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 | [...]. A view that is possible only through a camera. And then on film. To create these shots you have to[...]o this is very much related to your understanding of how a particular stock will act in a particular situation. And you not only have to understand it but you have t[...]’ve shot, I’ve calculated that 554 kilometres of film has gone before my eye. And the majority of that film has been 35 mm Eastman Color Negative film. I think that says something for my attitude to the stock.” Don McAlpine[...] |
 | [...]our one-stop, compact whats, whens, wheres, whys and how—tos” national book and bring the points in be- of shooting on government, state or Indian- tween into frame for film and videotape owned land, railroads, restored and historic[...]your production schedule requires. State-by-state and city-by-city, you’ll find And if you travel beyond US. borders, more than 35,00[...]have you in focus. Province-by- spectrum 0f film and videotape SlUle province or territorial island—by-island, we facilities, production and post—production cover facilities in Canada, the Virgin Islands centers, equipment, mobile equipment and and Puerto Rico. a complete breakdown of goods and ser— When you shoot on location, your bag vice[...]I Please send copy(s) of the current ON LOCATION The .National Film & Vi[...]Y. @539.00 _, ' -’ ’ I P I Plus $5.00 postage and handling* lFU'U s &PosseSSionsl ........... $ —[...]again snared your on 0 1 production in the abyss of permits and other location unknowns? r I I I I I I I I[...]_agazine. We bring the most important aspects of location shooting to you every month. What the problems were, how they were solved and who cut the red tape. We show you how, ‘\ where, when and why. Send for your subscription today. Your location manager wi[...]____ I : H M Please indicate the principal nature of your business, : I w» I '- -—__m--n---uununul |
 | Les McKenzie has been in the film industry fOr more than 25 years and you’ve never seen athing he’s done. Les, what led you into the sound side of what is, after all, a visual medium? In fact I did start in the visual side of the business — as an ass1stant projectionist at the Hoyts 6 ways Theatre, Bondi! Very glamorous. And I guess, just by Sitting through so many mOVies I was intrigued by the realism of the tracks; how the director used sound to create the illusion and build the right atmosphere, and I wanted to find out more. So where did you star[...]ybody who worked in this industry through the 50s and 60's worked at Supreme. It was our Film and TV school in those days, our studio system. And I was lucky enough to train for four years under the finest technician this count[...]th — AC. Smith. From there I went to “Skippy" for three years. I did every episode - 91 of them and one feature. Then to the States for a while: then back to Aust- ralia as sound superv[...]ing. Still, there must be some things you listen for, that you expect to hear on a track? \Vell. you[...]y seem to think you can always phone it in later. And you can. But I feel that the performance the arti[...]e day. It also saves the producer money. A couple of minutes on the set getting the right atmosphere. effects and performance can save days lost in post productio[...]eatures, but what is the film you’re most proud of, as far as your own contribution is concerned? O[...]fterI came to Colorfilm in fact. I’m very proud of ‘Tim’ because there is not one looped line in[...]had locations in the surf, at Mascot Airport, in and out of cars, and it’s all original material on the day I was also sound supervisor, supervised the music score and made the optical neg when it was all over. Any o[...]my best achievement in the optical transfer side of the business is the very first neg that I made on[...]common knowledge, but “Picnic” was nominated for a British Academy Award for sound. Is there one movie you can think of that particularly impressed you because of its sound? \Vhen I was at Universal they were dubbing the movie Earthquake: and I enjoyed gomg over to the theatre and sitting with Ronny Pierce when they were doing th[...]t there were 59 effects reels in those sequences. And to sit there and see the Sensurround system working. it was one of the most spectacular things I can remember. It st[...]I understand Colorfilm did all the release prints for ‘Elephant Man’ in this country, didn’t that[...]So we had to do the research on the configuration of the negative as far as density, fog levels, cross cancellation and that sort of thing. Then print it and process it and hold it to the control parameters we’d set. Do you expect to do more of these? Yes I do. I don’t really see us in the[...]s in the world: one in Los Angeles, one in London and one in Munich. The one in Munich is I understand producing Dolby Stereo Porn movies. I’d dearly love to go and see that! What can you offer the film maker here[...]the finest mono— optical system in the world. And so do RCA in America. Why is that? Because the[...]nt to APA I had the opportunity to train with Art for 6 months. He's 80 years old now and he really is the doyen of optical recording. In fact, he’s just been awarded the SMPTE Samuel L. W’arner Award for outstanding achievement and contribution to sound in motion pictures. I asked Art to put those cameras together for me in Los Angeles. It took him 16 weeks, and when those cameras arrived here they were so well set up I just put them together and started running track. I did not have to do a thing. And now RCA are using our parameters for the cameras they’re making today. And what does that mean to the film maker? It means we can produce a track for him at least as good as any he’d get anywhere else in the world. We tend to look upon Hollywood and London as being the centre of the industry, but our negatives out of here print as well as any of them. You must be really busy now, what’s currently happening at Colorfilm? ‘Gallipoli’ is ready for printing now, and coming up we’ve got: ‘The Best of Friends: ‘Partners,’ ‘Heat Wave’ and ‘Angel Street’ to name just a few. My persona[...]d negs are fine, we’re supplying magnetic xfers of dailies to producers, and I’m currently building up a very elaborate sound effects library Plus, of course, our new preview room which will be ready in November. It has suspended walls and ceilings, big screen 35mm and 16mm projection, full stereo sound — the lot.[...]u’ve worked in the States, at Universal. Yes. For Disney’s, United Artists, Allied Artists. Yes. You’ve had offers to go and live and work in America, what’s stopped you? Because I’m a fifth generation Australian and proud of it. Look, I don’t want to work anywhere else. The Australian film industry is as old and respected as any in the world. And today it's producing some of the best films in the world. And Colorfilm? Well, of course, the people make this company My sound crew is the finest I’ve ever had and you don’t often get the chance to work with technicians like Arthur Cambridge, Maggie Cardin, Bill Gooley and Roger Cowland. We’re a team. We respect each other, and we love this industry It's as simple as th[...] |
 | _ "1. Agfa-Gevaert have just And it doesn’t just offer a Australian laboratories[...]new color negative wide latitude that compensates for So in summary, 311 we can camera film, available in 16mm andand the will, we’ve got the creation of any masterpiece. grain that every frame can be _[...]Type 682. New Gevacolor 682 apprecrated as a work of art in itself. AG FA_G EVAE RT LIMITED negative camera film. Better still, this new film Head Office, P. O. Box 48, This film passes even the can be processed without any of the Nunawading, VIC. 3131. toughest of tests with flying colours problems created by cl[...]8000, (if you’ll forgive the pun), conditions. And it’s compatible with Sydney 8881444, Bri[...] |
 | [...]Ansara Edward Fox Brian McFarlane Some Aspects of Australia Rod Bishop John Duigan Interviewed: 22[...]s Television News Nick Herd The Liberation of Skopje Eric Fullilove Production Survey Edward Fox Interviewed: 252 The Film and Television Interface Reviews Gallipoli Brian Mc[...]rice Perera. Proof-reading: Arthur Salton. Design and Layout: Keith Robertson, Meredith Parslow, Andrew[...]pers Pty Ltd. 'Recommended price only. Articles and Interviews Government and the Film Industry Alienation and De-alienation Octavio Cortazar: Interview New Products and Processes Broadcasting and Regulation The Postman Always Rings Twice ISSN[...]285 286 287 288 291 Laurence Olivier: Theatre and Cinema Errol Flynn: The Untold Story 294 Steppi[...]ian Film Commission. Articles represent the views of their authors and not necessarily those of the editors. While every care is taken with manuscripts and materials supplied for this magazine, neither the Editors nor the Publishers accept any liability for loss or damage which may arise. This magazine may[...]oduced in whole or in part without the permission of the copyright owner. Cinema Papers is published e[...]Front cover: Robert Grubb, Mel Gibson, Mark Lee and David Argue in Peter Weir’s Gallipoli.[...] |
 | [...]W WIt was only a few years ago that inserters of film advertising in‘trade periodicals started a[...]are not deemed to be contractual." This arose out of litiga- tions over cast members being re- placed between the ads being printed and the films starting production. In Australia toda[...]proviso. The two recent examples are Wall to Wall and We of the Never Never. Keith Salvat, director of Private Col- lection in 1972. was announced as the director of Wall to Wall, for which he wrote a screenplay. Salvat did in fact b[...]oducer Errol Sullivan have issued statements. We of the Never Never, the first feature of Adams Packer Films, started shooting with John B. Murray as pro- ducer. Murray was then chief of pro- duction at Adams Packer. Not long into the shooting, Murray left the film and resigned from Adams Packer. His position as producer was taken by Greg Tepper, formerly of the Experi- mental Film Fund and the Victorian Film Corporation and now general manager at Adams Packer. Brian Rosen[...]illion film has only recently completed shooting, and executive producer Phillip Adams has claimed it has the lushness of Gone With The Wind, though adding wryly it is Aus[...]he Heart, which he is producing inde— pendently for Adams Packer. Igor Auzins‘ We of the Never Never. recently sub/er! to a change 0/[...]uarantors W Motion Picture Guarantors lnc., one of the major international companies providing compl[...]has expanded its operations to include Australia and New Zealand. Company chairman Douglas Leiterman, and legal counsel William Hinkson, came to Aus— tra[...]scene,” Leiterman said. “Australian producers and directors have already established a reputation for skill, integrity and dedication to their craft.” Leiterman, who has been a producer for 20 years, said producers here are to be congratulated on avoiding mistakes being made in other countries of turning out cheap, carbon-copies of Hollywood formula films. Leiterman said Motion Pi[...]rs Inc. has established an Australian corporation and is in negotiation with a number of Australian and New Zealand producers to provide completion bonds[...]d,“ Leiterman said. ”We believe the interests of the producer and his guarantor are identical, and we pull all stops to help him come in on-time and on-budget.” Part of Motion Picture Guarantors’ service is to provid[...]A 11- time Aussie Champs W W In the May 6 issue of Variety there is a listing of the “All-time Aussie Rental Champs". as of January 1, 1981. The Top 10 gross film rental ea[...]Grease $5,100,000 3. Jaws $4,620,000 4. The Sound of Music $4,437,000 5. The Sting $4,327,000 6. The T[...]er vs Kramer $2,746,000 10. Monty Python‘s Life of Brian $2,587,000 The top Australian films in the[...]c- torian Film Corporation, the State Film Centre and the audio-visual branch of the Education Department. In explain- ing the move, the Minister of Educa- tional Services, Mr Lacy, said, “The So[...]we provide through three.” The biggest upshot of the announce- ment was the threatened strike by s[...]rvice. Monty Burgess, assistant general secretary of the Public Service Association, said, “We recognize the need for people to be able to come in from Channel Nine or Hollywood and assist. We are saying they don’t need to take the whole lot out of the Public Service." Union representatives are continu- ing to have talks with the Minister in the hope of avoiding a strike. Meanwhile, the larger issue of whether amalgama- tion will benefit film production and film culture in Victoria is still to be debated.[...]t its first feature, Gallipoli, has been taken up for distribution by Paramount Pictures. This will be[...]nces Dates W W The following dates have been set for the 1981 Milan 44th Session of MIFED: 1. Indian Summer — October 19-25 2. East[...]ober 25- 30 MIFED is a concentrated market- place for buyers and sellers of feature films and television programs. Applica- tion forms will be available from the marketing and distribution branch of the Australian Film Commission when they are rece[...]annes Film Festival prizes were: Palme d’or Man of Iron (Wajda) Jury Prize Light Years Away (Tanner) Best Actress Isabelle Adjani (Possession and Quartet) Best Actor . Ugo Tognazzi (Tragedy of a Ridicul- ous Man) ” Best Screenplay lstvan Szabo and Peter Dobai (Mephisto) Special Jury Tribute Passione d’amore (Scola) Prize for Artistic Contribution Excalibur (Boorman) Award for Contemporary Cinema Looks and Smiles (Loach) and Neige (Berto and Roger) Best Supporting Actress Elena Solovei (Th[...]ers) Malou (Meerapfel) Ecumenical Jury Prize Man of Iron The jury was Jacques Deray (president), Ell[...]ye, Carlos Diegues, Antonio Gala, Andrei Petrov and Douglas Slocombe (messieurs). Ettore Scola’s Passione d’amore.winner of the Special Jury Tribute. United Artists Sold W W United Artists, a subsidiary of the Transamerica Corporation, has been sold to the MGM Film Company for $380 million, of which $250 million was paid in cash. |
 | [...]nfelt, has done a lot to revitalize his com- pany and he sees the acquisition of United Artists as a natural expansion. Not only d[...]ued at $300 million (in— cluding the James Bond and Woody Allen films), it gains a functioning dis- t[...]as well.According to Rosenfelt, United Artists and MGM will operate as separate production companies[...]s (Wayne Moor) General Groping (Alexander Proyas and Salik Silverstein) Tom Zubrycki's Waterloo,[...]ek in Melbourne W W Well-known British humorist and stage, screen and radio writer Barry Took will be visiting Melbourne for the Open Program of the Australian Film and Television School. In a round-Australia series of “pressure-cooker” screen-writing seminars, To[...]ok started with radio in the 19603, when he wrote for the celebrated “Take it From Here" series, and for television with The Army Game and its sequel, Bootsie and Snudge. In the mid-19605 he teamed with Marty Feldman and scripted many top-rating films, radio and television shows, After serving as comedy consultant for commercial stations and the BBC, including work on shows such as Father Dear Father, Laugh In and Monty Python’s Flying Circus, he joined the BBC[...]ustralian Film A wards m WM The Australian Film Institute has announced that the 24th annual presentation of the AFI/Australian Film Awards will take place at[...]provide a stimulus to all Aus- tralian filmmakers and to draw attention to outstanding achieve- ments by individuals and teams involved In the production of Aus- tralian films". The Awards presentation is[...]an Film Commission, which also sponsors the award for Best Feature Film. Television viewers throughout Aus- tralia will be able to see the presenta- tion of the 1981 awards via an exclusive live telecast of the event by the national network (156 stations) of the ABC. The executive producer will be Ric Birch, and Jacqui Culliton will be directing the show. A compere for the presentation will be announced at a later date. Screenings, for voting in the feature film section, are being conducted in Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane during June and July. Final nominees in all categories will be an[...]val W W The 1981 Melbourne Film Festival prizes for short films were announced on the closing night,[...]y (Jackie Raynal) Second Prize Amy (Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen) Third Prize Act of God (Peter Greenaway) Erwin Rado Prize Mallacoot[...]he Cat (Timor Hernadi) Groping (Alexander Proyas and Salik Silverstein) House of Flame (Kawamoto Kihachiro) New Jersey Nights (V[...]hance, History, Art Scott) Animation Award Down and Out (David Sproxton and Peter Lord) (James Overseas Interest in Restoration of A ustralian Films W W According to Ray Edmondson, director of the National Library of Aus- tralia’s film section, there is consider-[...]ration work, particularly on the 1927 silent epic For the Term of His Natural Life. Edmondson claimed this on his return from the 1981 Confer- ence of the International Federation of Film Archives in Rapallo, Italy. Edmondson said[...]every nation represented at the con- ference knew of the restoration of For the Term and of the work being done by the National Library to find, restore and preserve early Australian films. The restoration of the film, he said, caught their imagination because not only was the film the longest, most ex- pensive and one of the most success- ful made in Australia in the si[...]mission. Edmondson said, ”The AFC's investment of $68,030 enabled the Library to tint and tone various sequences in the film as they were originally, and to add a soundtrack . . . “The AFC funds are[...]stment was made because the AFC believes the work of the Library's National Film Archive is important and should be supported. We are hopeful that the AFC[...]rough commercial screenings in the capital cities and on television.“ Dominic Case, who with Glenn Eley was responsible for preparing the new print at Colorfi/m Film Laboratories, reports on how if was done: Many stages of editorial and labora- tory work were involved in the recon- struction of For the Term of His Natural Life, beginning with the duplication of nitrate prints onto safety stock, and ending with a color release print with optical soundtrack. The incomplete Australian copy of the film was supplemented by some reels of a recently-discovered American version, stills and out—takes from other collections. Dupe negative[...]screp- ancies were found between the two versions of the film: variations in story- line, as well as changed names in the cast and titles. Nevertheless, historian and film editor Graham Shirley was able to draw one c[...]nd missing frames, stills replaced missing scenes and a number of new titles were inserted to clarify the densely-w[...]t the action down to a more natural speed. Black and white fine-grain positives of the two basic versions were cut into one, and a dupe negative was made from this. Here, a sligh[...]e image into academy frame. With various sections of the film shrunk by different amounts, framing eac[...]ctly was far from straight- forward. The tinting and toning in the original print had, by this time, been lost In black and white duplication stages. The original system — printing on dyed stocks and processing through special chemical toning baths — is no longer practicable, and so at Colorfilm I developed an alternative system[...]the stock was pre-flashed to simulate the effect of various base tints, while normal color grading me[...]o put sepia, neutral or blue tones into the black and white image. The color scheme in the original print seemed to be rather arbitrary and, for the reconstructed version, it was used only as a rough guide. Selection of color was motivated by mood or emo- tions (red for anger or confrontation); by situations (green in the bush, sepia for interior) or to aid continuity (rapid cutting in[...]tint as the mutineers seize the captain’s wife, and blue tinting for the fighting above decks at night). Music was arranged by the Palm Court Orchestra from film scores of the period. After a live, fully-synchronized perf[...]d, a color dupe negative made to preserve the For the Term of His Natural Life, which has been restored by the National Library of Australia '5 film section. The Quarter tints and tones, and a composite print was finally made in time for the closing night of the Melbourne Film Festival. Australian Film Commission W W Betty Archer Betty Archer, who for the past three years has worked as European story editor for Warner Bros in London, has been employed as a con[...]ian Film Commission to assist in advising writers and filmmakers developing scripts for future productions. Before working at Warner Bros, Archer was story editor and personal assistant to the European head of production with United Artists (1972- 77), assistant story editor with Romulus Film (1971), story analyst and personal assistant to the managing director with Avco Embassy Pictures (UK) Limited (1970), and story analyst and personal assistant to the European head of production with Twentieth Century-Fox Productions[...]dviser. David Charles Field The general manager of the AFC, Joseph Skrzynski, has announced the appointment of David Charles Field as director — marketing and distribution. An Australian, Field was managing director of Collier Macmillan Pty Ltd. Cassell Australia Ltd, and has had considerable experience, nationally and internationally, in the field of marketing and distribution. Previously, he spent five years overseas and served, among others, as marketing director (Far East) for McGraw-Hill Publishers. Skrzynski said the AFC and the industry looked forward to benefiting, not on[...]onal marketing experience but also from his depth of knowledge of the related field of publishing rights, franchising, development of story properties and copyright. Field took up his appointment on June[...]cer- director from Ireland. joins OCP Ltd as film and television producer next month. O’Connell work[...]ann, the Irish state-run television organization, for eight years and his experience includes a weekly arts magazine, a comprehensive range of documentary productions and current affairs programs, as well as live music and drama production. Former executive producer of GOP, Bob Weis, has left to produce Women of the Sun, a series of films about Aboriginal women. Hoyts W Terry Jackman, managing director of Hoyts Theatres Limited, recently announced the appointment of Tony Malone as general sales and market- ing manager of Hoyts Distribution. Malone has had extensive experi- ence in all aspects of the film business. He joined Columbia Pictures in 1956 and progressed through bookings and sales to become director of advertising and publicity. In 1977, Malone moved to United Artis[...]ager, was appointed general sales manager in 1979 and general manager in 1980. * Cinema Pape[...] |
 | [...]is pleased to announce that the 198 1/ 82 edition of the Australian Motion Picture Yearbook can now be[...]tures, including:0 Comprehensive filmographies of feature film scriptwriters, directors of photography, composers, designers, editors and sound recordists 0 Monographs on the work of director Bruce Beresford, producer Matt Carroll and scriptwriter David Williamson 0 A round-up of films in production in 1981 0 Actor's, technicians and casting agencies 0 An expanded list of services and facilities, including equipment suppliers and marketing services For further details see tear-out order form. |
 | 224 — Cinema Papers, July-August Director of A Town Like Alice, David Stevens, left, during location filming. Director of photography, Russell Boyd, is at right. Poor Man[...]ll or ineptly executed, which deals with humanism and Christianity, coming down firmly on the side of the former but allowing a place for the latter, can be so airily dismissed as “soap opera”; and it is simply impertlnence to claim, with such abs[...]ive insight into the late Nevil Shute‘s motives for writing the original novel. The review of this program read like a sounding board for the prejudices and preconceptions of the reviewer about television in general, rather than this program in particular, and ended up as a vicious and unjustified attack on the producer [Henry Crawford], a man who has done more to improve the standards of television drama in this country than your elitis[...]recall you would not print Bert Deling’s review of Newstront because it did not conform to your edit[...]own right, with its own traditions, con- ventions and structures, and that it is not some form of poor man‘s cinema. Until that day does come, h[...]ies: If it is elitist to assess television drama for its integrity, originality and credibility, rather than for its Christian or humanist sentiments, then i am clearly elitist. And it was elitist of me to praise these qualities in A Town Like Alice. Of course, in a medium that measures success in terms of a mass audience, “elitism“ is a dreaded slur.[...]ogrammers tend to fall into another trap — that of trying con— stantly to please the mass audience[...]y patronizing approach is, I suspect, responsible for many missed opportunities. In particular, it seems to have been responsible for some of the weak- nesses of A Town Like Alice, though not the chief weakness which, as I argued in my review, sprang from the structure of Nevil Shute’s novel. i agree that television d[...]cinema”. The point i was making was that series and serials are different forms of television drama, with their own ”traditions, conventions and structure” (aside from the common structure imp[...]Editor replies: As David Stevens implies a lack of editorial control in printing Jill Kitson’s review of A Town Like Alice as written, several points need[...]to review Water Under The Bridge, The Last Outlaw and A Town Like Alice in October 1980, long before sh[...]t television mini-series in general. on the basis of the three pro- grams under discussion. Once the[...]bservant reader may well have noticed that Kitson and l dis- agree over Jack’s motivations in up- hol[...]n that Kitson’s review ”ended up as a vicious and unjustified attack on the pro- ducer", i can find no passage even remotely supporting of such a view. Kitson’s opinions are considered and, | suggest, well argued. Stevens also claims that Kitson, and Cinema Papers, sees television as “some form of poor man’s cinema". Firstly, a careful reading[...]ondly, Kitson’s views are not necessarily those of the Editor. Stevens ends by making a plea for intelligent debate on television. 1 can think of no publication in Australia that has so regularly and conscientiously pursued that aim. As to Bert Del[...]t was not printed because it was more in the form of a production report than the review we required.[...]lf to be, Bob Ellis, in his article “The Medium of the Future” (Cinema Papers, No. 32, p.115), des- cends to the level of schoolboy debate: presenting one side only of a somewhat pointless polemic. He even seems to s[...]fallacy that ‘serious' films are made in black and white, while color is used for ‘trivia’. is this the age-old argu- ment of ‘art’ versus ‘entertainment’? Can Ellis[...]color making the difference between L’Avventura and Zabriskie Point? As for Bergman, when he uses color it is for obvious reasons: to be symbolic, as in Cries and Whispers, or ‘clinical', as in Autumn Sonata or Scenes from a Marriage (made for television, by the way). The inspired lunacy of Bringing up Baby would work better in color than the insipid imitation of Bogdanovich in black and white. Anyway, if this supremely eclectic filmmak[...]onsiderable critic-historian — had deemed black and white a necessary element of the screwball comedy, he would have used it, as he did in his For- dian/Hawksian dramas. By the way, there was one Road film in color, and it was at least as good as the others — and streets ahead (roads ahead?) of the later black and white at- tempt to re-live past glories. Martin[...]on not to film Raging Bull in color was the spate of boxing pictures at the time. “We just wanted to[...]ers to preserve old color films. With all but one of his films in color, Scorsese — definitely one of the most important of contemporary directors — must believe you can make good films in that medium. 50 must Altman and Coppola and Lucas and . . . Mike Nichols’ preference for long takes would be there in black and white one feels sure. This is a question of style, not cinematography. Soggy senti- ments and some implausible argu— ments seep from Ellis' m[...]9605 can hardly be attributed to a smaller screen and a black and white image. Rather, it was the fact that it was cheaper and more comfortable in one's own living room. In any[...]re receiving color televi- sion in the 19605. As for A Man and a Woman, it hardly qualifies as a black and white film. Nor does If, into which they inserted[...]dn't get enough light to film the abbey in color. And you can’t really call Newstront black and white either — even if its best sequences were in black and white. Would Ellis honestly countenance the loss of the Yellow Brick Road magic of The Wizard of Oz (or does he count that as a black and white film because of the opening and closing bits)? Would he deny us the ”sunless remembered look of a surrealist painting" (as Farber has it) of The Quiet Man? Does he truly prefer the portentousness of High Noon to the epic grandeur of The Searchers? Would An American in Paris be the[...](About silent films, they were as seldom in black and white as they were completely ‘silent'.) What about the colorful childlike fun of The Crimson Pirate or Errol Flynn’s Robin Hood;[...]Gordon. Superman or Popeye; the exquisite beauty of Dersu Uzala (and so much of Japanese cinema); the restrained impressionist charm of the French cinema; the sensual exciting heart of |
