artist's[...]st's engagement in which case the total liability of 32. EQUITY MEMBERSHIP (i) Except as otherw[...]the Producer shall be limited to payment of a sum not less than All artist[...]members of the Union in good financial standing and shall remain in respect of work carried out during the seven consecutive day[...]the artist would have received if the terms of the engagement had such good fin[...]programme of the film. ending at midnight on a Satur[...]Any non member of the Union engaged by the Producer for work in the (ii) Meal money and payment in lieu of accommodation shall be paid[...]film shall make application for membership of the Union on the Union's[...]nd/or otherwise official form of application not later than the day before the beginning of by the Producer to an artist on a d[...] |
 | [...]today, a unique insight into one of the world's most ancient civilisations. The real stars of this series, one of the most ambitious projects in[...]ntemporary film making, are the people of India -- people like Padma, a[...]n industrial complex on the outskirts of Bombay. Fourteen films that explore the fascinating biways of agrarian, urban and cultural life in the India of the Seventies are[...]Commission, 8 West Street, North Sydney. Overseas to the[...] |
MD |
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