 | Yank flicks like American Graffiti and Taxi Driver; and . .. the list is con- siderable.Surely what mat[...]well the cinematography serves the script? Ellis, of all people, should subscribe to that. It is good[...]con- straints, but let us not fall into the trap of supposing something superior to something else by virtue of one ele- ment alone. Are oils ‘better’ than w[...]this letter from my old antagonist, collaborator and creditor Denny Lawrence an honest difference of opinion. He has correctly pointed out some of the several exceptions to my contention that, as a rule,_ black and white is a better narrative, dramatic, tragic, expository, comic and fantastical medium than color, because, in Satyaj[...]g one: to wit, color is always the better medium, and that, ergo, Citizen Kane, Wild Strawberries and Casablanca would have been better films in color.[...]Popeye, Superman, The Crimson Pirate, Robin Hood and The Wizard of Oz). It is certainly an arguable contention that children, and adults remembering childhood, prefer to do it in the vivid and joyful colors of the original comics and storybooks. I grant him two bob each way on the musicals (which appeal to the same childhood sense of joy), three to two on the women’s films, like A Man and a Woman, Gone With the Wind, An Un- married Woman, Maybe This Time and so on, because costumes and interior decoration are very important to women.[...], comedy has always been more successful in black and white — most especially bad comedy (Abbott and Costello, The Three Stooges, Martin and Lewis, etc.). Tragedy however, and epic, and those films most involved with death, and the hugeness of life (Casa- blanca, Wild Strawberries, Rashomon, Jules and Jim, Citizen Kane, Julius Caesar, the Russian Hamlet, the Russian King Lear, and so on) look so exactly right in black and white that it is impossible to imagine them in an[...]tral contention that color trivializes what black and white makes noble. There are, of course, honourable ex- ceptions to every rule, and honourable hybrids of every rule and its opposite (like It, and Newsfront, and The Wizard of Oz). But the prevailing rule of the cinema that color is a must for every subject and black and white has no place in the cinema at all is demon- strably destructive of the cinema, which is now so like its trivial, free-lunch cousin color television as to be on the point of expiring altogether. Cinema has to be again the special experience it used to be or it has no future. Part of that experience, what we call the silver screen,[...]n all the retro— spective cinemas in the cities of the world. And they are not disappointed. Bob Ellis Dear Sir,[...]”, No. 32, p. 115) about color as against black and white cinema. l have not read anything until now[...]y experience, though, most people I know (outside of “cinemato- graphic circles") would not agree wi[...]ght consider whethe. it is also a cultural thing, of a somewhat “elitist" nature, by which people, like he and I, are “afflicted"? I found his explanations v[...]iven me some con- crete ideas, which before were, for me, hazy and unformulated. This issue is most impressive alto- gether - content, format and layout. I don’t always read Cinema Papers, but[...]m now on if this stan- dard continues. Thank you for some entertaining and informative writing. Adrian Hann Back Issues W W Dear Sir, We are trying to complete our library of back issues of Cinema Papers. We are missing issues 4, 6,7 and 8 andof absolute gar- bagel ls Bishop asking for reform of the Creative Development Branch's method of allocating funds for specific projects? Or is he perhaps looking for a public venue to “hard knock" those who, in his opinion, are the Celluloid Gods (my expression) of the industry we see developing before us? Bishop[...]s he understand the responsibility, on both sides of the fence, for making available/receiving this finance. it is obviously back to play school and building blocks for him! While the success of Don McLen- nan‘s Hard Knocks is admirable, the end result by no means is justification for the methods. In the light of what happened, perhaps McLennan should have sough[...]Crombie, I believe i was the one who financed two of his early films (no Creative Branch in those days) and, if I remember correctly, Davis Cup and Solvol Makes You Beautiful were both very success[...]ob- viously knows his ABC, so now take him aside and teach him the rest of the alphabet.” Perhaps you might like to work on my latest scripts: The Bermuda Circle and 47 Interesting Things to Make With Ear Wax? I did indeed finance two of Don’s earliest films by buying his first projec[...]st-class working order. Andrew Rowan The Making of Mawson W W Dear Sir, We are making a documentary on Sir Douglas Mawson and hope one of your readers may be able to help with archival material. We know of the Frank Hurley Ant- arctic material in the National Film Archive, Canberra, but are keen to get hold of other material, particularly film, on his life and work: his Antarctic expeditions in 1907, 1910-15, 1928—32; his involvement with the University of Adelaide and geological studies in the Flinders Ranges; his wedding to Paquita Delprat in 1914; his death in 1958 and his State funeral. Would anybody with any inform[...]Sir, I am moved to write so as to make you aware of a feeling of disgust felt by myself and others studying drama at the University of New South Wales. The past three issues of Cinema Papers have ali used cheap, sexist and myth-perpetuating cover photographs. Since the pu[...]ied in demanding that a stop be put to this spate of sickeningly sexist covers. Surely your marketing[...]s. We believe you can cor- rect the present trend of your covers because past covers have been ad- mirable. Cinema Papers and the AFC evince a desire to produce a magazine which can be a medium for a continuing national film culture. The effect of ydur decisions to print the photographs in Issues 30,31 and 32 is to imply that you define our film culture as being as sex- ist and myth-orientated as Hollywood’s. Well, often thi[...]your past record that you, as editor, are capable of taking a path different from merely perpetuating sex- ism, the myths of perfect screen idols and cinema as superficial sensual arousal. Noric Dil[...]View W W In Cinema Papers No. 32 (pp. 183, 185 and 211), Lesley Stern reviewed Paul Eddey’s tele-f[...]81 to coincide with a repeat television screening and Cinema Papers’ desire to review the film, albei[...]denda raised questions about the preceding review and ended by inviting Letters readers of Cinema Papers to give their opinions about the process ofof moral righteousness? Why do I feel that this article is setting up a discourse in which only one view (that of the author) can be expressed?“ Perhaps it is pr[...]nly if one accepts such notions as: the existence of ‘scientific objectivity’; the negativity of authorita- tive writing and the possibility of demarcation into clearly separate areas, “the particularity of an individual film” and “general considerations about the cinematic app[...]to write a review" is to presuppose the existence of some equally definitive and universally accepted concept of the function of the act of review. Cer— tainly this article blithely steamrolls its way over Lesley Stern’s review of The Alternative, seemingly unaware that the function of review might differ from writer to writer, let alone reader to reader. By ignoring the question of ‘function’, the article is then free to criticize the review for such ‘sins’ as effacing the personal identity of the reviewer and minimizing the power of the viewer. It is interesting to note that one of the prime criticisms levelled at this review is that of pedagogy. This stems from a distaste for authoritative writing which abounds in Australia and seems to have its roots in the notion that to be authoritative is to ‘teach’, and that ‘to be taught’ is to be put in a position where the ‘pupil’ is stripped of ‘individuality’, enabled to act only in a fas[...]se, why is The Alter- native review so repugnant? For this review is directed toward showing how much such a film ‘puts into place’ and directs the position from which the viewer can perceive andof criticism/review is, “to show the text [film] as it cannot know itself, to manifest those conditions of its making about which it is necessarily silent".[...]ew to examine how a film works, “in the context of television drama or in the context of contemporary Australian Cinema”, is assuredly to ask questions of style and/or approach, but to posit such approaches as pref[...]ning function would seem to be faintly ludicrous. For there is no reason to prefer these ap- proaches a[...]al/subjective value system that affords no access and brooks no argument because of its intensely private and closed nature. “But rather than turn this into[...]be more productive to turn the broader questions of ‘func- tion’ over to the readers. . " There[...]-old review about a three year-old film published and used to initiate this argument? M. Sarfaty 1. T. Eagleton, Criticism and Ideology, London, New Left Books. 1976, p.[...] |
 | [...]ER or OUR DREAMS The award—winning director of Mouth to Mouth talks to Scott Murray about the disappointments of Dimboola and the anticipated success of his latest project, Winter of our Dreams, Starring Judy Da vis and Bryan Brown. Dimboola —————O In r[...]the film was that Jack Hibberd, the scriptwriter, and I had different concepts. It would have been better if someone had either come in and taken over the direction and stuck more to Jack’s concept, or if Jack had released control and I had done it more to mine. Understandably, as author of the original play, he was loath to do so and we ended up making compromises. However, I don’t share some of the critics’ reservations about the film. I feel they approached it with inbuilt expectations and didn’t allow themselves to accept the conventions under which it operated. For example, it was widely criticised for its theatri- cality. Certainly, it was larger tha[...]two geriatric buttocks, is the ancient under-rump of the world, so to speak —— hence the Australian passion for steak”, you can’t have them delivered natural- istically. I was asking for a height- ened performance level from the cast to match the screenplay — the actors weren’t to blame for any excess. In fact, I thought there was a number of excellent perfor- mances. Do you think this crit[...]herefore, influence an audience? It is a matter of degree. Certain films from overseas are given such huge publicity build-ups that they succeed irrespective of how the critics react. Most Australian films, on[...]which have got good critical receptions overseas, for example, have almost in- variably done very well here. How difficult is it for Australian filmmakers to experiment? If you are[...]ell to air the film at overseas festivals to try and amass a good critical response before releasing the film here. This would then point some of the critics in the right direction. Also, the pub[...]When you make a film that fails, you need to try and separate your- self as a person from the failure of the film as a whole. As the film’s director, I rightfully received much of the blame. Certainly, I made a number of mistakes and misjudg— ments which contributed to its failure[...]you Lou (Judy Davis), 0 Kings C ross prostitute. and Rob (Bryan Bro wn), an (’J’Jflt‘llt‘al. at Rob's trendy Sydney home. Jo/m Dutgan '3 Winter of our Dreams. can’t take a critical drubbing too personally, otherwise you’ll become embittered and paranoid fairly quickly. Why has it taken three years to do a film after “Dimboola”? I tried a number of projects, some of which I had been preparing before I was approache[...]y, the scripts were about political subjects. One of them was about the ethics of violence as a political weapon in advanced Western democracies. It told the story of a woman who had been involved with a group like the Red Army Fraction in Germany, and who had come to Australia on a false passport aft[...]er believed in the usefulness or ethical validity of that sort oftactic in the particular circumstance of an affluent Western democracy. Thus, she was bur[...]d as immoral, yet which had resulted in the death of someone she loved. However, despite this, she was still searching for an alternative form of political expression. That was a project for which I was unable to get money. I submitted it to a number of film bodies and did a great swag of drafts. Is there a resistance to making films a[...]icence by government bodies is expressed in terms of saying the film is not “commercially via[...] |
 | [...]the Mouth to Mouth scale. With sales in Europe and a moderate release and television sale in Australia, I would have got th[...]ding was being used as a meeting place by a group of pensioners and by the youth in the area as a dance hall. That was another low-budget film and also unsuccessful in finding funds.Then there[...]only one large filmmaking centre. In the US, most of it is in Los Angeles, though there is a certain amount done in New York. Winter of our Dreams ___—__. What is “Winter of our Dreams” about? It is about the relationship of a prostitute and the owner of a specialist bookshop, whose lives are brought together by the suicide of Lisa, a mutual friend. The book- Above: The bride ( Natalie Bare) and bridegroom (Bruce Spence) at their wedding reception. John Duigan's Dimboola. Right: Lou on the streets of Kings Cross. Winter of our Dreams. when I was developing and rewriting a number of scripts. In all, I put up about 20 applications to various bodies before I got The Winter of our Dreams accepted. During this period, you left Melbourne for Sydney. Why the move? I felt I had been living in Melbourne long enough. I wanted a change and thought of Sydney because I like the beach. There are additional benefits, of course, like the fact that the laboratories and most of the equipment-hiring services are in Sydney. The locations are also varied and Sydney is a much more photogenic city than Melbou[...]r to move to Sydney because it is more the centre of the industry . . . Yes, I probably did. The Australian Film Commission is up here, and the New South Wales Film Corporation has a much l[...]ke a difference. There are also a lot more actors and technicians up here. 228 —- Cinema Papers, Jul[...]), was a radical student leader in the late 19605 and Lisa was his girl- friend during those days. At the start of the film, Rob hears that Lisa has committed suicide and he wonders about the direction her life took in t[...]ostitute, played by Judy Davis. Lou had been sort of adopted by Lisa in the last year of her life, Lisa seeing in Lou someone who was following in her footsteps. The film then follows Rob and Lou’s relationship and contrasts their lifestyles. Lou has the diary tha[...]e Lou reads it, the more she identifies with Lisa and the more her relationship with Rob begins to para[...]Rob is thus confronted indirectly by the memories of Lisa and the sort of person he was 10 years ago. Winter of our Dreams actually derived from some of those earlier scripts. The male character, for example, is indirectly related to one of the characters in the script about terrorism. The[...]ain female character should die at the beginning of the film and that her presence, or rather her death, is the trigger for events that then take place. There seems to be continuity of characterization in your work. Some people, for example, will view Lou in “Winter of our Dreams” as having a lot of similarities with Carrie in “Mouth to Mouth”.[...]onal? They are both outsiders living on the edge of society, but otherwise the similarity between them is solely in terms of how they earn a living. Carrie was starting to wo[...]Mouth to Mouth — though that was a small part of the film’s canvas — and Lou is a prostitute. So, there is that occupation[...]quite different. Carrie had a much stronger sense of self-preservation and self- orientation. Lou is more a mosaic of bits and pieces of behaviour she has observed in people who have impressed her. She welds these elements into an amorphous and fluctuating whole. Carrie is more consistent and more directed by her ambitions. She would end up very different to Lou, just in terms of the type of person she is. In the screenplay of “Winter of our Dreams”, the social, political and economic forces have less influence on the chara[...]nal interaction . . . Political comment in films and books can take a variety of forms. The script I wrote about the terrorist was[...]g here is attempting to examine representa- tives of a generation who were once allegedly radical, or who once paid lip-service to radical ideas, and to see where they have gone. In part, it is an indictment of educated middle-class people. Because of their various advantages, they have the greatest potential for generating social change. So, while the ap- proac[...]ndirect, it is no less political. There is a lot of discussion today as to whether the radicals of the 19605 “sold out” or realized that much of their energies had been misplaced, |
 | Rob and Gretel (Cathy Downes), two people who are making[...]tionship work "reasonably successfully”. Winter of our Dreams. either ideologically or pragmat-[...]ttended the morator- iums have sold out. The kind of momentum that a society like ours has is very difficult for people within it to assess accurately. It is hard to detach oneself long enough to take stock of what one is doing with one’s life. In a way, the events of the film cause Rob to do just this: he is briefly dislocated from the mainstream of his life and glimpses its direction. There is a great diversity of pressures involved, and it would be too simple to condemn him out of hand. With Rob and Gretel, I have attempted to draw people who reflect some of the diversity of influences and pressures that have occurred in the past 10 years. It is very important that the audience likes them and is aware that these people are complex, sensitive and committed in their own way. It is just that their[...]ies towards Lou. But ifit’s too great, the rest of the film will collapse. There is a scene that seems to me to sum up the tone of the script, and that is when the 18 year-old girl is reading an expensive art book in Rob’s bookshop and she complains about the price in the hope that he[...]am hoping, in the way characters have been drawn and the way they are played, the irony of this kind of behaviour will be evident to the audience without it being too heavily pointed out. Likewise, the behaviour of Rob and Gretel is full of ironies. There are many films that have been rather unsuccessful in making really telling criticisms of the middle class. It is very easy to send up the middle class and make it look ridiculous, but I think one is more[...]ying with sympathetic characters who exhibit some of the contradictions and ironies that we live. An audience has far more room for personal examination if you allow it to engage it[...]me time, it can also discover weaknesses. Gretel and Rob have independent affaires and are open about it. And, except for a moment of dialogue, this situation isn’t questioned. How[...]lly. It has become, in a sense, a pre- occupation of theirs; it is, for example, a more important part of their mental life than anything political. Elements ofjealousy and unease still remain, however. The big difference between Rob and Gretel is that Gretel is some- one whose life is fairly successful and goal-oriented. She is working as an academic and she likes her job; she has ambitions which are be[...]’s rela- tionship with Lou revives the memories of the sort of direction that he could have taken had he made di[...]when he was involved with Lisa. Rob has n0w opted for a different lifestyle, with its cerebal and rational approach to the world. But this rests ra[...]al, intuitive person he can still remem- ber from university days, and can still feel inside. And the more Lou identifies with Lisa, the more Rob John Dakar: is confronted by those elements of his personality he has put in cold storage. Towards the end, after Rob has backed out of his lunch with Lou, Rob says to Gretel, “I thin[...]reted that as much as a comment about the dangers of Gretel and Rob’s relationship — i.e., of cutting oneself off from others — as much as it[...]is both. Rob is very much making a choice to opt for a continuation of his present life- style, and to opt for a drier way of relating to the world. But. he is obviously hit in the guts by seeing Lou disintegrating in front of him. One could equally speculate that he might, a[...]go somewhere quite different. The disintegration of Lou is so strong that one continually expects her[...]sa’s. . . Well, it may be. The departing image of the film ties the general and particular elements of a major part ofthe film‘s theme. Lou is seen allied, or together at any rate. with this small group of people demon- strating against uranium. Sh[...] |
 | and the GOVERNMENT 230 — Cinema Papers, July-Augu[...]n 1970, federal governments have been look- ing for an elusive formula to foster a profitable nationa[...]ll way, from the relatively non-elitist character of film culture. Films are also, of course, potential domestic and export income earners. The preoccupation has spawned the recommendations of the 1972 Tariff Board Enquiry, the creation of govern- ment film bodies to administer government grants and investment, the Peat Marwick Mitchell Report in 1979, and private invest- ment incentives through the Incom[...]Government has attempted to saddle the prob- lems of a high-risk industry, involving continu- ally increasing film budgets, in a country of small and dispersed population and with foreign- dominated distribution/exhibition c[...]ing discontent over the tax deduction as a method of assistance. On September 30, 1980, the Prime Min[...]h a one-year, 150 per cent income tax write—off for investment in Australian films. He also promised tax exemption of up to 50 per cent of the original investment. The write-off was to be allowed in the first year of expenditure. It was estimated that the concession[...]. In December, the Federal Treasurer, Mr Howard, and the then Minister for Home Affairs, Mr Ellicott, issued a joint stateme[...]ey reiterated that investors would “be eligible for the write-off in the first year of expenditure”. As if to allay fears about the risk of investing on the strength of an election promise, the ministers said, “It is hoped that these details will provide a sound base for investment decisions by prospective investors . , . pending the enact- ment of the necessary legislation . . .” So, it was not surprising that the industry — primed for the faithful implementation of the original proposal, but increasingly jittery a[...]m the original promise by stating that the owners of the copyright would be eligible for the 150 per cent write-off in the year in which t[...]out-face produced an industry outcry about breach of faith and it was suggested that some investors would now h[...]ed some intensive lobbying by the Australian Film and Television Production Association. A compromise[...]ment with film producers between October 1, 1980, and May 27, 1981. This amendment-to-the-amendment-to-[...]investors in 52 films, involving a total budget of $45 million. But the question of’whether it is appropriate for government to support the industry by giving high[...]in .1978. Despite industry pressure at the time for a 100 per cent write-off over a 12-month period,[...]f, but it did draw attention to other tax schemes for film investment which did not have the government seal offor investors is to abuse it slightly.”1 A trickle of such tax money found its way to “legitimate”[...]meaty” schemes also resulted in a proliferation of “Barrier Reef box brownies”. If genuine money was a little tight, Mr Howard’s announcements in June and September, 1980, relating to such schemes put an[...]reaction by the industry to Howard’s clampdown and an extremely vocal lobbying group in the AFTPA, i[...]into Fraser‘s election policy speech. In view of the Treasury’s $2 million cost estimate of the original proposals, it seems that I.[...] |
 | [...]stimate escalated from $2 million to $130 million and Treasury reportedly received 170 applications for the con- cessions, the stage was set for some amendment to the original proposal.In justifying the change, Mr Howard said the generosity of the concessions had led to their “exploitation” in “unacceptable ways”. Of major concern was that the concessions would be used for tax deferral: an investor could commit funds at the end of a financial year so that if the film in which he[...]omise reached on June 3, 1981, was clearly a coup for the film industry and the legislation, as it stands, will not drastically alter the situation for most investors attracted by the original proposal[...]ginal proposal allowing the write-off in the year of expenditure. Neither will it affect investors in television and film documentaries, nor in other productions that can be completed in one year. The year-of—marketing write-off will, however, affect films[...]int that the amendment will discourage the making of quality films rings true. So, to an extent, does the converse argu- ment that the year of marketing deduction will encourage “quickie” films of dubious merit. But the fact remains that the fil[...]idized local industry. The 150 per cent write-off and the tax exemption on profits offer far more protection than that of the clothing, footwear and motor vehicle industries. The concessions are cer[...]er the Income Tax Act. It is the very generosity of the incentives —— so it is argued — that co[...]m Corporation’s backing was desired as a matter of policy — there is now little need for producers to seek financial assistance from the g[...]control on produc- tions, through the involvement of the Austra- lian Film Commission and the state film corporations, has been lost. Presumably some sort of control will exist in the determination of films that qualify for the tax concessions, but by whom in Home Affairs it is not clear. It is an irony of the incentives that they were introduced to encourage a national industry and yet large proportions of budgets may be spent in procuring imported talent to ensure profitable overseas sales and so secure the tax-exempt profits. ther issues ar[...]ment’s virtual blessing to minimize their tax and it is questionable whether this gels with the muc[...]her income bracket’s tax problems to the extent of $130 million a year. Such questions aside, if there is a need for taxation incentives in the short term to stimulat[...]omise between the ineffective two-year write- off and the more outrageous schemes with which sections o[...]term, but “in the long term, the restructuring of the distribution/exhibition system in Australia may obviate the need for such measures . . .” Senator Ryan’s suggesti[...]Board’s Report in 1973 on Motion Picture Films and Television Programs. The Board’s principal recommendations were for: l. The establishment of an independent statu- tory body to administer grants and other financial assistance, and to operate a dis- tribution network in competitio[...]ng networks; 2. A scheme to reduce concentration of control by the Hoyts and Greater Union/Roadshow exhibition chains by forcing them to sell a proportion of their cinemas and to remove vertically-inte- grated distribution and exhibition through divestiture of shareholding; and 3. A single television program buying agency. T[...]block booking. This not only lowered the standard of films shown, she said, but it also put Australian[...]ed that the states could co-operate in a strategy for regulation of distribution/exhibi- tion. She also pointed to va[...]ealth constitutional powers which might be useful for such regulation. Presumably, a Labor Government of the 19803 would have been more prepared to take o[...]sial recom- mendations. Labor‘s former Minister for the Media, Senator McClelland, recommended to cab[...]Motion Picture Distributors Association clearance for a standard form film hire contract between distributors and exhibitors.Z he reasons supporting divestiture of major theatres from chains and divorcing exhibitors from distribu- tors is att[...]t lead in practice to an overwhelming preference for the Australian product, such films could at least[...]alleviated to some extent. Accordingly, the need for big budgets and im- ported talent would be reduced and so would the need for financial assistance from the Govern- ment. Howe[...]been suggested that reducing the bargaining power of the exhibition majors may disproportionately strengthen the market power of the distributors. They could achieve this situati[...]lm print supply according to their own assessment of an outlet’s revenue.‘ Perhaps the solution is for either government- subsidized exhibition outlets with specific national cultural objectives or subsidy of local films at the box-office. It has been argued[...]to profit-conscious investors.‘ The legislation for 150 per cent tax write-off plus tax exempt profits for film investment recently introduced to federal pa[...]rgument largely redundant. as shown by the amount of tax money now available to the film industry. But in terms of policy, the box—office subsidy may be preferabl[...]would not discriminate between different classes of taxpayers — they would not enable the pro- fess[...]. An appropriate forum where alternative methods of government assistance to the film industry could[...]rini. 3. Cinema Papers. January. 1974: “A view of the Tariff Board Report on Motion Picture Films". Barrett Hodson. 4. Cinema Papers. April. 1977: "The Case For Subsidy”, Tom Stacey. Cinema Papers, Ju[...] |
 | [...]he new film industry tax concessions as generous, and the Treasurer, Mr Howard, has done so publicly on[...]en subjected to so many limita- tions, conditions and uncertainties that the overall result is not near[...].Following the election campaign announce- ment of the Prime Minister, Mr Fraser, of the proposed concessions on September 30, 1980, and thejoint announcement ofthe Treasurer and the Minister for Home Affairs and Environ- ment, Mr Ellicott, on December 18, 1980,[...]ook the Government until May 27, 1981, to prepare and introduce the necessary legislation. With some la[...]th earlier, in response to enquiries by producers and investors who were becoming increasingly nervous[...]e Treasurer explained that the matter was complex and that care was being taken to frame the concessions so that they would not be used for tax avoidance. “Tax avoidance” has become an[...]rapped. The issue surely is whether the allowance of any particular deduction is con- sistent with the scheme of the Act or with equity or with Government policy.[...]ion to mean that, while going through the motions of fulfilling its promises, the Government was seeki[...]conces- sions still available under Division 10B of the Act, with which Australian film investors have become familiar over the past two and a half 232 — Cinema Papers, July-August[...]film industry by rectifying certain uncertainties and anomalies in Division 10B. Division 103 he latest amendments have left largely untouched the scheme of Division 10B, which permits the capital cost of acquiring an interest .. in the copyright in a ce[...]to be written off as a tax deduction at the rate of 50 per cent per year, commencing when the film ha[...](so that the copyright has come into subsistence) and the copyright interest has been used for the produc- tion of assessable income. The amendments to Division 103 (some additions to Section 124K, and the insertion of new Sections 124KA and 124WA) are technical provisions designed to ensure that, particularly in the case of investing partnerships, where a deduction is take[...]nder Division 10B. It remains uncertain (because of the require- ment in Division 10B that the taxpay[...]come) whether a unit trust is an appropriate form of organization for investors wishing to obtain deductions under Divi[...]st, with the production company acting as trustee of the film for the investors, is (apart from tax considerations) clearly the most convenient and efficient method of organization, it is a pity that the Government ha[...]he film is generating foreign income. (It is fear of this section, not any wish to avoid tax- able inc[...]monly excluded investors from receiving any share of a film’s foreign earnings.) It is a pity that[...]l24Z. No change has been made to the eligibility of films for certification as Australian films under Division 103, nor to the procedure and criteria for such certification. It appears that certification under Division 10B is separate from any certification for the purpose of the new tax concessions, and must be separately applied for. The certification provisions of Division 103 are rudimentary and contain some illogicalities. For instance, the Division clearly contemplates that[...]regard to some matters — e.g., the owner- ship of the copyright in the film, which may not be known until the film has been made. The former Minister for Home Affairs, Mr Ellicott, overcame such difficulties with a blend of liberality, commonsense and a sympathetic attitude towards the practical needs of film pro- ducers. It remains to be seen whether t[...]be as constructive. Despite these uncertainties and the modest rate of write-off that it offers, Division 10B has some attractions for investors. There is no pro- vision in Division 103 for a certificate to be revoked. So if, as in the pas[...]they stand. Division 10B is not subject to many of the limitations and conditions attached to the new concessions. Thus, there is no restriction on who may apply for a Division 10B certificate; Division 10B is not limited to certain categories of films, nor is it limited to first owners ofcopy- right; taxpayers obtaining deductions in respect of capital expenditure under Division 10B are not sp[...]are they denied tax exemption under Section 23(q) and 23(r) in respect of foreign source income; and capital expenditure for the purpose of Division 103 does not have to be “at risk” or[...]rectly” in producing a film in order to qualify for deductibility. Investors wishing to rely on Division 10B should however be aware of the amendments to Division 3 which also became law on June 24, 1981, and which (with retroactive effect) applied |
 | Tax and the Film Industry the expenditure recoupment provisions of Division 3 to capital expenditure that would othe[...]restrict film investors from obtaining leverage for the purpose of Division 10B by financing their investments with[...]obtained an “additional benefit”. If the sum of such additional benefit and the tax that would be saved by allowance of the deductions exceeds the amount invested (i.e., in the case of an investor who is in the 60 per cent tax bracket, if more than 40 per cent of the investment is financed by non-repayable loan[...]he investor is not allowed a deduction in respect of any part ofthe investment. There is provision for the Commis- sioner to amend the investor’s asse[...]hing to rely on Division lOB should also be aware of the new Section 124ZAE, which provides for a taxpayer to elect that the new concessions shal[...]tions under Division 10B must take the precaution of making such an election, even where no applica- tion has been made to certify the film for the purpose of the new concessions, because the investor has no means of preventing such a certificate from being applied for and issuing later, in which case the certificate wil[...]ursuant to Section 124ZAB(9) or Section 124ZAC(4) and may operate to exclude Division 10B unless the el[...]efore the date the investor lodges his tax return for the year for which a Division 108 deduction is first available. The New Concessions W he general scheme of the new tax concessions has received wide publicity: a 150 per cent deduction (under a new Division lOBA) for capital invested in the production of a certified Australian film, plus tax exemption[...]om the film up to an amount equal to 50 per cent of such investment. The limitations on these concess[...]nder Division lOBA, an irrevocable certi- ficate for a film — i.e., a final certificate under Sec[...]ntime, a provisional certificate can be obtained for the reassurance of investors. However, a provisional certificate ma[...]Minister simply changing his mind or his policy, and deciding that he is no longer satisfied? The same question arises in relation to the availability of a final certificate. The pre- condition of obtaining a final certificate is the same as that for a provisional certificate — i.e., the Minister[...]appears that a separate application must be made for a final certificate, and as there will inevitably be further facts for the Minister to consider (e.g,, the manner in whi[...]that a final certificate will issue as a matter of course whenever the Minister has granted (and not revoked) a provisional certificate? Althoug[...]is directed to take into account in determining, for the purpose of certification, whether a film has or will have significant Australian content are (save for the addition of “details of the produc- tion expenditure incurred . . . or . . . budgeted in respect of the film”) substantially the same under Division lOBA as under Division 10B, only certain kinds of film are eligible for cer- tification for the purpose of the new tax con- cessions. Excluded is any film that is wholly or to a sub- stantial extent (a) a film for exhibition as an advertising program or a commercial; (b) a film for exhibition as a discussion pro- gram, a panel program, a variety pro- gram or a program of like nature; a film of a public event (which includes a sporting activit[...]the public is normally admitted — whether free of charge or on payment of a charge); (d) a film forming part of a drama program series that is, or is intended to be, of a con- tinuing nature; or (e) a training film.[...]ust be “a film produced wholly or prin- cipally for exhibition to the public in cinemas or by way of television broadcasting, being a feature film or a film of like nature produced for exhibition by way of television broadcasting, a documentary or a mini-series of television drama”. (Section 123ZAA[4].) “Tele[...]by cable. Note that a film produced principally for dis— tribution in the form of Videocassettes would not be eligible. Will the M[...]- fined to films produced wholly or principally for the Australian market. What is meant by a mini-series of television drama? How many episodes may a series have, and still be “mini”? Will a certificate be obtainable for a pilot film made for the purpose of obtaining a production order for a continuing drama series? If so, will the certif[...]s incorporated in the series? Does the exclusion of a “drama program series . . . of a continuing nature” disqualify a continuing do[...]onditions on which the new 150 per cent deduction for film investment is available are set out in Sect[...]expended capital moneys in pro- ducing, or by way of contribution to the cost of producing” a certified film. Section l24ZAA(6[...]to exclude “moneys such as brokerage (C) fees for arranging that a group of people join together to produce a film”. But t[...]to a pro- ducer ofassembling the finance needed for a film and the cost of assembling the men and the materials. Would the Treasurer argue that the costs of transporting cameras and crew to a location are not direct costs? A practi[...]it clear to what extent the following categories of costs will be regarded as direct costs of produc- tion: 0 The Costs of acquiring underlying rights; 0 The script develo[...]such as in- curred on research, location surveys and budget preparation; Producers’ fees; Executive producers’ fees; Film producer’s indemnity and negative risks insurance; Errors and omissions insurance; Completion guarantee fees; and Legal fees. If the Commissioner takes a hard line on such costs, it is clear that a substantial percentage of the typical film budget will be excluded from the[...]A further question concerns the common practice of a film producer getting a production underway by[...]ner contend that the investors’ re- imbursement of such costs does not constitute direct expenditure[...](a) a taxpayer has expended capital moneys y way of contribution to the cost of pro- ducing a film; and (b) an amount of moneys has been expended in producing the film out of moneys that include the moneys expended by the tax- payer, then, for the purposes of this Division (lOBA), so much of the moneys expended by the tax- payer as the Comm[...]taxpayers have contributed towards the production of a film, to attribute actual expenditure out of the production account to the contributions ofa p[...]explained why such a power is needed. The wording of the section, however, goes far beyond that intent[...]lOBA whenever the investor has invested by means of contribution to a produc- tion account from which[...]normal case). What use will the Commissioner make of Section 123ZAH? Section 1242A] empowers the Commis- sioner, in a case where a producer pays for goods or services supplied by someone with whom t[...]aling, to recognize as expended only such portion of the payment as the Com— missioner regards as reasonable. A similar pro- vision is in Division 108. For all its uncertainty (there is, surprisingly, scar[...]t appear to have caused practical diffi- culties for producers and investors. Concluded on p. 297 Cinema Pa[...] |
 | [...]ericans reportedly discontent with the confusions and expenses of Cannes, the LA. Market premiered this year in April. Attracting mostly American producers and distributors, it proved a considerable success — so much so that it looked as if many of its delegates would bypass Cannes. If this happen[...]uld inevitably have to take third spot behind LA. and Mifed as an in- ternational marketplace.As a re[...]was this year replaced by concern about the size and importance of the crowd on the Carlton terrace, a favored meeti[...]did turn up were the U.S. majors, as well as many of the bigger foreign buyers. Summarizing the Festi[...]ctor, Robert Chabert, pointed out that the number of films shown in the market was 326 -— the same as in 1980. And while the number of registered buyers and sellers was down from 2548 to 2100, the amount of business done seemed comparable with recent years[...]Cannes is still a very large festival. This year, for example, the daily attendance at screenings in th[...]eraged 8300. included in that is 3000 odd critics and journalists. No other festival comes remotely close to so dense a concentra- tion of world press. A successful main event screening ca[...]ia coverage. The French have long known the value of this, opening many of the major Festival films throughout France, durin[...]stival. Overseas distribu- tors tend to let a lot of this publicity dissipate with long lead-ups. but this is often inevitable as many films are only seen for the first time at Cannes. Another oft overlooked point is that Cannes is primarily a festival, and only secondarily a market. This year, with a lower market profile, the critical func- tions of the Festival gained a renewed prominence. So whil[...]ajor dilemma confronting the reviewer/journalist. And if one comes away from the Festival liking only five or so out of 48 seen, as i did this year, one inevitably wonde[...]c- tion process was at fault or whether the range of films was just poor. A. Competition _ Michael Cimino’s epic account of the Johnson County wars, Heaven’s Gate. is clea[...]om 219 to 149 minutes, what remains is a shambles of a reconstruction. Despite that, parts are brilliant and the film still ranks as a major American film of recent years. Cimino is nothing if not a brillia[...]al filmmaker. Even put- ting aside his themes — and he is one of few Americans to discuss their society with any v[...]a consummate technician. The opening three shots of The Deer Hunter, for ex- ample, with the truck sweeping into town, und[...]ands as a metaphorical curtain between the values and ideals of an isolated American perspective and those of an outside world, are riveting. And if Cimino does, like his fellow italian-Americans Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese, slip too easily into the overwro[...]ated — his characters can be on the ‘wrong’ and ‘right’ sides simultaneously — and he resists caricature, even when dealing in a cod[...]on), the Harvard graduate-come-backwater sheriff, and lrvine (John Hurt), Kristofferson's class- mate who has taken the path of least resistance, siding with his class against the immigrant settlers; Best of all, though, is Champion (Christopher Walken), the killer paid by the landowners to track down and eliminate cattle thieves, invariably poor settler[...]y in the right, but as the landowners press claim for the settled land, he finds himself unintentionally sided with the op- pressors. The ambiguity of his position, and of the times, is reflected in his resignation to a changing moral code that will engulf him. And in the film’s best scene, he in- vites the loca[...], Ella (lsabelle Huppert), to lunch with a couple of local hunters at his modest timber hut. The complexities of the scene — Cham- pion's tentativeness in expressing his feelings for Ella; the quiet that frighteningly pre-figures a carnage; the simple purity of the life of the hunters compared to prostitution of sex by Ella and killing by Champion — are beautiful- ly conveyed in hushed tones and silence. Inexpressibly touching, it is not the le[...]cellent scenes: the final battle, with its echoes of all battles ever fought; the roller-skating dance; the waltz between Averill and Ella; the dance at Yale. Equally, there are many[...]charge into the battle; the overly-pointed scenes of the land- owners‘ fiendish scheming) and the casting is not always appropriate. Hup- pert is largely unconvincing as the madame, and Kristofferson is, at times, at odds with his role[...]h has been unbalanced by the cutting. John Hurt, for one, gets second billing on the credits but is rarely seen, and at one point (the Harvard graduation) is cut shor[...]clearly vital in verbally enunciating the ideals of the wealthy, educated Americans, ideals that would decay into the alcoholism of the conscious-pained lrvine or the racial, class-motivated sadism of Canton (brilliantly played by Sam Waterson). |
 | [...]remony. Heaven’s Gate. Top right: Willie Nelson and James Caan in Michael Mann's Bressonian Violent Streets (Thief). Below right: step-(laughter (Ariel Bresse) andof those profiting from it. Almost Bressonian in its stark- ness, the film is a triumph of technique. ignoring the ”neo-realistic” conven- tions of the genre (as Mann put it), he has concentrated o[...]formalized, give voice to the psychological state of his character.Visually, this sparsity works well, the camera making much out of neon lights reflected on greasy road surfaces or run- ning along the distorting curves of a chrome fender. Aurally, Mann relies on an elect[...]ch as Mann‘s extraordinarily detailed depiction of a safe robbery. Another excellent film is Bertrand Blier‘s Beau pere, the story of sexual attraction between a thirtyish man and his 14 year-old step-daughter. The film opens wi[...]lless nightclub. Abruptly, he turns to the camera and recounts his story. His live-in companion (“We sailed together in the same boat for eight years without anyone parachuting provisions[...]t), but returns to live with Remi. There, a drama of illicit desire begins: “She was 14. That‘s the age when a mirror never stops sending back im- ages of the most bewitchlng, dazzling and amazing sort. She had decided to use my eyes as h[...]ather, after all, is still a man, like any other, and there was nothing to stop her from seducing him. She had decided to make me melt and then to rule over my downfall. “Personally, i[...]I've always been riddled with fine little cracks and the least jolt makes me cave in. “80, think of me what you like. Yes, it’s true, | caved in.” Clearly, a difficult and delicate subject. Blier handles it with ferocious honesty and clarity. Marion's desire to seduce is matched by Remi's to succumb. It is a romantic, sensual and, in a sense, in- evitable attraction. When their moment of first sexual contact comes, a delicate kiss after[...]lly prolonged by Blier, it is a triumphant moment of sensuality. Rarely, if ever, have l experienced so erotic a se- quence in cinema. Flemi and Marion's subsequent atfaire is the consummation of a desire as valid 1 All quotes written by Blier, from Flemi’s point of view, and printed in the Beau pere press book. as that between people of any age; it is not the seduction of a minor. Moralists have continually attacked the[...]in years (one need only notice how many American and British feminist writers have decried the 13 year gap be- tween Prince Charles and Lady Di). Blier, who has confronted moralists in[...]egrity by being as explicit as his story demands (and that is emotional rather than visual), but not th[...]ways will. Andrzej Wajda's L’homme de fer (Man of Iron), predictable winner of the Palme d’Or, is a disappointing film. Like s[...]s seemingly sub- jugated aesthetic considerations for political expediency. Taking up the threads of his earlier Man of Marble, Wajda tells of many Poles affected by the birth of Solidarity, from dock workers at Gdansk to jour- nalists and filmmakers searching for the values of the new movement and the political corruption that necessitated its growth. But instead of devising a narrative where action determines not[...]cal is- sues, Wajda has (lazily, i believe) opted for little more than a Four Corners—style reportage. Endlessly, he shows people discussing the problems of Poland and the possible solutions. it is fictionalized documentary interviewing, and rather uninvolving in its one remove from ac- tu[...]pointing, however, is Wajda’s unashamed support of Solidarity. History may, as they say, forgive him, but a total lack of objectivity makes for a toneless film. This is doubly surprising as Waj[...]who has seen the contradictions behind the ideals of the noble, and highlighted the virtues of the damned. This lack of balance has also led to the film having a slightly out of date look, like that of a six- month old Nationwide. Although only comple[...]n it, with Solidarity already adopting techniques of its opposition (like suppressing alternate trade unionism) — just the sort of savage irony Wajda has delighted in showing up in[...]tale about the games played between the powerful and the subjugated. As Isabelle Adjani is particularl[...]m, never looking down on her luck or in dire need of support, her knowing accep- tance of social and sexual tyranny, in return for financial security, is un- believable. lvory. as[...]shows us, as he puts it. the “moral shading” of characters. He criticizes aspects of per- sonalities but never damns outright, challenging an audience's predilection for quick judgments. in particular, Maggie Smith’s Lois Heidler, wife of the boorish “H.J.“ (Alan Bates), is particular- ly sympathetic, one recognizing much of Cinema Papers, July-August — 235 |
 | [...]sabelle Adjani in James Ivory’sfi/m adaptation of Jean Rhys' Quartet. oneself and others in her pathetic at- tempts to preserve her position through childish game-playing of the type H.P, demands, Unfortunately, Smith’s[...]d Maddox Ford). H.J.’s downright unpleasantness and Adjani’s inap- propriateness as the girl, Marya, counter all Ivory's attempts to liven this drama. And as is the habit in most period films (this is set among the chic foreigners of 19305 Paris), the set and costume designers seem determined to swamp the action in gratuitous demonstrations of their crafts. Bernardo Bertolucci’s La tragedia di un uomo ridicolo (Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man) is, in the director’s words. the first film of his “mature period". Returning to the much-used Po valley, Bertolucci tells of a peasant (Ugo Tognazzi) who has become a wealthy cheese manufacturer and owner of a hideous villa which apes the local architectur[...]t his new binoculars — given to him by his son, of course). But, the kidnapping is not all it seems: did, for example, the son plan it? While frantically tryi[...]ho shares those Italian cinematic characteristics of being affected, un- likeable and ungrateful; a son who rebels against bourgeois values as much out of boredom as anything else), he also wonders if he[...]y. There are several predictable twists (instead of being ahead of his audiences, 236 — Cinema Papers, July-Augus[...]), before everything is ‘resolved‘ in a spate of Borges-like ambiguities of the kind that hampered The Spiker’s Strategy.[...]tter as much if the film had the visual boldness of his best films. But one product of this ”mature period” is a strangely hesitant camera. Instead of his usually spectacular cranes and tracking shots, there are jerky and meaningless one metre tilts, or short pans back and -. 9.- v- m . " I. M ”~22“. forth. It is as[...]ritating. Dusan Makavejev’s Montenegro or Pigs and Pearls is a virtual re-make of his preceding Sweet Movie. Again it is the story of a girl/woman who drifts acci- dentally into a counter—cultural under- world, and who, by experiencing its varied horrors and delights, is forced to re-evaluate her beliefs be[...]ng to her previous life, albeit changed. Instead of a hippie theatre group in Amsterdam, in Montenegro it is a Stockholm nightclub for immigrant Yugoslavians. Through confrontation with their different cultural, let alone sex- ual and culinary, habits, Marilyn Jordan (Susan Anspach)[...]returns home an anarchist, poison- ing her family and her husband‘s psy- chiatrist — as if they wer[...]is somehow validates the badly mis- judged satire of the preceding 97 minutes. Makavejev’s films have often been saved by his sense of outrage and the absurd; here, his presentation is as flaccid as his narrative is repetitious of earlier, better works. lstvan Gaal’s Cserepek (Quarantine) is yet another Hungarian tale of middle-life crisis. Here, the central character has stagnated; his feeling for life lost. He drifts, seemingly irreconcilably, i[...]vice from friends; professional help by doc- tors and psychiatrists; even an encounter with a dying man[...]se. This dreary film plods through its catalogue of failed exterior solutions before hitting on the s[...]Marina Lind/1a]. Per Oscarsson (psychiatrist) and Erland Josephson (husband) in Dusan Maka vejev's Montenegro or Pigs and Pearls. |
 | [...]port Isabelle Huppert, as Alphonsine P/essis, and Fernando Rey as her suitor. Maura Bolignini’s L[...]helping/impinging on others, thus depriving them of their right to act individually? B. Divers _ Mauro Bolognini‘s La dame aux camelias, already a critical and financial failure in Europe, is a minor but pleas[...]mas jun. as well as Dumas’ ac- tual fascination for the courtesan, Alphonsine Plessis, on whom he bas[...]nt narrative, which is set in parenthetical codes of the beginning and closing of Dumas’ play, works rather well, particularly in the cut from the death of Alphonsine to its representation on stage. The major problem with the film, and it near ruins it, is the casting of Isabelle Huppert as Alphonsine. Huppert, an actre[...]power to subjugate men, in her drive to rise out of the poverty in which she was born. Despite this weakness, the film is memorable for the exquisiteness of Piero Tosi’s costumes and the excellent photography by Ennio Guarnieri. The[...]priest finds himself unable to control his desire and commits suicide, make the film an interesting add[...]les Iemmes is his best film in years. The subject of a rave critique by French novelist Andre Pieyre d[...]ered reputation” In this umpteenth adaptation of the Robert Louis Stevenson novel, Borow- czyk has[...]is clearly at home among the medical bric- a-brac of the era, and the sets, again designed by himself, make good use of period styles while also creating a dark labyrinth of unknown chambers that mirrors the human mind. Th[...]r Jekyll (Udo Kier) assumes the per- sonification of Mr Hyde, are cleverly done. After pouring the[...]controllably, the water splashing about violently and the light playing on its discordant surface contrasting with the blank dimness of the surrounding room. After a prolonged submergen[...]orowczyk’s other films — despite the presence of Marina Pierro, seen in his Heroines of Evil. The film‘s tone is also less off-hand than many, reminding one most of Story of Sin in its Isabelle Adjani and Sam Neill in Arid/26?] Zula wski's Possession. literal and dramatic coloring. Jacques Doillon’s La tille[...]s collapse, signalled by her abrupt leave- taking of her husband and retreat to the family home. There, she regresses into a second childhood, seeing in her love for her father the possibility of a new, truer kind of relationship with men. Unfortunately, the film Is a little too measured and intense to be dramatically satisfying, and though Jane Birkin and Michel Piccoli do much with their demanding roles, they remain Birkin and Piccoli. Doillon has not really worked Klaus Kins/ti, as Sir Stephen. and concubme in Shit/l Terayama's The Fruits of Passion. with known actors before and he seems unsure about how to handle them — and, most importantly, how to submerge their off-screen personas. Incest is also the theme of Christian Braad Thomsen’s documentary, The One[...]hich looks at the sexual feelings between parents and their small children. Thomsen argues that suppres- sion of this natural desire leads to fascist aggression.[...]cinating, but Thomsen brushes over it too quickly for one to be convinced. Luc Berard’s Plein sud is[...]lead one to expect. Patrick Dewaere is Serge, a university lecturer who goes to Barcelona to give several classes at the university. Bored by marriage and the stifling nature of academia. he turns a chance meeting at a station[...]. But the escape proves its own trap, a pennlless and sexually—spent Serge finding himself enmeshed i[...]rationality by which he made his career, he opts for adventure, for the unknown. The film is a little long but Dewaere is most engaging when Serge loses grip of his senses. And Clio Goldsmith. as the girl he meets, shows fine comic flair and enough vitality to carry the story through its le[...]lton’s Tendres cousins is the least interesting of his three features — despite a screenplay by Pa[...]a- tion with adolescent sexuality, particular- ly of girls, Hamilton has attempted to make a provincial French farce in the style of C/ochemer/e. But the result is resolutely unfunny, a tedious parade of mistimed slapstick and crude characterization. Only in the last part, wh[...]er films seen include Shuji Terayama's The Fruits of Passion, an adaptation of Pauline Reage’s Return to the Chateau, Eric Roh[...]londorff’s sur- prisingly uninventive The Moral of Ruth Halbfass, Shohei Imamura’s disap- pointing Eijanaika, John Boorman‘s erratically magical Excalibur and Andrzej Zulawski‘s crazed, hysterical bu[...] |
 | Of the present crop of Australian documentaries, few have grabbed as much attention as Stepping Out. Made for $55, 000fr0m diverse sources, it demands attention because this is the International Year of Disabled Persons and thefilm is about the mentally retarded. It also h[...]how people come to be tagged mentally handicapped and what happens to them as a result.The groundwork for Stepping Out was laid more than two years before[...]Gennaro had also set up a nightly drama workshop, and out of those workshops came “Life — Images and Reflections”, a season of mime and dance performances staged at the Sydney Opera House in November I 979. _ _ Stepping Out is a record of that theatrical event. I t is also a glimpse of the lives and aspirations of the people who took part. One of the things that emerges most clearly from the film is that the residents love Gennaro and their expressions of affection for him are some of the most moving scenes in the film. Seven months after the Opera House performances, and shortly after some board members saw an early cut of Stepping Out, Gennaro was dismissed. No official reason was given. Two Sunshine residents feature in Stepping Out: Chris Dobbin, who is 3] years old and an extraordinarily expressive dancer; and Romayne Grace, 21 years old, who provides the film ’5 commentary. Stepping Out was produced and directed by Chris Noonan — his first independen[...]t Film Australia? There was only the possibility of making Stepping Out. but it was by no means certa[...]because I had a friend who was working with Aldo. and knew the play would be performed at the Opera Hou[...]Cinema Papers, July-A ugust to the home a number of times and had always refused. Finally. I accepted an invit[...]. The performer-viewer role seemed distant enough for me to cope with. I saw Chris Dobbin dance at that performance and he really got me interested in the residents as the subject for a film. Direclor Chris Noonan (rig/i!) talks wit[...]hat the presence ofthe crew would do to the event and to the performers. But on balance he felt ChrisNoomm that, because they had never performed for a mass audience, it would probably be good to accustom them to lights and all the paraphernalia of a shoot. That way they would not be awed by the s[...]ecessary first, then I had to go before the board of the home and get their permission. It took a lot of convincing. Did you have any problems working wi[...]ple who see themselves as “normal” are afraid of coming in contact with the mentally handicapped:[...]oting, there were all sorts ofbarriers between us and them, but they are such warm and emotional people they unconsciously challenged th[...]t. It involved conquering something in ourselves, and that was one of the major rewards of the whole exercise. Were there technical problems in filming the residents? In “Best Boy”, for example, all Philly wants to do is look at the camera? At the beginning, the camera caused quite a stir and we did have problems with a couple of people when we set up the lights. One girl in par[...]ribly upset by the effect ofthe light on her eyes and thought it was affecting her health. But that was[...]ks, but before that we had come in one day a week for three successive weeks, set up the lights and did a bit of filming. This was to capture some of the early rehearsals, and also to get the cast used to the equipment. Anot[...]rticularly between our two main characters, Chris and Romayne. They hated the mics. |
 | flaming feeling they were an invasion of their privacy. Romayne particularly resented the intrusion and it put a great distance between her and us until we realized what was happening and discarded the mics. Why did you select Romayne G[...]he suggested herself: she was the most articulate of the residents I met. When I first went to the ho[...]ly retarded” . . . Exactly. There are a number of people I felt should not have been in the home. They are there only because they have been deprived of the normal training we receive, which enables us[...]ple in the home should not be there? That is one of a number of themes which are implicit in the film. But Steppi[...]. It is a commonly- shared feeling that the value of a mentally-handicapped person is one of a living thing, but not ofa human being. Gennaro[...]approach to the film was a non- intellectual one and I had decided against a commentary. I wanted the[...]e Home. Stepping Out. Left: from the performance of 5Li/e — Images and Reflections”. Stepping III. about Aldo would have created an intellectual focus at the end of the film. The film leaves the audience on a very high emotional level and to have then put up an institutional issue would[...]ent were you cashing in on the International Year of Disabled Persons in making the film? To the ex[...]ard to raise the budget? Incredibly hard, except for the initial contribution from the Department of Social Security. It put in $30,000 and for that has the right to an unlimited number of prints at cost price and full non- commercial rights. There were different deals for the other contributors. Cinema Papers, Ju[...] |
 | [...]anies that contributed money — Boots,Unilever and GMH — did not want rights to the film . . . No[...]I’ve had a mixed reaction. Romayne’s parents, for example, were very disappointed with the film. I think they reject a lot of things she says. Certainly, some members of the home’s administration felt the thoughts Ro[...]assumption that I had written what she had to say and asked her to read it, which was not true. On the[...]ped letter. Those three were the only successes, and they put in about $1000 each. Did any of the financial contributors want to see a script?[...]proposal explaining that there was no possibility of having a script in advance, because it was an event and we could not predict what was going to happen. I agreed to show all sponsors, including the board of the home, the film just before we approved it for printing. Naturally, I could not give anyone edi[...]rol, but I guaranteed to listen to their comments and to consider them before making the final cut. Tha[...]me tried quite a lot. On what issues? The board of the home was very worried about the amount of affection shown among residents, and between the residents and Aldo. One of the board members commented that the relationship shown between Aldo and the residents was an unnatural one. Essentially, I think, it embar- rassed them and they put a lot of pressure on me to delete those scenes. Some of the board's comments were incorporated in the final cut, but only because we had to cut 10 minutes out of the film. How do audiences react to the film?[...]the film. Apparently at the Sydney Opera Gennaro and residents during rehearsals. Stepping Out. In[...]lmmaker. He made his first/71m at school, on 16mm and In black and white. Called Could It FCSPOHSCA Happen Here?, it[...]quite a curiosity. It was screened on television, and its makers were interviewed for television and written up in newspapers. The Sunday Telegraph, for one, reflected.“ “It is a sad commentary on[...]olboys, using an old—fashioned borrowed camera and a budget of $18 7. 35 can pick up third prize at the Sydney Film Festival. ” The success of Could it Happen Here? turned Noonan’s aspiratio[...]d to become an art teacher but, at the suggestiOn of producer Joan Long, he applied for, and got, a job at Film Australia as a production assi[...]ame one oft/refirst intake at the Australian Film and Television School, joining Phil Noyce, Gill Armstrong and Graham Shirley, among others, for the one-year “interim ” course. To what exte[...]you come down to a much more realistic assessment of its influence once it is finished. From the feedback I’ve had, I think the film has changed a lot of people’s perceptions of the mentally handicapped, Have you had much reaction to the film from parents and residents? 240 — Cinema Papers, July-August |
 | Chris Noarian What was the AFTS looking for in that first year? For people with at least limited experience in directing who had shown they were somehow committed to film. And what were you looking for? Confidence, essentially, and that is exactly what it provided. I was quite scared of direction, because I didn’t have enough experience to know whether the decision I had made off the top of my head, to work in film, was going to turn out[...]nt, in that it was a very intense year, with each of us making three films and a number of studio, video programs. If you had been offered[...]r was a long time to spend outside the mainstream of the industry. As it turned out it was excellent,[...]else. But if the course had involved three years of commitment, I am sure I would not have been interested. On the other hand, the film school is looking for different types of people now, with less emphasis on would-be direct[...]school libraries — but I threw myself into it and convinced the sponsors that they wanted somethin[...]e me the respect they did. I had really long hair and must have made a strange impression. It was a bit of a surprise to be treated as someone who knew what[...]proach. At any rate, while we were shooting part of the library series at Sunshine North Tech I had t[...]ee shop in the area. What other films stand out of those you directed at Film Australia? There was[...]day after the cyclone hit, Film Australia flew me and a cameraman up to Darwin. We had two days in which to shoot a cinema short, and that had to be released by the end of the week. In an extraordinary show of efficiency at Film Australia, that schedule was observed. Tony Buckley cut it and I recorded a personal commentary for it. The film was very successful. It was screened all over the world within a couple of weeks of release, mainly because Film Australia gave it away to everyone. You also made one ofand it received very mixed crits. It has a lot offans and I still have people saying how much they liked it, but a lot of the reviews were bad. I have been quite affected by the mixed reaction to Cass as most of my films have had very good press reaction andand I owe the place a great deal. Up until I made Cass, every project was a new challenge and further extended my abilities. Cass, the only[...]But after Cass I became involved in a number of projects in the developmental stage which fell th[...]a. It was a very hard decision. I had spent most of my life working in institutions and it was a very secure existence, with the money coming Chris Noonan (left) directs Michele Fa wa’on and John Waters in Cass. in every week. By contrast, I could not see myself making a decent living out of independent pro- duction; the precedents were not good. But I was in a situation of being frustrated and not making films — and the films I could have been making were not exciting to me. So Ijust had to get out and trust fate. Stepping Out has been sold ext[...]en helped by the fact that it won the competition for "Best TV Program in the Spirit of International Year of Disabled Persons” at MIFED last year, a bronze award at the New York International Film and Television Festival, First Prize in the 6th Annual Dance Film Festival of New York and a Jury Prize at the Oberhausen Short Film Festival Germany. At the time of this interview, the film looked like returning a small profit, some of which will go to the Lorna Hodgkinson Suns[...] |
 | [...]sidered it would make redundant the vintage black and white Hollywood features that had been bought as[...]ackages in their hundreds in the 19505. The films of MGM and Warner Brothers were thus returned to the parent companies and made available as hire copies on the Australian 16 mm market.At this point, however, a number of things happened which are revealing of the Australian film scene. Most of the famous titles and the work of celebrity stars were found to be lost, worn-out o[...]305 horror films, the Jeanette MacDonald musicals and the Oscar winners were missing from the list. The last of the Greta Garbo films went off to New Zealand at the start of this year. That meant that what was left was not[...]lated by even the more intrepid repertory cinemas and film societies. In particular, several hundred ofthese were the program films of the pre-1935 period which are virtually unknown for a variety of reasons. Film scholarship tends to dismiss these films as stage—bound and clumsy by comparison to the better known silent classics which precede them, or the films of the so-called Golden Years of Hollywood which follow. Season programming, to wh[...]eartedly, also encourages this neglect. The stars and major filmmakers of this period are not known and no programmer will play to empty seats a season of the work of, say, Lee Tracy 0r Sam Hardy, or of a director like George Hill or Wesley Ruggles. The result of all this was that when Neil Mac- Donald and I approached Amalgamated Distributors in the Hoyt[...]holds the two collections, they were on the point of destroying the copies to make space. Several hund[...]ing the duplicating materials are still available and in as good condition as they had been 20 years ago when many of the copies were made, it would cost more than $1000 to order, print, ship and acquire a new copy of one of these vintage titles. Such material would never r[...]ia. That means, ifthese prints are destroyed, one of, if not, the largest collec- tions ofthis rare material outside the US. would go and such material would never again be available in Australia. The management of Amalgamated treated us sympathetically — not on[...]ness to turn a few hundred thousand dollars worth of film into $42 242 — Cinema Papers, July-August An ecstatic Ramon Nova/7'0 in Laughing Bo y. worth of silver, but also from a genuine interest inthe past of the film industry. We were allowed to look at anything we wanted and the destruc- tion order was cancelled - temporarily at least. Noel Cislawski, of the NSW Education Department, took the project seriously and found us a corner in which to screen. We then beg[...]one might have expected to be in- terested. Some of the reactions were amazing, including astonishmen[...]American films which didn’t expose the infamies of the CIA. A repeated response was that we should tell them when we were running Public Enemy and Camille. Only a handful were able to appreciate that these films were a different and possibly more important part of thejigsaw to the known and respected titles. Certainly one of the things which makes these films interesting is[...]eriod. So, on the copies went — sometimes five and six a day for two months — more films than the National Film Theatre gets through a year. The faint-hearted fell away and the determined sat there muttering, “Not Franchot Tone and Madge Evans again!” The survivors had the uni- que experience of seeing a substantial cross- section of the program films 0fthe early years of sound, in quantity, not unlike the way the habitual filmgoers of the period first saw them and many of the same reactions were noticed. One of the most fascinating opportunities was the discovery of the voices of many people thought of as silent film stars. Erich von Stroheim regular[...]ice Wife (Lloyd Bacon, 1930). Betty Compson, star of many of her husband, James Cruze’s films like Pony Expr[...], Sam Hardy notices her provocatively exposed leg and growls, “Cover that thing up.” Ernest Torrence from Tolable David and The Covered Wagon proves to have a ringing delive[...]nth Heaven. The discovery is Ramon Novarro, star of the 1926 Ben Hur and usually heard only as the weak romantic interest in the Garbo Marta Hari. A remarkably full collection of his work remains, including his first talkie, Dev[...]t as “Gascon”. The film challenges the limits of the studio’s sound technique, recording speech and music at the same time and running two cameras on some scenes. More impress[...]varro is an Italian coalminer playing quarterback for Yale; Daybreak (Jac- ques Feyder, 1931), an unexp[...]zler adaptation flawed only in an evasive ending; and The Barbarian (Wood, 1933), with remarkably torrid scenes with Myrna Loy. Ver- satile and personable enough to impress in all these charact[...]ven more interesting are two legendary casualties of the early sound period who emerge in a new perspective. John Gilbert was said to have a voice unsuitable for sound film. However, in Woods 1929 Way for a Sailor, he is victim more of awful material written, in part, by Gilbert’s r[...]same year, has given Gentleman’s Fate the look and much ofthe pace ofthe best of the Warner films he was then doing. It also has the Italian-American setting, the sleazy hotel decors and mannerisms like the two-shot with the profile at frame edge. Gilbert and Louis W'olheim make their scenes together gripping |
 | and, even with its unnecessarily moralizing ending, t[...]dis- covery.It is also possible to see the last of Buster Keaton’s work as a star in the MGM sound films and it is true that these are only a shad0w of his great silents. A few of the old routines are restaged on a smaller scale[...]than talented straight actors like Gilbert Roland and John Miljan. The story that he was undermined in favor of the studio’s new comic, Jimmy Durante, seems un[...]y Stooge role in both films. Keaton’s delivery and agility have the qualities needed to make him a s[...]films available suggest another plausible reason for his decline. These titles include the extraordina[...]rst release. There is also an extensive selection of the work of round-faced, wise-guy comedian William Haines, now forgotten, though he was star of the studio’s first talkie. All these films, li[...]ling, clumsy style despite good production values and talented collaborators. This house style is a long way from that of Paramount which served so well at that studio in the contemporary films of the Marx Brothers, Mae West, WC. Fields or Maurice Chevalier. Their films are still admired and widely cir- culated. One team did manage to springboard a career out of the cycle where Keaton faltered — the Three Sto[...]rington, made by Raoul Walsh, where the beginning of a faster, more modern style is becoming evident. This was to develop in the Red Skelton and, later, Marx Brothers comedies. The work of the directors is similarly intrigu- ing. Few cele[...]re are no films by John Ford or Alfred Hitchcock, and only one inferior Cecil B. De Mille: his re-made[...]films which give a new perspective on the range of the programmers with which he spaced his major wo[...]plot. Midnight Mary (1933) is a faster prototype of the MGM woman’s film. College Coach (1933) surp[...]into an attack on football in educa- tion. Heroes For Sale (1933), though occasional- ly misjudged, has[...]ad” dragging left-wingers from the dinner table and running them out of town. And, of course, Public Enemy has survived. Warner staffers, notably Michael Curtiz, Mervyn Le Roy and William Dieterle, are represented by the lively, earlier co-features and also by the major works by which they are remembered, like Dieterle’s Emile Zola and Curtiz’ Sea Wolf. However, the discoveries of the batch are by two little known and misrepresented film- makers. One is George Hill.[...]Big House (with All Quiet the out- standing film of the era), he has not become a celebrity. In the[...]/lt': Bani \v/sou NHL] Mars/m Him! in The Affairs of Martha. Bot/mu: RIHHI/i/ Rt’uk’tlll m[...] |
 | [...]sell. They didn’t think it would be commercial and they just refuse to distribute it. I’ve had to take my print and I will show it in England next week.I understand they showed it in one cinema in Los Angeles and they have refused to show it so far in New York.[...]at it would be much more commercial than a number of films that have been released recently . . . Most people are of that opinion, including ourselves. When I made th[...]lm Festival Program. Paul Newman, Bibi Andersson and Nina van Pal/and! in Altman ’5 Quintet. 244 - Cinema Papers, J[...]t Altman has made I 7 films in the past 13 years and has developed a cult following rivalled by few mo[...]man ’5 films have mostly proved to be the bane of the major production and distribution companies which have supported his w[...]led to measure up at the box-office. As a result of wariness about the commercial prospects of two of his most recent films, the decision was made not to release them publicly in Australia. The films, Health and Quintet, have had their only Australian screenings at the 1981 Melbourne Film Festival. In view of this situation ‘Cinema Papers’ arranged for Robert Altman to be interviewed by Australian wri[...]obert Altman directs Nina van Pailandt on the set of The Long Goodbye. A head of distribution and he simply said he didn’t think the film was going to work and it was his judgment not to release it. Do you th[...]olitical? Are they objecting to the film’s view of American politics? I think it’s political with[...]yed the film was fired; Norman Levy had moved up and he said, “I don’t like this film, and we are not going to release it.” Then, wham, I[...]Frank Barhydt come to you with a full screenplay for “Health” No, he came to me with an idea, a f[...]had more to do with the background elements. None of the internal story was there. Prior to tha[...] |
 | became fascinated with the idea and then we started making the political parallels.This is the second time you have done that. It reminded me of the campaign in “Nashville” . . . It’s lik[...]ough Nashville involves a presidential candidate, and that was a campaign as the public sees it. In Health, we parodied the two political conventions and the way our system is run. The idea was that the[...]were on. I felt that would have been a good time for it, but they didn’t agree with me. While you w[...]re really saying in that film? That is the basis of the film. I think it ties in with gambling and game-playing. You have to put yourself in jeopard[...]ople in the film the dogs ate; theyjust sat down and died. Given that you create a totally artificial world in “Quintet”, why do you go to all the trouble of filming on location, with the extraordinary clima[...]n those climatic problems. It would Sissy Spacek and Shelley Du val! in Three Women. game of the same name. There are actually rules and one can play it Oh yes, it’s quite a good game. There are quintet clubs in the US. and they are now having tournaments. What came first — the idea for the game or the idea for the film? The film first, but I always had the idea that there was a game of the culture, like backgammon, chess, mahjong, dominoes. I wanted a game that represented the culture and that eventually became the end of the culture. The game survived longer than the cu[...]cultures. have cost us a fortune to go on stages and do that. This set — the ruins of Expo ’67 — was already there; so was the weat[...]s below zero, so wejust froze everything in sight and created our own Ice Age. Have there been distrib[...]her broadly. Fox promoted it, mainly on the basis of Paul Newman, and the film was not accepted by the public or the cr[...]it, although those who did really liked it. Most of the public found it tire- some and dreary; it would have been better to release it and let it build its own reputation. You tried very hard to do that by preventing too much advance discussion of the film . . . Yes. But they treat all the films[...]eleased, again by Fox, within two or three months of Quintet, and it had no names in it. It was a perfectly lovely,[...]t it didn’t do business in the first four days, and they pulled it out. Health was next, and I think it was on the basis of the failure of Quintet and A Perfect Couple that when it came along they were just glad to get rid ofand in your films it’s almost as if you are portra[...]ipt, certainly not mine. But it’s collaborative and tends to become incestuous, and you keep feeding back and forth to each other. But I produced all the films and had control of them. You are known as a director actors like to[...]o that often the same people reappear in a number of your films . . . That’s true, and it’s not by design or contract or anything else. I get to know what the actor’s full range is, and I can see how he can move into other areas. Are[...]don’t have any big dream. I Allen Garfield and Ronnee Blak/ey in Nashville. basically concentrated on the two coasts . . . I have spent most of my adult life in Los Angeles or New York, but I t[...]is no question that you take your roots with you, and they certainly form your opinions and your view of things. I am definitely a midwestern person, alth[...]t actually lived in that area since World War 2. For the past 12 years, when you have been making films, you have been involved as producer, director and writer on almost all of them. I don’t know of any films you have made since “M*A*S*H”, in w[...]dn’t have a writing credit on California Split, and on Nashville I think Joan Tewksbury had the sole[...]body crosses over. Popeye was Jules have no idea of being like John Boorman who carried the Arthur le[...]at attracts you to a project? I have been looking for a common ingredient in your films and I think it’s stretching things to find one . .[...]mmediately how to do. It has to present that kind of challenge. I do two kinds of films: what I call essay films, which Health, Nashville and A Wedding are; and what I call interior films — Three Women, Images and, in a way, Quintet. Except “Quintet” is an a[...]s a little more than an allegory. Quintet, McCabe and Mrs Miller and Popeye would fall in the same category. Th[...] |
 | [...]know. The usual procedure is that I start a film and I have a vague idea of how it’s going to be. Then we do the screenplay and we start and, I think, God, this is entirely differ- ent. So,[...]than the one I started with. Then it’s finished and I look at the end results. I realize that this is[...]ou have any favorite films? I like all my films and, likechildren, you tend to favor your least suc[...]pleased ifI had a film that went out like Grease and made $200 million, and yet everybody I ran into said, “That’s the wo[...]depress me more. The experience I have with most of my films is that commercially they are not very successful, but I can always find a little pocket of cult people who seem to like them. Does lack of commercial success make it difficult to make fi[...]ease, but It .‘n 5‘; 1‘ Julie Christie and Warren Realty in McCabe and Mrs Miller. different and they are all total in themselves. There is nothin[...]gain about them. Ifthere are flaws, that is part of their nature. Quintet is now starting to surface in revival areas more, and I think it’ll probably follow the same pattern as McCabe and Mrs Miller. That was also highly unsuccessful when it was first released and now everybody talks about it like it was a great[...]as a masterpiece; they have short memories. Most of my films seem to do that, which pleases me more than having a big commercial hit. People rediscover them, and they seem, eventually, to find an audience. Doe[...]about it. I am more interested in an appreciative and responsive audience, no matter how 246 — Cinem[...]ould be. I think there has to be a certain amount of struggle in it to keep you awake, to keep the adrenalin going. You are fighting for your life all the time, your artistic life. You are playing quite a major role now as a producer, not only for your own films but for other people’s as well. Is that a role you see[...]uing? I will ifI can; I like it. There are a lot of films, and there are a lot of filmmakers, a- lot of material I see that I think should work. Mainly it’s the artist, and if I can help that happen, it’s helping the whole industry; plus, it’s acceptance for my films. Do you see people like yourself, who work outside the major studios and put together films that are outside Fernando Rey and Viltorio Gassman in Quintet. the distribution mainstream, being able to survive? Well, I am surviving and I think it’s difficult. It’s bad on your ulcer, but not only will we survive, we are really the basis of what eventually becomes the establishment. Withou[...]the lowest common denominator. The films I make and the ones made by most independent filmmakers are[...]e the most successful films. Do you watch a lot of films? No. The obvious question, I suppose, is[...]youngster, I’d go to films as often as I could, and I thought those things just happened. I didn’t know there was a director; I don’t even know the names offor other films? I am about to do a film in[...] |
 | [...]in Canada. They have good tech- nicians up there and, I think, they really know a lot about film.Hav[...]esigner, Wolf Kruger, who had worked in Australia for a long time, felt we were logistically better off[...]decided I was going to migrate there. Popeye and Blulo (Paul Smilh} in Popeye. think the lowest it could have been brought in for would have been about $16 million. We had an enormous amount of people to move halfway around the world. The set[...]ion to build. We took a long time, we were at sea and we had boats; everything was just expensive. Going back to “Health” and its parodying of American politics, do you think of yourself as a political director, or of your films as political? No, but I certainly hav[...]ng when I supposed to be subtle in any way. One of the complaints about Health was that there was so[...]sound system or the acoustics aren’t very good, and it’ll drive people crazy. In a number ofof the first things I try to determine is where I am[...]is different from words, sound It’s a pity for the Australian film industry that you didn’t . . . I’d probably be running a shoe- repair shop. One of the things that hits someone coming from Australia is the sheer expense of making American films. “Popeye” cost about $20 million, and in a country where feature films are being made for about $1 million each, that seems an awful lot of money. Is there some way of breaking out of that and making good films? In the first place you have the unions and in the second place you have the basic cost. It’s escalating everywhere in the world andand most of myfilms don’t. I really didn’t have control of the purse strings on Popeye, although I make a film is trying to show my view of a certain subject or genre. I try to express my view of politics and, by politics I mean government, our social laws,[...]e culture that I live in. Watching “Quintet” and “Health”, it struck me you have moved away from the technique a lot of people associate with you, where you have a large number of overlapping conversations and a soundtrack that is very complex. That doesn’t[...]t not Quintet. Quintet to me was like a fairytale and it was very stylized in its language. All the act[...]ican. We purposely did that; it wasn’t effects and noise. It attacks a different sense. So even if I[...]so that the film is shot with the idea ofthe kind of rhythms going to accompany it. In the case of A Perfect Couple and Nashville, where we used music that was performed during the film, it is part of a plot. It is part of the behaviour of the characters. It is part of what the film is about, and yet it also calls for an additional emotional response from the audience. Where did you find the Steinettes for “Health”? I found them busking on the streets of New York. It’s very exciting to see somebody that everybody overlooks. Most of the casting offices in Hollywood are closed door[...]into the studios because there is an armed guard. And there is just a whole world of buskers and street performers out there. We found clowns and mimes and jugglers and fire-eaters, and they were marvellous. Why not take advantage ofth[...]cheerleader or a Hollywood starlet. That is one of the most striking things about your films compared with mainstream Hollywood films — the lack of pretty people in the conventional sense . . . Ca[...]e the ones that ultimately put the thing together and deliver the message or emotion or whatever it is, and I consider that most of my creative work is finished by the time I finish casting. What would you like your films to be remembered for? Just what they are. I don’t think any of them are important, and I think it’s minor art, if it is art. I don’t think any of them will mean much in 20 years. Do you think that’s the nature of film? Our technology is such that ‘1 don’t[...]s like Rembrandt, we are talking about techniques and things that we admire, but we really admire them for different reasons today than they were admired for at the time, and even so that’s a short period of time. We are talking about 400 or 500 years. I think it’s more like — and I am satisfied with this — it’s like building sand castles. You go down to the beach and get a lot of friends and you build a sand castle. You know that eventually the tide is going to take it away, so you try and finish it. Then you remember it, and you remember the experiences you had with the peo[...]you build it. That’s the real reward or wealth of filmmak- ing. * Filmography 955 I957 968 968[...]the Park NI*A*S*H Brewster .VlcCloud .\lc(‘abe and .Vlrs Miller Images The Long Goodbye Thieves Like Us California Split Nashville Buffalo Bill and the Indians Three Women A Wedding Quinte[...] |
 | Tm (Translated by Patricia McClanahan and Julianne Burton) Sergei Eisenstein and Bertolt Brecht, born in 1898 —— Eisenstein in Riga on January 23 andand The Three- Penny Opera (1928). These marked decisive m0- ments of immediate resonance because they formed part of the impetuous advance of a revolution that was to rock the foundations of bourgeois conceptions of film and theatre. What mattered to both was the advancement of an audience armed with reason, so they each pursu[...]tribute through their works to the transformation of mankind, accelerating its development. To meet this objective, they strived for the greatest ef- ficacy in their respective arts and confronted aesthetic problems with a commitment to scien- tific rigor and militancy. They were nourished by some common so[...]titudes, all that could con- tribute to new means of expression, all that could be assimilated. Thus, they ranged from Meyerhold to Joyce, through Chinese and Japanese theatre, the circus, the music-hall, Freud and Einstein. But above all — or, better yet, underlying it all as a foundation and a guide —— was Karl Marx. Both, rooted their search for new aesthetics in dialectical materialism; their[...]re precisely, that, “the simplest “prototype of such imitative behaviour will be of course, that of a. person ec- statically following on the screen,[...]a personage who, in one way or another. goes out of himself’. Brecht, on the other hand. declares almost by way of involuntary reply that, “This magical operatio[...]tries to provoke an ecstatic state or a clouding of vision."2 It thus becomes evident that in spite of not merely incidental points of contact but an ent1re philosoph— 1. Sergei Eis[...]Theory, translated by Jay Jeyda, Harcourt, Brace andand in some senses divergent in common, they ical b[...]le one exalts passion, the other chooses the path of reason; while one wants the audience to surrender[...]lled to shine with delight, before gushing tears of delight In brief, when the spectator is forced to go ‘out of himself “To use a prettier term, we might say that the effect ofa work of pathos consists in whatever “sends the spectato[...]ere is nothing to be added to such a formulation, for the symptoms above say exactly this: ec— —stasts, literally standing out of oneself‘ which is to say ‘going out of himself‘ or “departing from his ordinary condition’. ”‘ Of course, this “emotional surrender” (a state w[...]ented in the spectacle), this “dif- ferent mode of being”, also implies a separation from oneself. If, in one sense, it determines a “different” way of seeing daily reality, then it also represents an[...]such a “magical” operation. “ ‘To go out of oneself is not to go into nothing. To go out of oneself inevitably implies a transition to somet[...]s thus nothing other than a moment in the process of transformation of the viewer, a negative mo- ment which has no reason to extend beyond its own limits; the limits of the spectacle itself. For Eisenstein, that moment when the viewers become alienated from themselves, and cease to be themselves to live in the other — i[...]as it constitutes the premise ofa desired change. And this change, for Eisenstein, is produced — or at least originates —- in the realm of feelings and emotions. In a state of ec- stasy. “We understand a moment of culmination to mean, those points in a process,[...]ron becomes steel. Here we see the same going out of oneself, moving from one condi- tion. and passing from quality to quality — ec- stasvl‘[...]change which will lead to a greater understanding of him or herself and the surrounding social environment and, conse- quently, to effective dominion over self and sur- roundings. He says, 3. Eisenstein op p.[...]hese changes must not reach only the text, actor, and the whole staged representation, but the spec- ta[...]e to the viewers’ reason than to their feelings and calls attention to the fact that “the spectator[...]hem.”7 To achieve this, he proposes a mechanism of aliena- tion in the relationship between the viewer and the character, but in the opposite sense of what Eisenstein proposed with his “pathetic str[...]devices, Brecht at- tempts to estrange, separate and alienate the viewers, not from themselves, but fr[...]his world in order to be transported to the world of art. There is no need to abduct him. Rather, he m[...]han an alienation device, could be seen as a form of genuine de-alienation, since it attempts to bring the viewers back into the reality of their own world (with a new perspec- tive) and, ultimately, to return them to themselves.[...] |
 | Alienation and De-alienation ———-—‘-——_——_ If both artists share the same philosophical points of departure and the same revolutionary stance, how can they offer[...]r respective positions be considered antagonistic and irreconcilable? Obviously, we are dealing with t[...]must not have been easy. After finishing The Old and the New, Eisenstein travelled wide- ly, working o[...]jects — the Mex- ican film being the best known and most dramatically frustrated among them.* Earlier, towards the end of 1929, he had been in Berlin where he surely had occasion to meet Brecht. Marie Seton’s testimony of this point is elo- quent enough: “Equally curious and even a bit repulsive was the dry and bloodless energy that one felt in Bertoit Brecht, whose cutting lines and satiric pieces bit coldly into the heart of social hypocrisy. Sergei Mi- jailovich thought of Brecht as a tenacious professor armed with an ai[...]sness that couldn’t be melted by the sheer heat of his passion.”" Aside from their personal idios[...]y expressed themselves through two media — film and theatre —— which, while sharing many common e[...]I0 while directing plays, he was already thinking of film. In 1928, when‘ he staged Ostrovsky’s Wi[...]t on, film filled his life, not merely as a means of artistic expression, but as an object of intense theoretical pursuit as well. Brecht, on the other hand, was wholly a man of the theatre. if on occasion he approached film,[...]had much success * Que viva Mexicol, produced and subsequently blocked by Upton Sinclair. See Jay Leyda, “Eisenstein’s Mexican Tragedy”, Sight andof cinematic language, because he was unaware ofthe unique devices which film of- fered, he saw in film only a technical means to simplify the reproduction of a work. Thus Brecht ran up against narrow limits of expres- sion which prevented him from fully realizing the possibilities of an “epic” cinema (in the sense in which he us[...]ind which, in short, is not a dream, a substitute for reality, but one that mobilizes the consciousness of the viewer. in the theatre, the actor’s interp[...]position”, as Eisenstein understood it, made up of different elements (framing, narration, music —[...]led him to dis- perse his energies in the search for forms. it would be unjust. however, simply to cla[...]without bearing in mind the historical necessity of such a search — the logical consequence of the process of creating a new language, a new means of expression with rules and syntax that could only flourish as the result of sustained practical research and atten- tion basically centred on the more formal[...]when Brecht entered the scene had already evolved and for- mally consolidated itself, allowing him to focus primarily on problems of content, cinema was then in its infancy. Theatre and film make use of multiple expres- sive devices — image, word, music — and in both media these elements can be combined in different manners and measures. Often, one speaks of “theatrical” films or of “cinematic” theatre, which only serves to ind[...]cific trait that differentiates film from theatre and helps us to understand the contradictory positions assumed by Brecht and Eisenstein: film manifests itself primarily as vi[...]the word permits generalization, the expres- sion of ideas, concepts, abstractions outside the realm of concrete objects or images. images in the immediacy of their cinematic representation and based on the interplay of relations that further artistic pursuit, can be very suggestive and even moving, in that they appeal directly to the senses and register most comfor- tably on an emotional .plan[...]comes to communication on a conceptual, abstract and rational plane. Thus, all of Eisenstein’s efforts to express con— cepts through the clash of images (intellectual montage) did not allow him t[...]quently borne fruit, producing a much wider range of expressive possibilities in film. Even more sign[...][e cinema, L’Arche, Paris, p. 165. took power and initiated one of the most far- reaching transformations in modern[...]years as an artist were spent, then, in the midst of the effervescence ofthe early stages of the revolution, the years of the Prolekuit and other “enormities”. During that time, he paid[...]Mayakovsky, Malevich, Tatlin, the demystification of “art”, the consecration of “life", experimentation, propaganda — move- m[...]years (“collective art par excellence destined for the masses”). Lenin was not being capricious wh[...]a- sion he referred to film as the most important of the arts. Russian films had great impact due to their affinity with the times, their authenticity and revitalizing energy which derived from the reality which gave them life. Those same years passed for Brecht in a very different manner: the failure of the German revolution, inflation, the sharpening of class an- tagonisms. misery, unemployment —— and the consequent rise of fascism. in 1933, Brecht took the route of exile: Vienna, Paris, Denmark, Sweden, Finland and finally the US. His works were banned and burned by the Nazis. it wasn’t until 1948, the year of Eisenstein’s death, that Brecht returned to Germany, established himself in Berlin (GDR) and dedicated most ofhis time to staging his own work[...]ally speaking, Eisen- stein lived during a period of exaitation, of nas- cent strength. of triumph and affirmation, of emotional identification. Brecht, in contrast, lived during “sombre times”, full of decadence, defeat, barbarity, rejection and condemnation: times of rational separation which demanded an extraordinary lucidity and a solid critical perspective, it is, therefore, u[...]lace emphasis on emotional surrender as a premise for transformation within the viewer. while Brecht should reject that ap- peal and put all his emphasis on reason, distanc- ing and a critical outlook — concepts which, for him, held an “active, effective, positive” meaning.” The followers of each (above all, those of Brecht, whose impact was less explosive but more[...]struck out —— some with true fanaticism —- for one path or the other in uni- lateral fashion: they did not notice the breadth of these paths or perceive the points where both converge. in Eisenstein, one can discern a theoretical line of development that leads him from the primitive “montage of attractions”” derived Continued on p. 301[...]n this case, to improve it. correct it. Criticism of society is revolution. That is an efficacious com[...]lro. op. cit.. p. 198. 13. “The basic elements of the theatre arise from the viewer himselfand from[...]iven sense . . . The attraction (in our diagnosis of the theatre) is every aggressive moment it holds,[...]nsations. every ele- ment which might be verified and mathematically calculated to produce certain emot[...]enos Aires. 1941, p. 218. Obviously, this theory of the “montage of attrac— tions". or of “artistic stimuli“ as he called it another ti[...]is not the only possibility. We would go further and say that the hypertrophy ofthis attitude (or of this method) leads to authoritarianism bec[...] |
 | FILM DIRECTO What was the state of the Cuban ‘ ' ' ' were immediately transferred.[...]ntered the 1C AIC in October’ ICAIC? where two Of his documentaries, Par primera when _l was .23 yearS-old. 115231? vez (For the First Time) and Sabre un primer my ‘meresmg because In what we[...]a, our film industry combats (On a First COMbat), and his first revolgtsionalilry govetrtnminthgavehug[...]gadtsta (The Literacy Teacher), to start filming and employing per- and capitalt and using the Cuban were shown as part of the Cuban Film Week. some“ time was my ““16 mom landscape, tourist sights and for wages. folklore. There was a very small The enor[...]een by one million pesos ($3200), which was a lot of Octawb gadget For instance, the make-up man, when he was not worki[...], was a barber. At that time I was 18 years-old, and seeing the prospects offered by the cinema, I decided to work in publicity as a way of breaking into television. I then did a short cour[...]ol in New York, learning the general manage- ment of television. Returning to Cuba, I started earning[...]magnate who owned Channel 7 also owned Channels 6 and 4. and several radio stations. ’ Even before working[...]always been interested in cinema as a basic form of expression. I wanted to go to Europe. to Rome especially, but the trip was very expensive and I re- mained in television, From the beginning, however. I rejected its commercial aspects and was very lucky to be in charge of the channel‘s cultural program. This allowed me[...]some cultural significance. Within this context of com- mercial television. there was a small group of young people opposed to the commercial aspects, and searching for more artistic and culturally-meaningful paths — people like Santiago Alvarez (founder of the lCAIC’s Latin American Newsreel), Jorge Fraga (now head of production) and Rogelio Paris (an ICAIC dir- ector). We were a group with a lot in common. We re- spected each other and all rejected the system. When the rev- olution triumphed and the ICAIC was created in March 1959, some of us Cubans in the first month of release) testifies to his understanding of the Cuban national character. In this interview[...]r expresses forcibly the distinctive Cuban spirit of militancy for which the nation and its filmmaking is famous. money then, especially for a 23- year-old. At the ICAIC, I was offered the o[...]at time? Class contradictions became very strong and Cuba came under threat. Havana had been bombed by[...]were all in the same militia. So, it was a moment of very acute political confrontation when the spontaneity and full co-operation from all sectors had passed. It was a time for definitions. What was your attitude before, as a person with a good position and a big salary in television? I supported the revolution and had very sharp discussions with my friends who didn’t. But I didn’t have as high a degree of political awareness as I do now. When I entered the ICAIC, it was not a time of effervescence but of struggle. Luckily, the ICAIC was a small film centre formed by a small group ofvery political people, and the political and cultural at- mosphere helped my development enorm[...]s Ivens, Chris Marker, Georges Sadoul, Maya Deren and Agnes Varda. I consider that period to hav[...] |
 | [...]e experience; now we have old equipment, but lots of experience.In the beginning, everybody was lear[...]varez would ask me to go off to a certain factory and make an item about it. I would go off with the cameraman, come back and we would edit the film. Santiago would then inclu[...]d. We tried to do our best to reflect the reality of living the political life of the country — filming on one hand and doing guard duty with the militia on the other. For example, I finished work at 5 pm. and then at 8 pm. we would go to guard our workplace,[...]e until starting work again at 8 am. Some nights, for one reason or another, we wouldn’t get any sleep at all. The atmosphere was of great revolutionary militancy. And this reality was reflected in the cinema. The re[...]conomic ones. In this way, the ICAIC has built up and main- tained its high prestige. Since 1973, the[...]organize production more from the economic point of view. This means strict budgeting, not over- shooting and keeping to schedule. These I consider very basic aspects of production, but for many years they were not taken into account. One also wonders whether the early spirit of a place has been lost during a rational reorganiz[...]s maintained because ICAIC was created by a group of people with a very strong cinema- tographic vocation. They were all film artists. Tomas Alea, for example, was telling me that after seeing Newsfro[...]t, he felt he really wanted to make another film. Of course he wants to make a film! The spirit is there; he is going to die wanting to make another film. And we are all the same. But, of course, I must add that it is not as comfortable making a film according to a budget and a schedule as when you have a totally free hand.[...]First Combat”, is very interesting, especially for a documentary, with its mixture of newsreel and re- enacted material . . . The initial purpose i[...]years, Cubans have lived under different degrees of tension. Now, for instance, we have President Reagan threatening aggression against Cuba and Nicaragua. And, in the 19705, when I thought of making the film, we were living through a very te[...]portant case history: the first direct aggression of imperialism against Cuba —-— the explosion of the French arms ship Le Coubre — and what effect this aggression had on the Cuban pop- ulation. I interviewed a large group of those who had been wounded in the explosion, from[...]on had been to have those attacked without arms, and also to frighten them. However, the exact opposit[...]t, everybody went to the port to help the victims and pick up the remaining armaments. The whole of Havana became a blue city as everybody wore their militia shirts. The emotional support of the common citizen towards the revolution turned[...]It meant a qualitative jump in the consciousness of the people. I remember Castro’s speech when we[...]nce received our first films had begun to decline and turn into scepticism. Then, thanks to the newsreel and to The Twelve Chairs and Death of a Bureaucrat by Tomas Alea, the public began to regain interest in the Cuban cinema. Now, of course, Cuban films are very well received by the audience, and notjust out ofa sense of solidarity, but because they enjoy them. In 1971[...]advantage in that it was shown between features. And, during that time, people would go out to smoke a cigarette or go to the toilet. For this reason, the documentary in Cuba had to capture the attention of the audience from the very beginning. All these[...]ar's El brigadista (The Literacy Teacher).. mind and I went to the cinemas to study the situation. I then recalled the structures of some of the Warner Bros films of the later 19403 — like House on 92nd Street — which told a story by sending you back and forth between past and present. I started my documentary like that, wit[...]t was happening. People are seen taking boxes out of a ship, emphasized by music and tension (1 used dode- caphonic music), until they pick up a box from which is hanging a piece of rope. The music reaches a climax and you are sent to another scene where two children,[...]with the first scene, are playing a strange game of war. They say, “I declare war on such and such a country." Up to that moment — and I am sure because I proved it myself — no one i[...]et or to have a smoke. Then the credits come down and the children keep on playing. The music of tension begins again and lasts until the last movement of the game, in which one child says, hitting the hand of the other child, “I declare war on Cuba!" The bomb explodes and I start immediately with the best archive material I could find. From then on, people sit there and watch the documentary. They receive a message. A[...]lly felt that a documentary should consist mainly of actuality filming . . . For me a documentary is a weapon of combat, an instrument Concluded on p. 307[...] |
 | The performance of yours I admire most is as Lord Trimingham in Jose[...]’s texture . . .It was a wonderful film to do and a lovely part. It was my best film- making experience ever and offered enormous opportunity for an actor. Many people, and all the tech- nicians, turned down work waiting for the moment when this would be made — and it was on and off until the last moment. They all went to work with such a will and devotion to Joe, and to the subject. Looking back on it now — and I think I felt the same at the time — it was a great privilege to have been part of that film. Really, it was the last time we had a[...]Bloody Sunday” came out at almost the same time and one wondered if this was the beginning of a new British film industry. Of course, it didn’t materialize . . . It is very[...], it is im- mensely important that the whole iiew of the English aristocracy be so well done. To be less generously and accurately played would have upset the balance of the film. It seemed to me important that Trimingham be at least as attractive and interesting as the Alan Bates character . . . The levels of society were important: Trimingham definitely was an aristocrat. and Margaret Leighton‘s and Michael Gough’s characters were more of the nouveau riche than of the landed gentry. You played in two other Losey films, “The Doll’s House” and “Galileo”. Was this a pleasure? Yes. indeed[...]e know. How do you find Losey in his hand- ling of actors? Well. Joe is very generous to his actors[...]August Edward Fox in Fred Zi/memann's The Day of the Jackal. Edward During the past decade, few British actors have managed to build and sustain a reputation in films. Whereas Anthony Hopkins and John Hurt have succeeded by making most of their films in the US. or for American companies, Edward Fox has remained that rarity — a British film star. Perhaps best known for his performance as Lord Trimingham in Joseph Lose[...]een, Fox’s major roles include those in The Day of the Jackal, The Doll’s House, Galileo, A Bridge T 00 Far, Edward and Mrs Simpson (for television) and the recent The Mirror Crack’d. Here, Fox talks[...]n it, but if you are within your inter- pretation and you want to use wide- ish bounds —- I will put[...]ting? Much nearer. You are much more in control of the whole performance . . . Much more. Have you[...]find it extremely difficult to accept — unless, of course, their point of view is un- arguably righter than one’s own. Th[...]How did you find him to work with on “The Day of the Jackal”? It was a wonderful experience wor[...]there doing the bravest deeds with the soldiers. And, of course, his overall conception of how to do something, and his demand upon you within a short space of time with very little material to show many thing[...]extremely exhilarat- mg. Would you regard Losey and Zinne- mann as perhaps the two most stimulating d[...]the distribution it deserved. Do you think highly of him as a director? Much admired. But I do[...] |
 | he is, in any sense at the moment — and he’s a much younger man — in the class of Zinnemann or Losey. Maybe one day.I think Scott is very much hoist on the petard of a style of commer- cial filmmaking which relies very heavil[...]at makes “The Go-Between” a remarkable film for 1970 . . . Yes, because it blowsjust as hard a punch in a much quieter way. And somehow the punch works for longer. “The Mirror Crack’d” is your third film for Guy Hamilton. You have said he is a “traditiona[...]s one isn’t so much action-adventure, but it is of a particular kind. It is certainly not The Go-Bet[...]well-wrought, well-thought out, well-planned Way of film- making and it doesn’t try to pretend to be what it isn’t[...]n action adventure. But Guy is very appreciative of an actor being able to supply a little more than maybe the part gives on paper. Is this one of the charms of the Agatha Christie films, in that in the books[...]that have been made — like “Orient Express” and “Death on the Nile” —— are very attractive largely because of the way actors seem to take the role by the throat and do something with it? Yes, I would agree with you entirely. I think it’s like having a lovely souffle for your pudding. You love it at the time, but you do[...]er it that much; you just enjoy it on the moment. And these films do offer actors entertaining opportunities for personality acting. What do you think is the future of British films? Would you agree that it has been[...]Australia, other than films like “Confessions of a Window Cleaner” . . . Pathetic. Personally, I know very little about the industry, but I meet a lot of people who are intent on makingjobs. What it real[...]eurial ‘1 Cynthia Harris as Wallis Simpson and Edward Fox as Edward, Prince of Wales, a! their wedding in Edward and Mrs. Simpson. Edward Fox vision from the top.[...]t in the business would agree that Lord Lew Grade and Bernard Delafont are admirable in their way, but quite unable to fill the role of the entrepreneur with flair. They do not have the instinctive know- ledge of what the public wants, which is so necessary to a thriving industry. Is there any hope for British films to establish themselves as a real[...]ood? If we can make films inexpen- sively enough and aim to please the rest of the world outside the US. and build up that market — if one can give it a vul[...]on products have proved this. If we could do that and secure a market, a fairly stable one. then I thin[...]all the originality produced within their shores for their market. Is it mainly an economic problem?[...]minute you have a fine product, so it is a matter of persuading people that you have a fine product.[...]ds each, who will see that the unions don’t ask for enormous overtime wages andof course, is that you can make some films with a unit of 15 or 20 people, while some films require a unit of 250. The union legislation, as it is now, requires that the former had an over-complement of staff, which is an enormous burden on production.[...]r”, I suppose, is a case in point, with stories of an immense sum being paid to at least one actor for a very small part. Such Concluded on p. 3[...] |
 | [...]March 1 981 Registered Without Eliminations For General Exhibition (G) Cheban tat el seter (16mm): Baraka. Egypt. 1316.4m. F. M. Fares Conquest of the Earth: Freilich/Lupo/Winter, U.S., 2677.25m.[...]g Kong, 2468m, Golden Reel Films Not Recommended for Children (NRC) Brother Peng’s Revenge: A. Wong[...]Int'l Film (30.. V (I-I—/) Emperor Chien Lung and The Beauty: Shaw Bros. Hong Kong. 2867.07m. Joe S[...]mbia Film Dist.. 0 (sexual innuendo) The Warrant of Assassination: Feng Huant. Hong Kong. 2600m. Golden Reel Films. V (i-l-i) For Mature Audiences (M) Diary of Forbidden Dreams: Carlo Ponti. France/Italy. 2509[...]urkey, 2000m. K. Kavurma. V (l—rn-i) The Story of a Refugee: Goldig Films. Hong Kong. 2502m. Comfort Film Enterprises. 0 (adult comedy) For Restricted Exhibition (R) Caligula (modified ver[...]ua/ theme) The House at 1000 Delights: T. Roter and Assoc . U S. 2063.71m. Cinerama Films. 3 (t-m-g)[...]bited only at the Sydney/Melbourne/Brisbane/Perth and/or Adelaide film festivals and then exported. Agee (16mm): James Agee Film Proj[...]3. US. 780m. Melbourne Film Festival Free Voice of Labour PaCific Street. US. 780m. Mela bourne Film[...]. U S.. 3135m. Melbourne Film Festival A Kingdom for a House (16mm). Tilt Netherlands. 845m. Melbourne[...]ma Papers, July—August Films examined in terms of the Customs (Cinematograph Films) Regulations and States' film censorship legislation are listed below. An explanatory key to reasons for classifying non—“G" films appears hereunder:[...]U.S., 1063m, Mel- bourne Film Festival The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (15mm): Clarity Educ. Prods. U.[...]only to its members by the National Film Theatre of Australia in its 1981 ‘Independent Cinema in Britain" season. At the Fountainhead (16mm): British Film Institute. Bri- tain. 987m. National Film Theatre of Australia Faust (16mm): Triple Action Films, Britain. 323m. National Film Theatre of Australia Penthesilea (16mm): L. Mulvey/P. Wollen. Britain. 1086m. National Film Theatre of Australia Telling Tales (16mm): Yorkshire Arts Assoc, Britain. 102cm. National Film Theatre of Australia Special condition: That the film be shown only to its members by the National Film Theatre of Australia in its 1981 “Images of Italian Cinema of the Seventies“ season. The Expedition. Not shown. Italy. 2277m, National Film Theatre of Australia A Simple Heart: Not shown. Italy. 2551m. National Film Theatre of Australia Stream Line: Not shown. Italy. 2770.43m. National Film Theatre of Australia Spectal condition: That the film be shown only to its members by the National Film Theatre of Australia in its 1981 "Recent Hungarian Cinema" s[...]o Budapest. Hungary. 2762m. National Film Theatre of Australia Film Novel-Three Sisters: Studio Budapest. Hungary. 7406m. National Film Theatre of Australia A Happy New Year: Studio Budapest. 2304m. National Film Theatre of Australia The Nice Neighbour: Studio Budapest. Hungary. 2688m. National Film Theatre of Australia 0n the Move, Studio Budapest. Hungary. 2853m. National Film Theatre of Australia A Quite Ordinary Life: Pro Vobis Film. Hungary, 2057m. National Film Theatre of Australia A Very Moral Night. Studio Budapest. 2762m. National Film Theatre of Australia Registered With Eliminations For Restricted Exhibition (R) Harvey (16mm): G Danie[...]lin. S (i-m-g) Deletions: 1.7m (19 secs) Reason for deletions. S (i-h-g) Sweet Diane (16mm): Venus I[...]lin. S (l-m-g) Deletions: 8.5m (46 secs) Reason for deletions: S (i-h~g) A Ton of Action (16mm): Not shown. US. 647.23m. 14th Mandolin. S (f-m-g) Deletions: 8.9m (49 secs) Reason for deletions: S (l-h-g) Films Refused Registration[...].6m. A.Z. Assoc. Film Dist.. 8 {i-l'i-g) Journal of Love (16mm): I. Grozny. U.S.. 638.5m. 14th Mando[...]1 981 Films Registered Without Eliminations For General Exhibition (G) El ruisenor de Ias cumbre[...]ms Australia. 2482.03m. Hoyts Distribution Legend of the Wild: Taft Int'l. U.S.. 2677.25m. Sunn Classi[...]Space Firebird. Toko Leo. Japan, 3290.78m. House of Dare A. Stitt. Paramount/Disney. I ' l / I[...]om 3095.57m (January 1981 list). Not Recommended for Children (NRC) The Burning Train: B. Chopra, Ind[...]ce. 2379.4m, Newhart Diffusion. V {i'-/-]) Love and Bullets: P. Kohner. Britain. 2788.8m. Hoyts Dist[...]e (16mm): BFI. Britain. 855.66m. Australian Film Institute. L {Ills/I), O (emotional stress) Roller Boogie:[...]ly registered with “G" classification in 19 1. For Mature Audiences (M) The Battle of Broken Hill (videotape): Sagittarius Film and TV ProdSnAustralia. 51 mins. Sagittarius Film and TV Prods. V (f-m-g) The Beauty Escort: Yu Fun H.[...]mm): BFI. Britain. 976.33m. National Film Theatre of Australia, V (i-l-j), 0 (adult themes) King of the Mountain: Polygram Pic, U.S., 2482.03m. Roadshow Dist.. V (hm-l} The Lathe of Heaven (16mm): WNET-TV, U.S., 1173.79m. Cinecon/Fantasy Film Society. 0 (sexualln- nuendo) Lion of the Desert: Falcon Int'I Prod.. Britain/Libya, 43[...](16mm): BFI, Britain. 526m. National Film Theatre of Australia. V (l—m—j). L (l-m-j) Struggle to[...]86.35rn. Golden Reel Films. 8 (l-m-g), V (f-m-g) For Restricted Exhibition (R) Danish Escort Girls: P[...]k. 2705.14m. Blake Films. S (l-m-g) The Daughter of Emanuelle: D Randall. France/Italy. 2406.15m. A,Z[...]: Cirkus Kronhausen. Denmark, 2231.04m. The House of Dare, 8 (f-m-g) Lulu: Parafrance Films. France/W[...]vage Weekend (reduced version) (videotape): Kirby and Paulsen, U.S.. 74 mins, Focus Video, V (f-m-g) Sc[...]70m. Filmways A‘sian Dist.. S (l-m-g) Symphony of Love: D. Randall, Italy. 2649.36m. A.Z. Assoc, Th[...]bited only at the Sydney/Melbourne/Brisbane/Perth and/or Adelaide film festivals and then exported. Alexander The Great: T. Angelopoulos and 00., Greece. GOOOm, Melbourne Film Festival The[...]SA, Spain. 2900m. Sydney Film Festival Brothers and Sisters: British Film Institute, Britain. 3000m. Melbourne Film Festival City Fa[...]ney Film Festival The Falls (16mm): British Film Institute. Britain, 2080m. Melbourne Film Festival Faster[...]skiner. Turkey. 2400m, Sydney Film Festival Hide and Seek: D. Wolman/J. Justin. Israel, 2304m, Sydney Film Festival Image Before My Eyes (16mm): Yii/o Institute for Jewish Research. U.S., 991m. Melbourne Film Festi[...]rance/Canada. 1100m, Melbourne Film Festival Land and Sons. J. Hermannsson. Iceland. 2578m, Sydney Film[...]C. Jover, Spain, 2900m. Sydney Film Festival Men and Non-Men: Rai~FIadio TeIe-visione Italiana,[...] |
 | ASPECTS OF AUSTRALIASOME od Bishop looks at a new 10-hour, Super 8 documentary on, Australia, and talks to one of the filmmakers, Garry Patterson. 0[...]1979, filmmakers Garry Pat- terson, Franca Majoor and Russel Farrance drove a beat-up Kombi- wagen around Australia. They covered 20,000 km and carried only one Beaulieu 5008 Super 8 camera. Two years of research and a “shoot and run” approach to their material has produced so[...]ary they have self-effacingly titled Some Aspects of Australia. The film is structured in ll parts, each of 55 minutes duration. The first five sections are presented without narration, and deal with five major subjects: “The Kanakas ofNorth Queens- land”, “Land Rights and Self—determination”, “Banking and the Fiscal Crisis”, “Mining, Utah and Ranger”, and “Nimbin (The Politics of Foodffi Some of the stronger sequences from this sec- tion include: racist exploitation of Aboriginal culture by the tourist industry and ice cream companies in Surfers Paradise; disposse[...]s with islanders who reveal the forgotten history of the Kanakas; an old man from an urban skid row drifts into a painful sleep on a park bench to the strains of “Waltzing Matilda”; tourist boats negotiate the Katherine Gorge; and whites gape at the work of Aboriginal cave painters, whose children die from[...]rator series”. This delivers a personal account of Australian history, from the arrival of European Man on this continent to the formal constitu- tion of Federation in 1900. Throughout this series, Garry Patterson plays a parody ofof Australia from a scrappy, dog-eared clipboard. h[...]some tropical tourist resort, squatting in front of Uluru or sitting disconsolate- ly in the middle of the outback with the dismantled Volkswagen engine, Patter- son relentlessly presents his fractured and fatalistic view of Australian history. His narra- tion is intercut with a chronological travel diary, interview material and social observations that could not be included in the neat categories that divide the first half of the film. The final section of Some Aspects of Aus— tralia is a 55-minute postscript on the logistics of information. “Banking and the Fiscal Crisis” is the pivotal episode to the first section and the most obvious political statement in the 10 hours. It consists of a 55-minute illustrated interview with an “anon[...]c order. The thesis is one oftotalitarian control of banking finance, headed by the Bilderbergers and involving the major inter- national financing corporations of Rockefeller, Rothschild, Kuhn-Loeb, Morgan and others. The interview sheds light on “the poor[...]let alone profit from them. Banking conspiracies and international deals over resource development are beyond the comprehension of most Australians. Yet, it is precisely these Aust[...]ofthis mammoth film. They are the “underside” of Australian history, people seldom, if ever, asked[...]eir story in any medium. We meet them at the Utah and Ranger mines, we see the casualties of race (Kanakas) and land (Aborigi- nals), and explore the white middle-class alternative of the New Settlers. Some Aspects of Australia is clearly no sanitized work of “balance” and a proper examination of the content contained in its 10 hours is still to[...]achievements are obvious. With their own finances and $3000 from the Australian Film Commission, Patterson, Majoor and Farrance shot a 10-hour film on a 2:1 ratio. With[...]they edited the material on single strip original and finally dubbed it onto video for distribution. Some Aspects of Australia is essentially a film about people and politics. With an instinctive commitment that shows little fear of disturbing the individual political persuasions of its audience, the film may well be a frontier achievement for the aesthetic and commercial prospects ofthe Super 8 medium in this[...]A ugust — 255 Russel Farram‘e. Franca Majoor and Garry Patterson. |
 | . AUST. IAUST A051: Some Aspects ofInstitute Awards. Why have you now chosen to work on 8mm and produce this 10-hour film? The Creative Development Award was an encouragement to go onto bigger and better things, which I tried to do. I worked on half a dozen scripts, and submitted three or four to various funding bodies[...]any- thing political. I also wrote a circus film for the Australian Film Com- mission and they called me a liar and a plagiarist. But I don’t want to get into a long list of sour grapes. I enjoy shooting film; I enjoy editi[...]the more we shot, the longer it got. The history of Australia was pretty fat, and we underestimated how keen people would be to tel[...]People only have access to media by invita- tion and there is a lot of frustration because ofthis. We generally talked to them for an hour or so, then asked: “What’s your name, what’s your job and what d’ya reckon?” People spoke directly at t[...]iewer. But you did choose to visit certain parts of Australia We decided to go anti-clock- 256 —-[...]ng, Utah, Ranger, land rights in North Queensland and Kakadu, Pine Gap and so on. That roughly mapped out the trip for us. People passed us on from one active group to[...]r, Bart, then joined us in Northern Queens- land and stayed with us until the end. We wanted to go to the Kimberleys and Wittenoom and the West Coast, but ran out of money in Darwin. We wrote to the AFC from Charters Towers, and sent the 10 hours of film we had already shot for their $3000. Murray Brown was very nice, but the[...]ary funding. You shot the film on single system and, as most Super 8 filmmakers know, you have the inbuilt problem of the 18-frame delay. Yet you managed to do a fairly rough, three- track mix on various parts of the film . . . The lS-frame delay is not a problem if you allow one second at the head and tail of the shot. The Beaulieu is a terrific camera, but any camera will do. We had a cas- sette recorder and a good micro- phone with a split lead. All the interviews went onto the cassettes and the sync sound went onto the stripe. There was no slating of shots. Non-sync material can be dubbed onto wild shots. I worked with original film, and edited on a $150 SS editor with a little sound reader. I originally screened the films and mixed the music live. But this stretched the tape splices and they wouldn’t go through the telecine. So we re- spliced them, and worked on video dubs, either mixing the music whi[...]OID THE lBl". SOUND AWANOE WHEN uni-nus. , SHOOT FOR EWING. sHoor TIGHT. [tulc' the basic information is there. I figure it is pretty good value for money. What film stock did you use? Kodachrome 40 for outdoors, and 7244 for interviews — that is until Alice Springs, when we were down to $100 worth of silent film bought with a Bankcard from a chemis[...]The big problem at the moment is that the makers of video programs, and the people who watch them, are obliged to wait un[...]upporting governments, their protective military, and God knows who else) get their act together and divide the market satisfactorily among them- selv[...]or Betacord. One video dealer told me that Sony and Sanyo have lost out on their Betacord system and may be turning to VHS. I am very sus- picious of the 1/2-inch standard. If you shoot on Super 8, it is lighter, more flexible and probably cheaper than shooting on videotape. You[...]pped. What have you learnt from the ex- perience of making a 10-hour film on 8mm? That the informat[...]decisions. I don’t know what is going on there, and that is an obsession. The second obsession is the possibility that tele- vision determines language and, ul- timately, reality. Can I read this?[...] |
 | Some Aspects of A usualia banking houses, parasitic organiza- tions which grew in the festering capitalism of post-feudal France and emerging America. “By 1900 and following World War 1, the family names that gave[...]the monetary manipulations going on in the bowels of the banks (Morgan, Rothschild, Kuhn-Loeb, Wauberg[...]were dominating international shipping, commerce and politics. They still do to this day. “The conspiracy was, and has remained, the propagation of the myth that global progress and human endeavor are synonymous with capital growth and material expansion. This has been pushed (with in[...]s coming under the same control) to the exclusion of any alternative measurement of collective happi- ness. We must be careful not to[...]g —— sym- bols that are universally relevant, and not limited to a particular medium. How certain s[...]been so difficult that you want to work on 16mm and 35mm formats? Garry Patterson 90D 55 SEC. OFW.[...]is hap- pening in video cassettes. Even Ox- ford University Press is looking at “publishing” video tapes.[...]tellite television. Who is going to own all this? And for what reason? I think it is important that people who work in film and video support community television. But a one- ho[...]evelopment in the Australian Film industry is one of increasing central control. That may mean a lot of work for a lot of people, but it may mean the complete emasculation of cinema so that filmmakers, like entertainers, bec[...]m 1978 Builders‘ Labourers Mural, with Preston Institute of Technology, 60 mins, 8mm 1978 Chile Lucha/Chile[...]Chile Committee, 60 mins, 8mm 1981 Some Aspects of Australia, with Franca Majoor and Russel Farrance. 605 mins, 8mm All available fro[...]ceremony without evident enthusiasm. Some Aspects of Australia. Some Aspects of A ustralia A film by Garry Patterson, Franca Majoor and Russel Farrance. Edited by Garry Patterson. Production assistants: Ed Batt and Gail Hannah. Filmed in Super 8mm (Kodachrome 40 and 7244SM). Post-production: Media Vision (Australia). Distribution on U-matic and other formats. In 11 parts. each of 55 mins. Total running time: 605 mins. Produced by Shopfront Films, 1981. Nimbin and the Politics of Food. Kanakas and East Coast Racism. Banking and the New International Economic Order. Mining and Utah. Aboriginal Struggle. Self Determination andof information. Part One: Part Two: Part Thr[...] |
 | THE ADAIR INSURANCE BROKING GROUP The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith The Picture Show Man Eliza Fras[...]A Town Like Alice Nightmares Hoodwink The Winter of Our Dreams Heatwave Partners Dead Easy NEED WE SAY MORE? SPECIALISING IN THE NEEDS OF FEATURE FILM PRODUCTIONS. CONTACT OUR SPEC[...] |
 | [...]ry which in- cluded 61 hearings, 2260 submissions and 5500 pages of testimony, the Government-appointed Dix probe into the operations of the Australian Broad- casting Commission has reco[...]ng changes to the ABC.Among the recommendations of the inquiry headed by marketing veteran Alex Dix were: 0 Reconstruction of the ABC into a new National Broadcasting Organiza[...]nti- fied on air as the ABC. 0 A governing board of directors of seven members and a 20-man con- sultative council representing com- munity interests. 0 Integration of ABC music and con— cert departments into a separate body: Music Australia. 0 Introduction of modern business methods. 0 More accountability t[...]BC has become slow- moving, overgrown, complacent and uncertain of the direction in which it is heading. ”Despite the efforts of many talented and dedicated people work- ing for it. . . it [the ABC] has not only slipped from the forefront of change but threatens to be eclipsed by it. “Au[...]are being asked to justify them- selves publicly and give cogent reasons why their traditional activi- ties should continue.” In the light of Razor Gang cuts to ABC funding of three per cent, along with abolition of the usual inflation ad- justment of 10 per cent, an effective 13 per cent cut in its[...]have to seek finance elsewhere as the possibility of the Government increasing its funding now or in the immediate future was small. One suggested means of raising money was corporate underwriting of ABC programs — but not paid adver- tising — a recommendation which has brought howls of conservative protest from within and outside the ABC. The Report also recommended a long-term plan to merge the ABC’s news and public affairs departments to improve co-operation and cut down overlapping. Total cost of the recom- mendations — the majority of it spent over a five-year period —- would be $1[...]the Seven Network, the Australian Film Commission and the Victorian Film Corporation, has been a resounding success. Filmed in Australia, Malaysia and London, the six-hour dramatization of Nevil Shute‘s novel was recently seen by about[...]Local reaction has been justifiably enthusiastic for the work of the cast, Helen Morse, Bryan Brown, Gordon Jackson. Anne Haddy and Yuki “em“! ‘ aim- - ‘o-< Helen Morse and Bryan Brown in A Town Like Alice. Shimoda, the scripts of Rosemary Sisson and Tom Hegarty. the direction of David Stevens and production of Henry Crawford. New SCOOP Producer Former telev[...]t from Channel 0/28 to provide Melbourne coverage for the station’s SCOOP news-magazine program. Form[...]y held the contract. De Montignie was last heard of trek- king through the Simpson Desert in the Northern Territory filming the re- creation of the first scientific crossing of the desert in 1939. The $100,000 documentary, The Madigan Line, will follow a team of sur- veyors, scientists and botanists as they make the crossing by camel. Mining corporation CRA has backed the pro- gram and De Montignie is confident of international sales. His DNM Produc— tions rece[...]tary on the Le Mans car classic in Europe, the US and New Zealand. T VW Takeover Sir Robert Holmes a‘Court has taken control of TVW Enterprises in Perth, which controls TVW-7, r[...]major interest in SAS-10 Adelaide, City Theatres and Entertainment Centre operations. The Perth-based tycoon, who heads the Bell group of companies, takes over as chairman of TVW from Sir James Cruthers, who has been with TVW-7 for 23 years. 7 Goes for 1984 Olympics The Seven Network, despite the set- back on the Moscow Olympics, are negotiating for rights to cover the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. A[...]be held in Yugoslavia in 1984. Final negotiations for rights to the summer Olympics will take place lat[...]rnment has approved changes to the Broadcast- ing and Television Act. The changes are a revised version of controversial changes — dubbed “the Murdoch a[...]to make the Com- munications Minister responsible for determining public interest in licence hearings were dropped, and a clause was inserted denying appeal against lice[...]unal. Changes approved include strict guidelines for determining public interest, share dealings involving radio and television interests no longer subject to ABT approval before being allowed to go ahead, and a company will be allowed to hold 10 per cent in[...]owever, the appeal must now continue on the basis of the old laws. After lengthy hearings in Mel- bou[...]aring was ad- journed to mid-August. While a lot of media coverage has concerned Murdoch‘s assertio[...]tle or no control personally over the programming of his television interests, the crucial question is[...]ose his ATV-10 licence, but it could mean trouble for the Nine Network when its licence comes up for renewal in March next year. Sensing the danger, TON-9 and GTV—9 applied to be included as parties to the[...]nted the application. Bruce Gyngell, former head of the ABT, supports Murdoch’s ownership of ATV-1O because he believes in strong networking as important to competi- tion and thus to the benefit of the public. He told the annual meeting of the Public Relations Institute in Can- berra (June 18) that: “The fine nitpicking of ownership indeed begged the question of its [television‘s] marvellous and enor— mous ability to communicate ideas and exchange thoughts between people.” The Government, while notifying the AAT of its amendments to the Broad- casting and Television Act, has also given the ABT its favorable view of net— working. The increasing cost of drama and general television production — serials such as Cop Shop and Prisoner cost about $75,000 an hour -— means that production of such shows requires strong commitment from more t[...]. (See also Nick Herd’s report on pp. 262, 263 of this issue.) Quiz Bandwagon There are no prizes for guessing what prompted the rash of game and quiz shows tempting viewers and con- testants. The continued success of Sale of the Century — which in one recent program rated[...]m Sale, Reg Grundy Pro— ductions is responsible for The New Cinema Papers, July-August — 25[...] |
 | [...]r conditioning that can cause magnetic attraction of dust onto the film surface.We built our Clean Room because we know that once it's on the neg, it's on for good. And that means a poorer result for you. Come and see for yourself: the dust never settles at Video[...] |
 | [...]is pleased to announce that the I981/ 82 edition of the Australian Motion Picture Yearbook can now be[...]eatures, including: 0 Comprehensive filmographies of feature film scriptwriters, directors of photography, composers, designers, editors and sound recordists 0 Monographs on the work of director Bruce Beresford, producer Matt Carroll and scriptwriter David Williamson 0 A round—up of films in production in 1981 0 Actors, technicians and casting agencies 0 An expanded list of services and facilities, including equipment suppliers and marketing servicesContent; PART 2: Feature Films PART 5: Directory PART 5; Media 1980 and 1981 PART 3: Profiles Print. Radio,Teievision, Overseas Media Representatives, Film Bookshops and Record Shops. PART 7: Reference Organizations Services and Facilities Film Stock, Sound Stock, Equipment Suppliers, Equipment Rental, Lighting Rental, Actors and Actresses Agencies, Technicians Agencies, Casting Consultants. Laboratories, Film Studios and Sound Stages, Editing and Post-Production Facilities, Preview Theatres, Recording and Mixing Studios, Animation,Tities and Graphics, Special Effects, Negative PART 1 : Aus[...]Industry Round-up Bruce Berestord, Matt Carroll and David Williamson, PART 4: Feature Film Personnel Film and Television Awards Film Festivals Legislation Ta[...]ives. Censorship Local Production; Distribution and Exhibition; Government and the Film Industry; Film Organizations; Festivals; Awards and Competitions; Visitors; Television; Censorship; T[...]ia. Directors oi Photography, Editors, Production and Re»dimension, . . OVerseas Production Designers and Art Pubiicists, Marketing Services, Bibliography[...]o UC ion, esan ' Recordists, Shipping Agents, Car and Truck Rental, 1930 Festivals, Awards and Competitions; Overseas Media. Media Research. Production Companies Distributors and Exhibitors Capital City Maps Advertisers’ inde[...]a 305i Tel: (03) 329 5983. Note. Bank draits only for overseas orders. Please allow up to 4 weeks for processing |
 | [...]iero Tosi. John Scott John Dankworth. The Getting of Wisdom Journey Among Women.BACK ISSUES SALE Take advantage 0f0u7 special oflw and catch up on your missing issues. M ulczple copies[...]entaries. Number 26 April-May 1980 The Films of Peter Weir Charles Jolie. Harlequin. Nationalism[...]a. The Little Con- vlct. Index: Volume 6 No. of copies ordered Total amount enclosed 8 (Note numbers 4. 6. 7. and 8 are out of print) Number 20 March-April 1979 Ken Cameron.[...]a cross in the box next to your missing issues. and fill out the form below. If you would like multiple copies of any one issue. indicate the number you require in[...]ources Koataa. Money Movers The Aus- tralian Film and Tele- visron School. Index: Volume 5 10[...]tler. Number 28 August-September 1980 The Films of Bruce Beres- lord. Stir. Melbourne and Sydney Film Festivals, Breaker Morant. Stacy Keac[...]uttnam. Censorship. Stir. Everett de Roche. Touch and Go. Film and Politics CINEMA 11”: 6'» Numb[...] |
 | [...]issue purchase price Please enter a subscription for 6 issues D 12 issues D (8 issues D Please start[...]ption to Cinema Papersa gift, cross the box below and we will send a card on your behalf with the first[...]ender) .................................. . _— Office use only Enclosed is a cheque/money order for $. ................ made out to Cinema Papers Pty[...]alia The above ofters applies to Australia only. For overseas rates. see below This offer expires on N[...], 5 (17-20) J Please send me c copIesOl'VolutpC 3 and 6 (21-24) are Still available. copies oiVolurrIcJ #— Handsomcly hound in black . copIcs of Volume 5 l wiIl-I gold embossed letterrng ‘ copies of Volume 6 Volumt 7 contains in l: copies ofVolumc? luvishh-Illuslruted pages of O txcluswc Intchicws with EZIBINDERS producers. drrectors. actors .— and luchmmm Please send me Lu comes of Cinema 0 Valuable historical materral Papers tzib[...]er bInder on Austrulmn film production ' ' ("I") and hook “View" Total amount enclosed SAust. O l’roduclturt survzys and reports from the sets of local . and international production “AME- . Bux- ullicc reports and guides to film producers and Investors 0 Includes I2pp Index ADDRESS Cinema[...]copies. Individual numbers can be added to the _ For overseas ”1168‘ see below _ . ... binder inde[...]rra SIreeI. PLEASE. N0”; Volume l (numbers l-4) and Volume 2 new binder Wlll accommodate 12 come; Nor[...]NOW L'VAVAIIABHE. Please allow up to four weeks for processing. overseas Rates (All remittances i[...]k Issues 6 12 18 Volumes Ezibinders (to the price of each Zone issues issues issues (each) (each) copy[...]hlna (Air) (AIr) (Arr) (AIrl (Arrt (AIr) ‘- ”of“ M0“. $20.50 $39.60 $56.70 $33.30 $19 00 5080[...]vtce is available to Britain Germany Greece ltaly and North America Subscriptions 6 Issues — $[...] |
 | Cinema Papers is pleased to announce the publication ofIn this first major work on the Australian fil[...]leading film writers combine to provide a lively and entertaining critique. Illustrated with 265 still[...]in full color, this book is an invaluable record for all those interested in the New Australian Cinem[...]sm (Keith Connolly), Comedy (Geoff Mayer), Horror and Suspense (Brian McFarlane), Action and Adventure (Susan Dermody), Fantasy (Adrian Martin), Historical Films (Tom Ryan), Personal Relationships and Sexuality (Meaghan Morris), Loneliness and Alienation (Rod Bishop and Fiona Mackie), Children’s Films (Virginia Duiga[...]EXPO ’80 SEMINAR PAPERS In November the Film and Television Pro- duction Association of Australia and the New South Wales Film Corporation brought toge[...]nal experts to discuss film financing, marketing, and distribution of Australian films in the 19803 with producers involved in the film and television industry. The symposium was a resounding suc— cess. Tape recordings made of the proceedings have been transcribed and edited by Cinema Papers, and published as the Film Expo ’80 Seminar Papers. Copies can be ordered now for $25 each. Contents Contributors Theatrical Prod[...]eteers Ltd. Theatrical Production. Business (US) and Legal Aspects Barbara D. Boyle Distribution in the United States Executive Vice-President. and Producer/Distributor Chief Operating Officer, New[...]President. Producers Sales Television Production and Organization (US) Distribution Michael Fuchs Financing Of Theatrical Films Senior Vice-President, Major Studios Programming, Home Box Office Financing of Theatrical Films: (US) IndependentStudios Samuel W. Gelfman Presale of Rights IndependentProducer(U.S.) Presale byTerritory Klaus Hellwi Multl-Natlonal and Other Co- President. Jagus Film Und Productions[...]ctures (US) Simon 0. Olswang Solicitor, Breaker and Company (Britain) Please send me .......... copies of Film Expo ’80 at Aust. 5525. Outside Australia[...]$35 (airmail). Please send me .......... copies of The New Australian Cinema @ Aust.SI4.95. Outside[...]3051. Tel: (03) 329 5983 Note. Bank drafLs only for overseas orders. Please allovl up to 4 weeks for processing Rudy Petersdorf Presidentand ChiefOp[...]Films Office Inc. (US) Barry Spikings Chairman and ChiefExecutive, EMI Film and Theatre Corporation (Britain) Eric Weissmann Partner, Kaplan. Livingston, Goodwin, Berkowitz and Selvin Harry Ufland President, The Ufland[...] |
 | [...]ht (Seven Network), Ford Superquiz (Nine Network) and Wheel of Fortune (Seven Network).Channel 10 has so far failed to jump on the bandwagon, but not through lack of interest. It is still looking for a format. Ten is still trying to boost its ratin[...]t survey again puts the network third behind Nine and Seven. lts newest programs — Michael Parkin- son’s Saturday night show, the Grundy cops and robbers show Bellamy (an unashamed take-off of Britain‘s The Sweeney and starring a more deserving John Stanton) and Craw- ford Productions’ Holiday Island — have[...]s comedy show, Ratbaga, pro- duced by Hal McEIroy and John East- way and starring Rod Quantock, Mary Kenneally, Joanne Samuels, John Derum and others, is also in danger of being axed. Network in-fighting is believed responsible for Melbourne's Channel 10 declining to take the Sydney- produced show, though the wisdom of their decision is borne out by the Sydney ratings[...]gainst the ABT’s decision to block the takeover of ATV- 10. Murdoch admitted the stations didn't work together and that he had acted “very slowly and with some shy- ness because of these [the Administrative Appeals Tribunal] pro-[...]Hector Crawford has retired as managing director of Crawford Pro- ductions. He will remain as chairman of the Crawfords’ business interests. Hector’s nephew, Ian Crawford, has assumed responsibility for running Crawford Productions. Steven Grives and Chantal Contouri in Holiday Island. New Cra w[...]ious television series since the ill-fated Arcade of 1979 — Holiday Island. Produced by Crawford Pr[...]ourne studios, the series cost more than $300,000 for the sets alone, which include a “pre-fab para-[...]klot. Heading the cast are Nick Tate, best known for his roles in the ABC's series Dynasty, Space 1999 and his Austra- lian Film Institute award-winning per- formance in The Devil's Playground, and British actor Steven Grives, who starred in Yorks[...]alian Film Corporation‘s mini-series Sara Dane, and has stayed on in Mel- bourne for Holiday Island. The supporting cast includes Caz[...]Tracy Mann (in early episodes), Patricia Kennedy and Frank Wilson. New Grundy ’3 PR Head Thomas Greer, former publicity director for Channel 10 Sydney, has been appointed vice-president, publicity, advertising and public relations of the Reg Grundy Organization. Grundy’s productions include Sale of the Century, The Restless Years, The Young Doctors, The New Price Is Right, Bellamy and Ford Superquiz. Felicity Goscombe continues as G[...]ce The Senate Standing Committee on education and the arts has called for a public inquiry into television violence. It said television program standards in the Broadcasting and Television Act were ”obsolete, difficult to follow and wide open to interpretation". The Committee call[...]iolence. It said research had shown the existence of a relationship between violence on television and in society, and that an inquiry should be held to review the exis[...]were contained in a review tabled in parlia- ment of a 1978 report on the impact of television on the development and learning behaviour of children, which strongly criticized program stand[...]vision industry has been shocked b the withdrawal of a major advertiser rom the sponsor- ship of 50 programs. Procter and Gamble, American tele- vision’s largest advertiser, withdrew on the basis of detailed standards which assess the socially-redeeming features of a show ~ whether it is likely to encourage anti-social behaviour and whether. sex and violence are gratuitous. The move came shortly before Coalition for Better Television announced a boycott on the sponsors of shows it thought most offensive. Details of the boycott were not avail- able at the time of writing. New SAF C Television Sales Agent The S[...]ra- tion is close to finalizing the appoint- ment of an international distributor for its television productions, heralding the start of a new era for the Corporation. SAFC director, John Morris, fol[...]P/TV Festival in Cannes, believes there is plenty of scope for expansion in the SAFC's tele- vision production a[...]cussions with organiza- tions in Britain, the US. and Europe regarding future SAFC productions. Among[...]the South Aus- tralian opal fields at Coober Pedy and Andamooka. Production is expected to start late next year. The book will be adapted for television by Adelaide writer Dave Allen. The SAFC has also announced plans for a major new series, based on the Rolf Boldrewood[...], first published in 1888, relates the adventures of bush- ranger Captain Starlight as recorded by bus[...]still to be finalized. Ironically, the chairman of the SAFC, Jack Lee, was involved in the 1957 //[...]lian Broadcasting Tribunal has extended its terms of reference in the Cable and Subscrip— tion Television Services inquiry. It will now include a more detailed con- sideration of radiated subscription ser- vices and pay television. The change in terms of reference has delayed start of the inquiry until mid- September. Persons or org[...]submissions can lodge supplementary submissions, and new submissions are invited. The closing date is[...]- vision from groups as diverse as a con- sortium of Christian businessmen, sporting bodies, and newly-formed cable television companies whose directors represent radio, theatre, mining and television interests. Recent information suggests that the form of subscription television best- suited to Australia[...]ambled signal is broadcast by traditional methods and decoded by a “black box”. Consumers pay either a flat fee for receiving programs or a fee calculated on how muc[...]ent visitor to Australia, Robert Block (president of the US. firm Telease), said his firm is developin[...]cast to television, teleprinter or home computer, and can deliver five separate audio signals with a tele- vision picture and in stereo. Future of Children ’3 Television Foundation in Doubt Talks aimed at determining the future of the Australian Children’s Tele- vision Foundati[...]place in July, between the Vic— torian Minister for the Arts, Mr Lacy, Federal Education Minister, Mr Fife, and Home Affairs Minister, Mr Wilson. The ACTF, set up in 1981 to encourage production of children’s programs, needs $600,000 to match mo[...]sland. The Senate Standing Committee on Education and the Arts recently recommended Government support for the ACTF, Dr Patricia Edgar, director of a task force setting up the foundation, said it c[...]without Common— wealth support. New FACTS Code for Children ’s Television The Federation of Australian Com- mercial Television Stations (FACTS) has implemented a new code for advertising during children‘s programs. From Au[...]to five minutes an hour. The scheme will operate for a two- year trial period and was introduced as a result of pressure on FACTS over the volume and effects of advertising on children. The code restricts the type of products advertised. the repetition of commercials and has guidelines for content. New SBS Board Former Lord Mayor of Sydney, Sir Nicholas Shehadie, has been appointed chairman of the expanded Television News Special Broadcasting Services Board, which oversees administration of multi— cultural television Channel 0/28. The C[...]sed from four members to seven, with appointments for terms of up to three years. The new board comprises Grigorij Sklovsky, chairman of the 888 since 1977, Garvin Rutherford, chief executive of the 28M broadcasting group, Tony Bonnici, vice-chairman of the Ethnic Communities Council of Vic- toria, James Salmon, chairman of the Ethnic Communities Council of NSW, Fiorenza Jones, an ltalian community social worker from Brisbane, and Frank Galbally, chairman of the Institute of Multicultural Affairs. The new advisory council, the membership of which has yet to be finalized, will replace the e[...]tative committee, which comprises representatives of the Victorian and NSW Ethnic Broadcasting Advisory Committees and the National Ethnic Broadcasting Advisory Council. Announcement of the new 888 board has drawn protest from some qua[...]d representation to 400,000 Italians in Melbourne and Sydney. The only Italian on the new board is Jones, from Brisbane, which has an Italian population of 20,000 — and doesn‘t receive Channel 0/28. At the same time, public broad- casters are critical of the new board. The Public Broadcasting Association of Australia says the board failed to in- clude anyone with experience of public broadcasting. The 888 has already agreed to screen test television transmissions for public broadcasters for eight hours over two weekends in October. How- ev[...]the public broad- casters has not yet been passed and public broadcasters are still waiting to be issued licences. Brian Walsh, spokesman for the PBA and chairman of Melbourne‘s Open Channel co-operative, told the[...]n has yet to be made about formal estab- lishment of the independent Multi- cultural Broadcasting Corporation as a statutory body. With the expansion of the SBS board. it appears this decision could be[...]tarted production on a television series destined for screening in the US. on pay-television. The seri[...]ringa Stone. is an adventure about a cattle baron and a mining magnate. it is being financed by the VFC, the Queensland Film Corporation, private investors and the television subsidiary of The Washington Post. American actor Robert Vaughn, best known for his role in The Man From U.N.C.L.E., has b[...] |
 | \ \\X \\\\ \ \\ BROADCASTING AND G U LATION Nick Herd reports on the role of government in regulating broadcasting. In particu[...]mendments to the BroadcastingAct. he argument for regulation of broad- casting by the state is based upon the concept that since the airwaves are a scarce and public resource they should be used in such a ma[...]itimacy in the Con- stitution, which is the basis of broadcasting legislation and which successive governments, Royal Commissions and inquiries have reiterated. Private interest, it[...]s powers to ensure that the structural priorities of the broadcasting system reflect this concept. Commercial broadcasters, in putting a case for self-regulation, have often seemed to present regulation as relating primarily to questions of program standards and local content. They are important issues, ones wh[...]interest groups have focused on to the exclusion of any other. However, regulation has to be seen as going beyond this to include the issues of ownership and control, as well as the intro- duction of new technologies. It is only in recent years that ownership and control has become a major public issue. Previously, it was assumed that the structure of commercial broadcasting was more or less stable.[...]the Labor Govern- ment), about the concentration of media interests, it was generally assumed that th[...]r changes in the status quo. However, the shakeup of com- mercial broadcasting, occasioned by the activities of Rupert Murdoch, have put that assumption to the test. The result of that testing seems to be the demonstration by the present Government of a lack of resolve in regard to broadcasting regulation. The amendments to the Act, pushed through the autumn session of parliament by the Minister for Communication, Mr Sinclair, would seem to indicate an unwillingness on the part of the Government to challenge the domi- 262 — Ci[...]had the confidence to devise an effective system of regulation in the public interest. Britain, the US. and Canada, the countries upon which Australia has of[...]tory authorities vested with the respon- sibility of regulating broadcasting in the public interest. T[...]broadcasting system from private monopoliza- tion and political interference. It is only recently, how[...]advisory role. The power to grant, renew, suspend and approve changes in owner- ship and control rested with the Minister. Even in the areas of program standards and the allocation of frequencies the ABCB was subject to ministerial oversight. During the Labor Government’s term of office, the idea of establishing an equivalent to the British Indepen[...]ing commercial broadcasting, was floated a number of times. However, no effort was made to reduce the dis- cretionary power of the Minister. Despite the sound and fury, and the change of name to Media Minister, Labor did nothing to chan[...]he Fraser Government abolished the Media Ministry and established a departmental inquiry into the structure of broadcasting — the Green inquiry. Its report re[...]ian Broadcasting Tribunal should replace the ABCB and be invested with all the powers of the Minister. They recommended that the licensing process should be a public one and that, as much as possible, the public should be a[...]ance. Public interest groups were obviously eager for a more open system. But broadcasters were also ready to welcome a system that reduced the potential for direct political intervention. Accordingly, the[...]cing the amendments, Eric Robinson, then Minister for Posts and Telecommunications, said: “The principle of a broadcasting system not subject to political interference is one of the basic aims of the changes proposed . . . The major element of the changes aimed at depoliticizing the broadcasting system is the transfer of the licensing power from the Minister to the Aus[...]he ABT the power to grant, renew, suspend, revoke and approve changes in the ownership of licences as well as to monitor and maintain program standards.'It also gave the Trib[...]nary powers to act in the public interest outside of a literal interpretation of the Act. At the time, however, nobody seems to have been aware of just how wide the Tribunal’s discretionary powers were. The first public inquiry of the ABT examined the question of self-regulation for broadcasters. The result ofthat inquiry was a reiteration of the concept of public regulation. The Tribunal stated: “We be[...]ctive or an individual basis, should be regularly and directly confronted with the views of those whom it serves. The Tribunal contends that regular, public inquiries on licence applications and renewals will achieve this aim. The philosophy of direct public accountability is the basis of our approach to the regulation of broadcasting.” This statement indicated the phi[...]ub- sequent public hearings into licence renewals and share transactions. The licence renewal hearings in Adelaide, Sydney and Melbourne failed to demonstrate how wide the powers of the ABT were. In fact, to many it seemed t[...] |
 | ///// Broadcasting and Regula tion mined to give the ABT a run for its money. It was not just that this was the firs[...]g at the major media interests in the strongholds of their power. It was also that the industry had se[...]sly. .espite the ABT’s intention to have open and informal hearings, the Sydney hearings quickly b[...]ABT at such hearings, rather than the performance of the applicants for renewal. At that stage, the ABT had no lawyers among its members and appeared to rely too heavily upon the rather conservative inter- pretation of the Act by the Attorney-General’s Department. T[...]hat the public interest had lost out to the power of the broadcasters. The chaotic nature of the ABT’s performance at these hearings led to[...]It also, no doubt, contributed to the appointment of lawyers as members ofthe ABT — in particular, t[...]chairman after Bruce Gyngell resigned. Ownership and control became public issues when, in 1979, Rupert Murdoch restructured his Australian media interests. Of the major media interests, Murdoch’s was the only one\that did not have substantial interests in Sydney and Melbourne television stations. Murdoch had long w[...]y station. He had been the unsuccessful applicant for TEN-10 in 1964. He subsequently bought into WIN-4[...]bitions to strengthen its signal to reach Sydney. For a time also he had significant in- terests in TCN[...]ch must also have realized that with the approach of satellite broadcasting he could be left out in the cold. For not only would ownership of stations in Sydney and Melbourne mean control of the third com- mercial network, they would also be the base for national satellite broadcasting. When Murdoch gained control of ATV-10, through buying into Ansett, it seemed fairly evi- dent that he and his advisers were confident of subsequent ABT approval. They had told the ABT of their intentions and were presenting them with afaz’t accompli. The ABT had not ob- jected to the previous acquisition ofTEN-lO and Murdoch was going to divest himself of such television interests that would bring him within the limits of prescribed interest. What was more, he liked to p[...]an tele- vision industry. Despite the confidence of Murdoch and his advisers, there was a question raised as to w[...]ould refuse to grant approval. However, the terms of reference of the inquiry and the procedures undertaken by the ABT became an issue for debate when the in- quiry first opened. In this debate, the key section of the Act was 92F(4A) which obliged the ABT not to refuse approval unless it “(a) is of the opinion that the transaction has resulted or[...]ary to do so in order to maintain such ownership and control, whether direct or indirect, of the company holding the licence as, in the opinion of the Tribunal, best accord with the public interest.” The movement of shares that had resulted in the change ofownership of ATV-10 did involve a rather complicated series of transactions between companies, the result of which was that the applicant before the ABT was a subsidiary of News Corporation, Control Investments. Counsel for Control urged that the authority of the ABT was limited to considering a contra— vention by Control and not to any other person party to the transaction.[...]hallenger to approval, the ALP, argued that scope of the in- quiry was much wider than that and that they wished to pursue the question of whether contra- ventions by persons other than Co[...]ut argued that the ABT should allow them by means of cross-examina- tion to explore a range of matters relevant to the transaction. The ABT rule[...]le evidence” it would not be a110wed to so call and cross~examine witnesses. As a result, the ALP withdrew, went to the High Court and obtained an order halting the inquiry. The High Court, in May 1980, ordered the ABT to re~open and reconstitute the inquiry. It reminded the ABT tha[...]nsive discretionary powers to examine all aspects of the transaction, even as it affected those who were not party to the application for approval. it said that the ABT had a statutory re[...]all matters relevant to the inquiry irrespective of whether a contravention was be- ing alleged before it or not. The ABT, it said, was not a court of law, was not bound by the rules of evidence and could inform itself on any matter it thought fit. The importance of this ruling is that it gave support to the view that the function of the ABT was not to act as the impartial arbiter of disputes brought before it. The Act specifically[...]uiry, after hearing evidence that a contravention of the Act had taken place, did not refuse approval[...]tionary power “. . . to maintain such ownership and con- trol, whether direct or indirect, of the company holding the licence as . . . best acc[...]that they determined the programming stan- dards of the entire network. t was not the first time the[...]blic interest. It had previously refused approval of the purchase of Radio ZHD, Newcastle, by NBN—3, Newcastle, because it was not in the public interest for one group to own a monopoly of broadcasting in one city. That case had gone to the High Court too, where the decision of the Tribunal was upheld, the Court stating: “Fr[...]t in relation to the grant, renewal, revoca- tion and suspension of licences, the limitation on ownership of shares, the determination of program standards and the extensive role which it gives to the Tribuna[...]these matters, we infer that it is the pur- pose of the Act to ensure that commercial broadcasting is conducted in the interests of the public.” By the end of 1980, the ABT, with the support of the High Court, had established itself firmly as the body charged with the regulation of broad- casting in Australia. The only way that this could be changed was for parliament to re-write the Act. That is exactly[...]unced that the Government would inquire into some of the issues surrounding the ATV-IO case as they related to the Act. The inquiry was conducted by officers of the department and, although theoretically open to submissions from[...]n such a manner that there was little opportunity for public com- ment or scrutiny of proposed changes. The foreshadowed amendments ca[...]t the Government did not consider the ex- istence of three major metropolitan networks as against the[...]. He also intimated that he wanted the discretion of determining what was in the public interest to be[...]mored that the Government would include some kind of retro- spective legislation to ensure that the Ad[...]verse the ABT decision. It is clear now that some of the proposals so obviously partial to the Murdoch interests were deleted as a result of pressure from Liberal backbenchers. They were not, however, successful in protecting the power of the ABT. The amendments to the Act remove the di[...]to decide what is in the public interest. Instead of the ABT being able to decide, as it sees fit, what is and what is not in the public interest, this is now l[...]wing guidelines: l. Whether the applicant is fit and proper to hold a licence; 2. Whether the applicant will provide ade- quate program services and encourage Australian production; 3. The commercial, financial, technical and management capabilities of the applicant; and 4. The degree of concentration of ownership and control. but only outside ofthe six ma- jor metropolitan areas. The amendments also make the process of takeovers and share market raids much smoother, by allowing for unconditional take- overs and for approval of a transaction to be given by the ABT before it takes place. The amendments do nothing to prevent the use of friendly companies to “warehouse” shares as a means ofgetting around the ownership and con- trol provisions. As Mark Armstrong has said, the amendments “. . . give a gorilla of average intelligence a fair chance of circumventing the Act”. Mr Sinclair has also p[...]r- doch can still get ATV-10, despite the absence of retrospective provisions, by the simple expedient of selling the shares to a nominee company and making a fresh application under the new rules. O[...]ition in broadcasting will be between three large and dominant groups, whose position is protected by the Act. It is they who will determine a large part of the future development of Australian broadcasting, not the ABT or th[...] |
 | [...]Company appeared in an open-air pro- duction of the play The Liberation of Skopje at the old Darlinghurst Gaol (now East Sydney Technical College). In between this short season and one held in Melbourne, Ferry— man Television Productions, Sydney, booked the company for a week and filmed an adaptation for television._ _ Producer Er1c Full1love reports on the production of this harrow- ing story of the psychological damage of war on a child’s mind. 1. Obtaining the Rights, Unions and Associated Problems As executive producer nom1nally responsible for drama for the experimental programs on the fledgling Chann[...]epreneurs likely to import theatrical productions of note to Australia. The object was to consider “deals” for rights to _, televise such productions for Australian 1 audiences. Anthony Steel, artistic director ofthe Cladan Cultural Exchange Institute of Australia (CLADAN), enthused about the Zagreb Theatre’s (Yugoslavian) production of The 9.: Liberation ofSkopje which CLADAN intended[...]to Australia in January 1981. He sent me a resume and review of the play, which made gsi Rade Se1bedz1zi/a as G[...]to la lk afie1 bein rig 101 1ur.ed The Liberation of Y1 go savl nplaywrighr Dusan Jovanovic (left). television producer Eric Fuliilove and arrisric Skopje. di11reclo1An/hony51eel.[...] |
 | [...]as such large Yugoslavian com- munities in Sydney and Melbourne (served by Channel 0/28).As New Zealand had opted out of their proposed importation of the play, we were given the chance to buy the Australian rights to televise the production, and have the services of the Zagreb Theatre Company for one week, between other engagements Channel 0/28 ex- ecutives Bruce Gyngell, Ron Fowell and John Martin approved the deal, and agreement was reached with CLADAN. Actors Equity[...]ction spoken in Serbo-Croatian, Hungarian, German and Romany!) and protracted negotiations failed to reach a solution. It is to the credit of Channel 0/28 that they agreed to underwrite the costs of the Zagreb Theatre Company for that week, even if the teleplay could not be moun[...]uity came to an amicable arrangement with CLADAN and, with about two weeks notice before the arrival of the Zagreb Theatre Company, Ferryman Television P[...]gent pre-production processes. 2. Pre-production and Censorship l was not able to get either an English or Serbo-Croatian version of the play until the Company arrived and I then rushed the play for translation into English. I found that the text w[...]r words. We subse— quently discovered that many of the actors were also ad-libbing more profanities into their roles, during dramatic moments of the play. It should be pointed out that swear wor[...]family life among the working class in Yugoslavia and that swearing is permitted dur— ing adult programs on television there. As we were then adapting the play for tele- vision, [ approached the author of the play (who fortunately accompanied the Company to Australia), and the stage director from Zagreb, with a request for changes. They refused and Channel 0/28 ignored my appeals that (i) it could[...]hange the text would be the same as censoring one of Shakespeare’s works. Not only would Channel 0/28 not allow cer- tain words (“fuck” and “cunt” were among them) to appear on the sub-[...]ctors in the original languages. Dusan Jovanovic and Ljubisa Ristic finally agreed to a compromise (“crotch” for “cunt”, for example), when I pointed out that, if we did not[...]the final result was satisfactory from all points of view, although I was forced to have a Serbo- Croa[...]as set in two separate locations in the old gaol, and the audience was moved by the players within the areas. But after Fitzwater and i had seen the play, we decided it would not do itjustice to have this static situation for television, so we adapted the play for television and eventually recorded the teleplay in 36 different[...]d on photographing a stage play in two locations, and not recording in so many different locales, in- cluding interiors, Fitzwater and I planned the production tightly to make the best use of the O/B facilities arranged for the production. We had booked (from the excellent NBN-3 New- castle station) an O/B van with four cameras for two days/nights and one camera (for pick-ups) for one day/night. As the teleplay contained day and night scenes, we made our crew calls be- tween midday and 10 pm. each day. Fitzwater had planned to use on[...]gged” the other two cameras to other locations. and the reserve camera crews set up the next scenes. NBN-3 set up their van in the centre of the old gaol complex so that the cables could rad[...]There were other complications in the plan- ning and execution of the production. One of the attractions of the play for me was that the cast included six children, two white horses, a dog and two dozen pigeons. Our agreement with Child Welfa[...]ted to work limited hours daily with the children and not later than 10 pm. (“curtains” for the play) at night. So we had to schedule around[...]to rain. We quickly used our wet—weather cover and were forced to shoot some scenes in rain. After t[...]hedule, so I gave the director a two—camera O/B for the last day/night’s shoot. On the last day we started operations at 10 am. and finished at 4 am. the next day. (Uusually these sorts of hours are only worked on 30- second commercials!) At one stage of the shooting, two ofthe three cameras available packed up — technical problems caused by rain — and I admired the way that Fitzwater adapted to this nightmarish situation. the bane of video directors. The cast were marvellous throug[...]o skilled television actors in their own country, and performed for the cameras with great skill. \\\ 4. Post-production castle. Because of the many shifts in location, and inserts tapes contained in so many rolls of tape, editing took 40 hours instead of the scheduled 10. We were also not able to “off[...]sweeten- ing. which took place in the audio suite of Chan- nel 0/28, also took many long hours because of the complex soundtracks. In the end, our mix was[...]n screened on Channel 0/28 in April. The audience and critical reaction was very positive, and the channel is planning to repeat the show[...] |
 | [...]ers to the Australian Television, Broadcast, Film and Technical IndustriesThe MTA product range inclu[...]ld- renowned manufacturers: AMERICAN DATA Studio and 0.8. Production Video Switchers, Master Control Switchers and Automation Systems ARVlN/ECHO Video Discassette Frame Store Recorder/ Reproducer for PAL Colour AUDIO KINETICS Q-LOCK 21 O, 2 or 3 ma[...]TAL Digital Videotape Leader Countdown Generators and Clapper Board Character Generators CEI Broadcast Colour Cameras for EFP and Studio Applications CMX Computer Assisted Videotape Editing System, Time Code Generators and Readers CONRAC An excellent range of Monochrome and Colour Picture Monitors DATATEK TV Transmitter Colour Phase Equallsers and Waveform Correctors, Envelope Delay Measuring Sets, Sweep Generators DOLBY Audio Noise Reduction for Single and Multi-Track Recorders, VTR, Cassette Production and FM DOLBY Motion Picture Sound Noise Reduction Eq[...]Equipment ELECTRONIC VISUALS Television Waveform and Vector Monitors ENGINEERING DESIGNS AND SUPPLIES TV Caption Scanning equipment on camera and portable prompting systems HARRIS VIDEO SYSTEMS (CVS) Digital Time Base Correctors JERROLD Complete range of Cable equipment and planning service LINK ELECTRONICS Specialised Colour TV Test Equipment, Monochrome and Colour Cameras and OB Vans MTA (AUST.) Television and Radio Traffic, Scheduling and Accounting Computer System MAGNA-TECH ELECTRONIC CO. World-famous Film Sound Recorders, Dubbers and Post Synchronislng Equipment MICROWAVE ASSOCIATES Television Mobile, ENG and STL Microwave Equipment MOSELEY Digital Remote Control Systems for AM, FM and TV Transmitters RCA Broad ast Television Camera[...]o Consoles custom-built or standard ‘8‘ range for all applications WR, ROYLA; Excellent Colour Camera Grey Scale and Regist; on Charts. Special Transparencies and Colour Monitc grey Scale Reference Units SCHNEID[...]y TV Lens manufacturers TELEMATiON A large range of Television Colour Studio Equlpr‘ ant including Delegation Switchers and the Compositor Graph ,3 Generator T‘l‘i Swrtc‘ lei; Access Transmission Testing and Digital Transmissmn Test Sets ViG: ELECTRONICS Teletextano vdata equipmentand systems For further information and enquiries contact:— MAG NA -TEC H TRONICS lAUS[...]N " Nagra III professional sound recording unit for sale - comes complete: 0 Internal crystal sync,[...]er 416 microphone (cage, pistol grip, shock mount and wmdsock) oSony ECM microphone, plus two Sennheiser neck mikes oBeyeI DT48 dynamic headphones ofull set of Cannon, DIN extension leads Price: $2,600. The unit is in excellent condition and would be ideal for all types of location work, given Nagra’s reputation for reliability. Also available: Lowell-0mm 50 min, 250w portable battery and lighthead. Price: $850 Telephone John McLean, (02[...]lywood films shot using fRosco filters and gels? _. . fermation on the largest A range of: ,Iz’tiag‘if‘ilters in the world, contact the sole Australian agents for Rosco iDICS Australasia Pty Ltd r ‘ II[...] |
 | [...]lA agent. Steve Sinclair, to uncover the identity of the attackers, With the assistance of Wrightson’s beautiful assistant. Toni Rus- sell, Sinclair relentlessly pursues his quarry across some of Australia‘s harshest land- scape.BELLAMY Pro[...]ork Exec. producer ........ .Don Battye In charge of production ...... David Lee. Jan Biadier Director[...]........................ 60 mins Gauge ..... 16mm and 2 inch videotape Shooting stock ............. Eas[...]oo in town, with the toughest job in town. FATTY AND GEORGE Prod. company .......... Tasmanian Film C[...]iginal idea by ............... .. Eddie Moses and Ron Saunders Photography .............. Gert Kir[...]d. manager Prod. secretary .... ist asst director and floor manager ........... Jack Zalkalns 2nd asst[...]Jonesy), Michael Aitken (Maggot). Synopsis: Fatty and George's father. Edward Lockley. disappears while[...]riend lzzy they rescue the time crystal from Phil and Nancy. the villains. Slasher and his gang of bullies are also on their trail. Can they rescue[...]psis: On Holiday island. one explores every shade of the human condition. The loves. the fights. the fun. the terrors, the tricks. the traumas. A continuing and ever— changing stream oi plots and personalities that ebbs and flows with the Pacific. THE SATURDAY SHOW Prod.[...]: A musical series featuring highlights from some of the great musicals of the century. Musical director Scheduled release[...]. Marianne Howard. Tom Farley. Synopsis: A group of country children ac- tivate an old mining town as an adventure campsne for city children DOCUMENTARIES -------- 1ST[...]ULPTURE TRIENNIAL Prod. companies. .. ...... ABC and The University of Sydney Television Service ....ABCand The University of Sydney Televr5ion Service Dist. companies[...](ABC. Sunday Spectrum) Synopsis A documentation of the Ist Ausi lralian Sculpture Triennial held on the campus of La Trobe University and the Preston institute of Technology in March this year. Includes the 3 . 3 Art Exchange program between Australia and Canada. TO FIGHT THE WILD Richard Oxenburgh Pro[...].. Bill McCrow Composers ....... . Robert Lagette and Norman Wilkinson Exec. producer .. . Richard Oxe[...]hich was shot at the exact locations THE GODDESS AND THE MOON MAN Prod company .......... Morni[...]Composer Asst editor ....... Neg matching .. No of snots MUSIC perlormed by .. ' ..Polly Miller. Ali Mungatop and family ....... Sandra Holmes. Janine Chialvo ..A[...]........ Tim Elliott . . . Sandra Holmes .. ptics and Graphics ...Optics and Graphics Sound editors .. Editing asmstant ....[...]Amber Mae CeCil. Synopsis The film about the myth of Pukamani. A dreamiime goddess com- mitted adultery With the Moon Man and this caused the death of Jinaini. baby son of the goddess The griei/ing father made the first mortuary ceremony. for the first death. The story ol Pukamani is told by the old Tiwi sculptures of the gods and heroes that were used in the ceremonies long ago and placed around the graves These anoient sculptures[...]ngs were collected by Sandra Holmes over a period of 24 years and (timed to tell the story of Pukamani. FEATURES _ THE LIBERATION OF SKOPJE Proo company ........... Ferrymart TV Pro[...]arapandza (Oskar). Synopsis. Telex/won adaptation of Dusan Jovanovics famous play * Cinema Pap[...] |
 | \\\\ \\ \\ \ The Film and Television In terfoce A technical series pr[...]nt. The original camera footage would then be cut and spliced (Fig. l) to match the edited workprint, and a print made from the edited originals would then[...]o tape. Edited camera originals could also be — and often are — transferred directly to videotape.[...]the original camera footage to tape from telecine and then electronically editing the transfers (Fig. 2) to produce a master program tape. Many variations of these two basic approaches are being used in film post-production with elements of film editing and electronic editing being combined in a number of ways to give producers a great choice of program assembly alternatives. Making a transfer[...]ed on a telecine projector or film scanner. Video and audio cables carry the telecine output signals to a videotape machine loaded with blank tape and set up ready for recording. On cue, both machines are started and the signals are recorded in the form of magnetic traces or tracks on the tape. The 2-inch quadruplex videotape recorder was used years ago for professional television program produc- tion. Thi[...]slanted tracks on the tape. With both quadruplex and helical * Compiled by the Motion Pictures Division of Kodak Australasia (Pty Ltd). Fig. 2. Editor asse[...]is recorded in a continuous track along one edge of the tape. Space must also be provided on the tape for control and cue tracks. When a videotape recorder is being set up for a film transfer, a test tape is used to optimize[...]color bands — is then recorded at the head end of the tape on which the film transfer is to be mad[...]ficant alteration or degrada- tion at the output of the playback machine. Television practice requir[...]r has already compensated in the printing process for scene- to-scene density and color variations in the camera originals. But in the transfer of original color reversal films or color negatives. sudden and sometimes quite large variations may be encountered, calling for cor- rections that cannot be made unobtrusively w[...]ng. There are now facilities which make the task of the telecine video operator much easier. Many pos[...]ctions to be determined by cycling the film back and forth over a scene; these corrections are then stored in a computer memory and applied automatically at the start of each scene as the film is being transferred to ta[...]lm is being transferred to videotape, the purpose of the transfer and the way in which the transfer is made should be given careful considera- tion. If. for example. one plans to assemble the program by electronic editing. it is best (at least for now) to use a 2-inch quadruplex machine for the transfer. Editing capabilities for this format are par- ticularly extensive and versatile. Besides, with a properly adjusted 2-in[...]ity can be maintained through several generations of re-recording. On the other hand. i[...]er, any convenient videotape format can be chosen for the transfer, depending on the end use ofthe program master tape. If the program is being produced for on-air television release, the transfer probably[...]in two (broadcast quality) formats, designated B and C. Outside these two broadcast formats, a great number ofdifferent types of helical scan recorders are in everyday operation in industry, commerce and education. Transfers can be made directly from film to any of these formats. but interchange among machines may[...]the edited camera originals. The relative merits of assembling programs on videotape by film editing[...]pear much easier to transfer film footage to tape and then assemble the program by electronic editing,[...]ies, including at least three videotape recorders and a video switcher/mixer. must be assured. Also. the high capital cost of all this equipment (dictating a high hourly usage fee), tied up for long periods while editing decisions are being made. must be kept in mind. Off-line editing equipment and methods. devised to ease the difficulties of gaining access to broadcast- quality recording equipment for television program production on videotape. allow[...]s in a quieter working area, away from the stress and strain — and noise — of the main videotape recording and playback centre. But for these gains. a penalty must be paid: off-line edi[...]tor to deal with numbers representing real scenes and production elements. As the video pictures are be[...]PTE time code [Fig 3] in hours, minutes, seconds, and television frames) that is keyed into the pictures. An edit list (Fig. 4) is prepared using these numbers and other necessary information to show where cuts or[...]d to generate a punched paper tape or floppy disc for auto assembly of the program. In contrast, the film editor works entirely with ac- tual pictures and sound as programs are being built, scene-by-scene, on an editing table. However, the final product of the editing process, including effects, can be seen only by making and projecting a print. And 2&34=33=8@ TV Frames Hours I\i‘linulrs Seconds Fig. 3. (‘RT display showing SMPTE lime and manual I Iii/cs. |
 | Film and Television Interface 1 Fig. 4. CRT display s[...]deotape, adding effects such as fades. dissolves. and superimposed lettering electronically. At the sam[...]dify picture appearance in any desired manner. If for any reason the transfer from film is found to be unacceptable. the tape can be erased and a new transfer made, with the desired changes inc[...]A frequently stated objective in the development of the highly-sophisticated off-line videotape editing facilities now available is to give editors and program producers a degree of flexibility comparable with film editing. The 3/[...]in off-line editing (Fig. 5) have the capability of reproducing the pictures in slow motion down to s[...]over an il- luminated panel in the editing table. and the equip- ment needed to recreate picture movement consists of a very simple mechanical apparatus and a light source, superimposing successive film fra[...]ear projection screen. Producing a video picture for viewing is a much more complex process. First. th[...]ic editing has been greatly simplified by the use of coded frame identification that enables any scene in a large roll of recordings to be located automatically by enterin[...]down the camera originals into individual scenes and hang- ing these short lengths of film on pegs in an editing bin. each one identifi[...]k has been done to develop a time—coding system for film, but, so far, most of this effort has been confined to Europe. The Euro[...]ight-emitting diodes (LEDs). The specifica- tions for the time-code are given in EBU recommen- dation T[...]. Jean-Pierre Beauviala has been actively engaged for several years in developing time coding on film as an economic reality. and the Aalon No. 7LTR camera shown at BKSTS—sponso[...]ing. Aaton also has a |6mm magnetic stock printer and a Pilotone— compatible coder for 'At-inch sound recorders. The clear numeral marki[...]approach to time marking on film. Gunther Bevier of the Steenbeck Company describes an editing table[...]ing in a paper in the August 1975, SMPTE Journal. And K. H. Trissl of [RT (Institut fur Rundfunktechnik GmbH) shows how this type of editing table can be used to automatically synchr[...]g has been used mainly in multicamera productions for syn- chronization of film cameras with the sound recorder (usually thr[...]inly because film is edited in sequence on simple and relatively inexpensive equip- ment. Also. since t[...]s more easily working directly with film pictures and sound as compared with the electronic methods. To be able to take advantage of the most favorable features of film and electronic editing methods -— even to decide wh[...]s in the most efficient manner. It is not unusual for films to be prepared for transfer by personnel isolated from those engaged[...]ng with a film editor to prepare the film footage for transfer in the most economical way. The editor.[...]n assembling the camera originals into A&B rolls, for example. a suc- cessful transfer can be made. Fig. 6a. A&B roll editing: simultaneous sound and picture editing on flat—bed editing console. Common Practice A&B roll editing (Figs 6a and 6b) has been a most useful and frequently employed method in lomm film printing operations for many years. With this method. effects such as fades. dissolves. and superimposed titles and credits can be added by printing, first the A roll and then the B roll. from common start marks. frame s[...]tape or a microproces- sor that counts the number of perforations (hence the S SMPTE[...] |
 | [...]MBERING have in common? . . . & SYNCHRONIZING“And Now For Something Completely Different" “Monty Python And The Holy Grail" Good edge numbering can save you[...]" How will YOU be scoring your next soundtrack? For further information and catalogues contact; 38 8 C LAR E N DON STR E E T[...]INTERLOCKED FULL REMOTE CONTROL I08) 42 2251 One of Australia’s most aggressive video tape 105 Rundle Street, cassette marketing organizations is looking for KENT TOWN SA. 5067 additional films to consider for promotion or sale on video tape cassette both in Australia ,1 and overseas. We will consider films ofand experienced stunt organization with I I years experience, led by international Stuntman Frank For further information please contact: Lennon. Capable of all forms of stunts. Outstanding in: 0 , . 0 Fire Stun[...] |
 | [...]vantage would be that films prepared in A&B rolls for transfer to tape could also be used to make prints for direct screen projection. What is needed here is[...]te the telecine film transport, the video levels and color balance controls, and the television switcher/mixer the same way that a[...]tape as the video signals. There is a great deal of interest in devising a method of double-system sound video-recording to gain the a[...]This method is used extensively in the production of 16mm films (particularly for news gathering and low-budget documentaries). But most professional[...]eative advantages over any other recording method and enables the film editor to turn out a finished product of unparalleled quality.Electronic Editing of Film Programs Electronic editing avoids any cutting and splicing of the original videotape recordings or transfers from film. Portions of recordings can be dubbed (recorded) electronicall[...]gs or ilm transfers is placed on one machine (A), and a blank roll to become the master program tape is[...]d onto the program master tape. At the beginning of a program assembly operation. the first scene mus[...]the,program master tape. A search is then started for the second scene in «Jim I .VRIWCR-WI «(Inf[...]///// //////////////////// lat-rd Launc— andof recordings. After this scene has been located, the ingoing edit point in the second scene (on the A machine) and the outgoing edit point in the first scene (on the B machine) must be selected and iden- tified by cue marks. These could be actual marks made with a felt-tip pen on the back of the tapes, but more often the cues consist of beep tones recorded in the cue tracks of the videotape. Again the two machines are starte[...]ine in the playback mode reproducing the tail end of the first scene previously recorded. At the cue,[...]machine. erase heads clear the remain- ing video and audio tracks after the outgoing edit point of the first scene and new video and audio from the second scene are laid down on the tape. continuing to the end of the second scene. This procedure is repeated, sce[...]team can make an edit in less time, but the task of searching for wanted scenes in the reel of recordings (often several reels in some programs) and locating the in and out edit points in successive scenes before the splices can be made, usually takes more time and effort. Simplicity is Complex To simplify and speed up the process of program assembly, highly-sophisticated editing fa[...]developed in the past few years is the SMPTE time and control code (Fig.9). All videotape recording formats allow space for a continuous longitudinal cue track (Audio 2) on[...]or pulses recorded on this cue track can provide for semi-automatic machine operation. The SMPTE time and control code consists of a stream of pulses recorded in the cue track. Each television frame is identified by an ‘address’ consisting of a series of coded pulses. The code can be recorded on the tape in elapsed time from the start of a recording or in time ofday from a clock. Coded[...]ue track in playback can be displayed in the form of the corresponding numbers on an electronic counte[...]another tape. It is customary to record the time and control code on the videotape at the time the ori[...]the same time. //////////////////////// Film and T elevisian Interface or in a subsequent viewing session, editing notes and a recording log should be prepared, essentially t[...]ording log should also show the time-code address for each scene. The start of scene 23, for example, might be identified with the scene descriptor “Harry opens door and yells”. and the time-code address as —1043l8 l6—that is.[...]hen the time comes to locate this scene in a roll of recordings, the time-code address is dialled or entered in a keyboard on the control panel of the playback machine. Then, on depressing the play button, the machine will automatically search for that address; and after it has been located, cue up that particular[...]he playback head. or at some predetermined number of frames ahead of the first frame, to allow for machine run-up time. The control function of the SMPTE time and con- trol code is an invaluable aid in editing and assemb- ling programs on videotape. By entering the outgoing and ingoing frame addresses for the splice point between two scenes. the machines will make the splice automatically on these frames. Of course. the machines used for editing must be equipped with the necessary search and control facilities for use of the codes recorded in the cue tracks of the tapes. The second part of this article, to be printed next issue, will cover on- and off-line editing, edit lists for program assembly, double—system videotape editi[...]transfer to videotape, adding eflects, the need for sync, post-production facilities, double-system alternatives, untouchable negatives and double-system sound.* Fig. 9. SMPTE time[...] |
 | [...]sion commercial production has provided the basis of training and livelihood for most of the Aus- tralian feature film industry technicians and artists. It is also a source of innovative and complex tech- nology to service the need for startling images that communicate quickly and with impact.Ian Baker is a Melbourne director-cameraman noted for his feature work as director of photography on “The Devil’s Playground” and “The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmit’ ’, and for a number of award- winning commercials. Recently, he used the[...]eft), [an Baker, Jean-Marie Lavalou, Clive Duncan and Noel Mudie. crane for the first time in Australia, in the production of commerczals for the launch of the Datsun Bluebird. Ian Baker When did y[...]t only the Louma could "' F red Harden is a film and television producer for the advertising agency John C lemenger Pty Ltd Me[...]idea, we were really committed to use that piece of equipment. Then there was a time when l pulled ba[...]sons have been talking about the imminent arrival of the Louma for some time. How did you arrange it so quickly tor[...]Through them we contacted the French co-designer of the Louma, Jean- Marie Lavalou, and arranged to have him bring the crane out. What did it cost? Mega—bucks! Out of respect for the clients, I can only say that the equipment and operator alone cost more than the total budget of the usual (BO-second com- mercial. We offered the crane to a few production companies for a share of the freight costs, but had no takers. The main c[...]culous because we didn’t know what came with it and we didn’t have time to say, ”Don’t send wei[...]y were so well designed: they moved along a rail and you could counter-balance it instantly. That’s what cost the money, freighting tons of lead out here, plus the man and his accommodation, expenses and salary for two weeks. One thing I worried about was the pub[...]ould have been done with an Elemack at a fraction of the cost." But happily when everyone saw the equi[...]scribe it as strapping the camera to a bumble bee and letting it loose. it is such an amazing piece of equipment that, in itself, that becomes a problem. One has to use it in a restrained way and not for the effect alone. What was Lavalon like t[...] |
 | [...]he balance weights. movements to fit the mood of the com- mercial. As we worked. if I suggested so[...]ry receptive. They are still developing the crane and seem to appreciate the feedback and suggestions. Jean—Marie got the crane through Customs. it took a day to uncrate it and for Samuelsons to set it up. Jean-Marie then spent a[...]ree grips to operate it — two to push the dolly and one to crane it. In fact, there were times when w[...]it can go on anything or be adapted to anything, and to any camera with a video split. The video feed[...]s his control box in a corner with a video screen and the wheels of a standard geared head. You can gear it to different weights and put tension on it, so it feels like you are actua[...]tion except that you aren’t being thrown around and should be able to do a better job than actually being on a crane. Production company: Fresh Flicks and The Production Group Director/lighting cameraman: Ian Baker Lighting and lighting effects were ateam effort of Geoff Collins, Paul Dickinson from TELSCO, John Leonard who wrote the computer program for the lights sequencer, the AAV technical staff and others Staging: Warren Kelly of W.A.Z. Effects Camera: lkegaml 79 D Crane: Samue[...]Adviser: Jean-Marie Lavalou Production manager of The Production Group: Tony Sprague New Producm and Processes Detail of the camera mounting with the lkegami video camera[...]h down much lower from its fulcrum. We used it on and off its mounting. Tony Sprague at AAV has the complete set of its operating statistics but, for instance, on the dashboard shot we used a prism and went from a 2 inch (5 cm) lens height up to a possible 17 ft (5.2 m). The biggest move we did was an arc of about 300 degrees around the car which involved a[...]about a 13 ft (4 m) lens height. That shot lasts for about 30 seconds and that is quite grand when you are on a false floor and trying to work up through a tight row of elec- tronics. Also, we were on a stage and you know how hard it is to light a car and make it look good. The fact that the crane moves[...]must cause unique lighting problems . . . Sure. For lighting we had holes in the black floor with min[...]car. So, in fact, we were dollying through shafts of light. When you look horizontally at the car you[...]was dust in the air, you couldn't see the shafts of light. Many people might criticize my use of the Louma but, with due respect, you have to understand how difficult it is to light a car and do such a movement. Remember you are looking first in one side of the car then the other. 80, using the crane meant we had lights on either side of the lady in the back, both on rheo- stats. When we moved from one side to the other, we would fade one up and the other down, with the lady throwing a piece of black velvet over the light that was in shot. We[...]in the car. Then, whenever we crossed through one of the shafts of light, it would often cast a shadow of the crane onto the bounce board which you could s[...]e light- shaft as the crane was about to cross it and someone uncovering another one to get the exposur[...]g the talent in the car turning the headlights up and down as we moved to the front. It is hard to appreciate the technical nature of what the machine did for us and what its use required. The total staging of the shoot took about two weeks and we shot seven spots in six days, most of which were pullouts from the 90 sec. Was[...] |
 | [...]Travels on inexpensive PVC piping 0 Includes set of pipe couplers 0 Made from aluminium & chrome mol[...]8kg 0 Total weight only 32kg 0 Extremely smooth and silent running STEERABLE DOLLY 0 Large 25.4cm r[...]rack to steering quickly 0 Detachable side boards for 76.2cm doors 0 Handle can be locked or swing free[...]R CONFIGURATION THE DOLLY DISASSEMBLES IN MINUTES AND IS CONVENIENTLY STORED IN For sales and hire in Australia and New Zealand contact: ANVI L CASES. THE MOVING PIC[...]IIIIIIII THERE'S ALWAYS somsmmc new AND EXCITING ATSAMUELSONS ' 91'”? ./,___ Three ye[...]meet strict engineering standards. After one year of severe testing, the Tulip is now registered and certified to be mechanically safe. Made from lightweight modern alloys and computer designed technology, the Tulip has been designed with safety, portability and versatility for the ultimate in location and studio applications. Thirty minutes total set up[...]y is required), combined with the ability to fold for storage and the versatility to work with a complete family of accessories will soon make the Tulip Crane the location standard forthe Film and Video industries. $200 per day. $600 per week. Head Office: Interstate Office; Sutures: geItifiedjafnd registered mechanic[...]pry. ltd. AUSTRALIAN MANAGING ASSOCIATES FOR —F—?ANA WSW/V LOS ANGELES, U-S.A. |
 | New Products and Processes The Louma in operation. felt we[...]ut what we were really getting. i couldn’t wait for the following day to find the guy didn’t shutte[...]ne. The next time i do a feature, the first piece of equipment l would consider using would be the Louma. I could easily justify it to any producer. The amount of production value you would get out of the use of the crane, plus the saving in time in being able[...]ou wanted to do, you would put the problem to him and, even if they went away for six months and totally redesigned the thing, he would make sure[...]ed as, say, open-heart surgery. There is no noise and it is beautifully made. You would have to see it[...]ul machine. Jean- Marie just got on to the wheels and made the .camera do loop-the-loops in the air. Th[...]r money wisely. So did i! i think it is the sort of machine that could be easily misused. You should start out with the idea and then realize it with the machine. it would also be invaluable where danger is involved. For instance, you can crane over a cliff or into a he[...]ashing car. You could have it right down in front of the car. Okay, if it gets hit it is an expensive[...]certainly don‘t have an operator, focus puller and director out there. They are all sitting in safety looking at the monitor. Diagram of the Louma crane. 26' 11” (Bin 20) maximum l[...]ve ground level 41' 4" (12 m 60) maximum rise and fall 14' 5"(4 m 40] below grdJevel,[...]urations) 21’ 8" (6 m 61) max. length in front of wheels 23’ 8” (7 m 21) max. reach in front of fulcrum Clive Duncan a! the control wheels and monitor (Ian Baker seated at his left), Tony Sprague (AA V) How is the pan and tilt head tensioned? The speed ratios are controlled by the buttons on top of the control box. The pressure on the wheels is co[...]ere is no weight relationship at all. The strain of concentrating that Clive Duncan, the operator, we[...]rtunately. by the time we finished the commercial and he had the knack of it, the Louma had to go back. It would take a while for an operator to get used to not having the weight of the camera against him or his eye to the viewfinder. How long did it take to unpack and set up the crane? When we first set it up at Samuelsons, there was Jean-Marie, myself and a couple of the young guys from Sammies, and it took us an hour. That was with Jean-Marie saying, “That bit in that box goes there.” None of us had a clue which bit went where. Could you st[...]tly longer to set up the video split. The length of the arm makes a difference to the speed of set up because after you extend it beyond 17 ft ([...]there is a yoke on the end to attach guy ropes to and there is a handle that tightens it quickly. Is there some motorized extension of the arm possible or is it all mechanical? No, the boom is fixed. It is made up of sections and if you want to change the length there is a speci[...]wn, take the weights off, unscrew the end section and insert another piece. it only takes a few minutes. The weights have nylon centres and are on a cam so that they slide easily yet look into place with the flick of a lever. They weigh about 15 kg a piece. Was it[...]an operator was needed to slow it down at the end of a move because it had built up inertia. Noel Moodie was at the front end of the arm guiding it and he was dancing like a ballerina as he dodged in and out of bounce boards and lights. What is the function of the semi-circular white gears at the post and on the head? They are linked with a rod that goes through the-centre of the tube and act together to keep the camera level when the ar[...]to keep it horizontal to the floor. That is done for him and he only tilts relative to that. Do the camera ca[...]it. We had the camera cables, including the zoom and focus controls that Ian operated in some of the shots, plus the leads of the lights mounted on the end. There is provision for headsets to plug into the end so that the crane operator and the two dolly operators had headsets. Clive had a headset and Ian had a spare set that were hooked into a cassette player so they could all hear the music and word cues. What was the dolly like? The dolly t[...]ays that brace it solidly, Did Jean-Marie do any of the operating? No, but he was a tremendous help.[...]ad planned the way we would with a normal Elemack and a jib arm. But he was able to say, ”In- stead of doing that, why not set the tracks this way?” He saved us a lot of time. * Cinema Papers, July-August — 275 |
 | [...]mposers listed here are available to the film, TV and advertising industries. Their diverse talents cov[...]Adelaide, went to the U.K. to pursue his musical studies at the Royal Academy of Music and Trinity College of Music. He became one of the most sought—after session guitarists in Eur[...]Olivia Newton—John, Mary Hopkin, Shirley Bassey and Mel Torme.He has made his name internationally as a classical solo guitarist on the concert platform but of late he has turned more and more to composition. Some of his film and TV work includes Animal Olympics (BBC); Tales of the Unexpected (Anglia), (sold in 45 countries); and The Long Good Friday (feature), in conjunction with Francis Monkman. As a member of the famous ”Sky” group he has also composed and arranged many of their most successful hits. Kevin is now intending to spend much of his time in Australia with his family. _ John Va[...]m a musical Melbourne family. In 1965, at the age of 15, he became a professional bass playerand had h[...]band "Kinetics”. He toured Australia with rock and roll bands until 1971 when he left for the U.K. to join Steve Kipner and Steve Groves in the band “Tin Tin” under the management of Robert Stigwood. Whilst touring the USA with the Bee Gees, ”Tin Tin’s” single Toast and Marmalade for Tea reached the top of the American charts. During 1973-79 John was back in the U.K. writing in partnership with Nat Kipner for such a For further details of dates, times and availability of the above artists please do not hesitate to contact: wide variety of performers as Acker Bilk to the Pedlars. He returned to Australia in 1978 and shortly afterwards received international acclaim for the song he wrote with Nat Kipner, Too Much Too Little Too Late for Johnny Mathis and Denise Williams (No.1 world—wide with millions of record sales). In 1980 he was awarded the B.M.|.[...]USA). At present he is under contract to Alberts and is specifically working with Russell Dunlop and Bruce Brown in composing music for record release and advertising purposes. _ Ron Goodwin , .[...]ilm scores to his credit, is an undisputed master of his craft. His music ranges from jazz to classic[...]ts. He is a perfectionist with an enormous sense of fun, which has earned him the deep regard of his colleagues throughout show business. He broadcasts, records, composes film music and appears on the concert platform. As a result of touring Australia and New Zealand as guest conductor with the major symphony orchestras, he has formed a very special relationship and fondness for the industry here and the Antipodean landscape. The following are just a few of his outstanding credits: 1958-60 Village of the Damned, I’m All Right lack 1960 Trials of Oscar Wilde (Warwick Films) 1962 Day of the Triffids 1963 633 Squadron 1964 Of Human Bondage 1965 Those Magnificent Men in Thei[...]iviera Touch 1968 Where Eagles Dare 1969 Battle of Britain 1972 Frenzy 1973 The Little Mermaid (Ca[...]arone Dudley Simpson Dudley Simpson was born and educated in Melbourne. He is currently living in[...]880 where he is regarded with the highest esteem for his work in the field of composing/arranging for TV, films and documentaries. His talent for producing some of the most recognizable signature tunes and incidental music may be heard in the following list of credits: - Moonstrike (1960); Lorna Doone; Kidnapped; The Last of the Mohicans; The Expert; The Man Outside (1970); The Long Chase; The Ascent of Man; The Brothers; Madame Bovary; The Tomorrow People; North & South; Katy; Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm; Target; The Nixon/Frost intervie[...](1980); Hamlet; The Winter’s Tale. A new score for Marguerite & Armand (Liszt) for the Covent Garden Orchestra. Currently working on "Storky & Co" (Kipling) and on the film Flame from the Forest. Countless episodes of Dr. Who Countless episodes of Blake’s Seven (18,000 singles of orch. playing the main theme sold to date). Chris Neal Chris Neal has a background of classical study of piano, general music (included in arts degree course at Sydney University) and professional football! In the early stages it was[...]spheres. However, music won outwith this talented and intelligent musician. His career has proceeded with highly acclaimed successes as a performer, composer and songwriter, record producer, sound engineer and expert in the field of computer synthesis. He is currently working on the sound/ music for Wall to Wall (Feature), A Load of Old Rubbish (short feature) and his second solo album. A partial list of film, TV and audio visual soundtracks is: Composition and Production — Age of Consent; Wilderness; Metropolis (1926); Mutiny on[...]er Work) — Lost island; Is Anybody There?; Dot and the Kangaroo; Auntie Jack; Norman Gunston; Little[...]hy — ”Man-Child" 1972 (Cast LP) LP; “Winds of lsis” 1974 (Solo LP) LP; "Newcastle Song[...] |
 | FEATURES FIRE-PRODUCTION DOT AND SANTA CLAUS (Further Adventures of Dot and the Kangaroo) Prod. company ............ Yoram[...]n), Chris Ashbrook (live action) Sound recordist for character voices ..... Julian Eilingwort[...]nimation assistant ..... Robert Maiherbe Checkers and cleaners ...Animation Aids, Bruce Warner, Jan Ca[...]gins. Synopsis: The continuing adventures oi Dot and her search for the missing joey. Dot meets with a hobo in her outback home town, the hobo becomes Santa Claus, and takes Dot on a wonderful adventure witnessing var[...]. Ben Lewin Synopsis: After the Nazis smash shops and burn synagogues in Vienna, the leading character[...]heir Australian gaoiers they recreate a semblance of Viennese cafe society in the treeless desert —[...]FORTRESS Prod. company ...... Associated R and R Films Director ................ Bruce Beresfor[...]liam Anderson Synopsis: A country school teacher and her pupils are kidnapped. After recovering from t[...]those who have violated the es- tablished pattern of their lives. GIRL WITH A MONKEY Producer ...[...]er Campbell Synopsis: A film following the events of a lonely. young school teacher in a small North Q[...]ily Asst editor .................. Mark Darcy No. of shots ... .. Linda Wilson Sound editor ..... ..An[...]. Synopsis: Cathy was all any old fool could ask for — a beautiful masochist with an Electra complex. She knew her life was a great pre-destined adventure, and, if it ended like Bonnie and Clyde, so be it. it was girls like this that old fools like Agamemnon died for. KANGAROO Producer ....................[...]r ................ Greg Brown Synopsis: The story of an English couple who travel to Australia with the intention of possibly settling here. They form a close friendship with an Australian couple, and through them meet the leader of a clandestine fascist organization made up largely of returned servicemen from World War 1. This leader[...]lishman, urging the fascist cause. After a series of events culminating in a political riot, the writer deCides he cannot support Kangaroo and leaves Australia. MARNI Producer/director ......[...]ert Kewley Synopsis: The film charts the fortunes of Gerald Percival, a 38 year-old business ex- ecuti[...]h two young children, as he embarks on his search for self-realization. For details on Billy West see previous issue, — PR[...]ostume designer for Ms Parkins ............ Prue Acton Make-up ......[...]..... Gary Scholes Publicity ........ Taking Care Of Business Unit publicists .............. Judy Gree[...]that develops between a successful dress designer and a photographer. Set against the backdrop of romantic Paris, it traces the resolution of their conflicts and their final union. CLOSE TO THE HEART Prod. com[...]be- tween Peter Thompson. a middle-aged bachelor, and Patricia Curnow. a 30 year- old spinster.[...]etary ...Catherine Phillips PRODUCERS, DIRECTORS AND PRODUCTION COMPANIES To ensure the accuracy of your entry, please contact the editor of this column and ask for copies oi our Pro. duction Survey blank, on which the details of your production can be entered. All details must be typed in upper and lower case. The cast entry should be no more than the 10 main actors/actresses — their names and character names. The length of the Synopsis should not exceed 50 words. Entries made separately should be typed, in upper and lower case, followrng the style used in Cinema Pa[...].......... Ross Major Composer ...Bruce Smeaton (and others) Cast: Noni Hazeihurst (Nora). Colin Friel[...]od companies .......... David Hannay Productions and 0B Productions Marketing company ........[...] |
 | [...]naware that a killer stalks the streets. A mother and her two sons survive in a dis- integrating relationship These two ele- ments coming together form the basis of this mystery/thriller.SOUIZZY TAYLOR Prod. com[...]pe (Pad- dy). Synopsis: A film based on the life of the notorious Melbourne gangster ofthe 19205, "Sq[...]till photography .......... ...Bliss Swift Rigger and aerialist ........ Tim Coldwell Wrangler ........[...]idea by ...... George Scherlck. Robert Williams, and David Lawrence ...... John McLean Photography. .[...]ael Craig (Thatcher). Synopsis: The year is 1995, and the world is carefully run by a strict regime. if you step out of line, you are labelled a “Turkey”. Further failure to conform means you are a candidate for the "Turkey Shoot”. WALL TO WALL[...]CTION —_ THE BEST OF FRIENDS Prod. company ............. The Friendly[...]Becher (Jim), Mark Lee (Bruce). Synopsis: Melanie and Tom have been the best of friends since preschool. Thirty years later they[...]after? A BURNING MAN Prod company ..... McElroy and McElroy Producer ............ James McElroy Direc[...]is a 22 year-old loser. He survives on his dream of a world where he at least has a chance. The dream[...]n he is used again. He steals a Porsche 930 Turbo and turns his dream into reality. Sound recordist .[...]st editor ............... Sue Scott Cutting rooms and sound rushes ......... Studio Clip Joint ....Un[...]companies ......... Michael Edgley international and |
 | and a hilarious, eccentric lady. Excitement, mystery and non-stop action and roll-in- the—aisie comedy for children. PARTNERS Dist. company ............[...]tlon Aids, Bruce Warner, Jan Carruthers Checkers and cleaners .. Title designer ................ T[...]ow (Sarah). Character voices: Joan Bruce (mother and grandmother). Shane Porteous (blacksmith, partisa[...]partisan, soldier). Synopsis: The poignant story of a young child, orphaned by war. and her struggle to survive. It is representative of the plight of children In war-torn countries and acts as the voice of all children against the suffering and hardships imposed'by all wars. WE OF THE NEVER NEVER Prod. company ........... Adams[...]. Donald Blitner (Goggle Eye). Synopsis: A story of the hardship faced by newly-married Jeannie Gunn which recalls the courage. vitality and humor of early cattlemen and Aboriginal stockmen in a harsh, but memorable Nor[...]son). Synopsis: The loves. the lives. the dreams and the fears of the incredibly young doc- tors and nurses. But, in this adaptation of the oft-told story. the doctors and nurses are played by children, the patients by a[...]: A psychological thriller. its plot is a mystery of manipulation and double- deaiing centering around elegant. beautiful Christina Stirling. her urbane. successful man-of-the-world husband. Peter. a daunting. sensuous young man and Peter‘s efficient. devoted secretary. .\ \ \ Puberty Blues THE KILLING OF ANGEL STREET ..Forest Home Films ............ GU[...]n Hargreaves. Reg Lye. Synopsis: A tale not just of corruption. but of courage. determination and sell- reaiization A film about a woman who at- le[...]ry in- dividual would never think herself capable of achieving — a woman who sets an example to the rest of us in taking on authority PUBERTY BLUES Prod. c[...]on the novel by .................... Kathy Lette and Gabrielle Carey Photography ..............[...] |
 | [...]hard Hobbs Publicity .................. Roadshow and Limelight Productions Catering ....................... John and Susan Faithfull Mixed at .......................[...]opsis: A comedy about an old ferry, an old grouch and the youthful enthusiasm of a group of children. Will the Transport Com- mission ever be[...]). Synopsis: Two young Australians meet in London and inspired by their dreams of making films in Australia fall in love and celebrate. THE WINTER OF OUR DREAMS ..Vega Film Productions Prod company[...]orary love story triggered by the coming together of two people from different worlds. SHORTS — FE[...]il, 1981 Synopsis: A film about the the festival of Perth. It looks at the actors and people in— volved and their motivation for par- ticipating. A MOST ATTRACTIVE MAN Prod. co[...]story about survival. Dorian is an attractive man and has always got by on his looks and charm. He lives in Frances‘ house, along with h[...]r financial well—being. Frances is running out of patience, and Dorian's looks are fading . . , REVENGE Prod. com[...]is: Three reclusive opal miners strike a fortune, and it becomes the catalyst for arousing old differences between them. They wrestle with feelings of greed, fear and finally revenge! THE RIFT Prod. comp[...]ynopsis: An ambiguous story about Albert's change of attitude after he finds his true love. THE SHEEP FARMER AND THE SHE[...]A film depicting interaction between the shearer and the sheep farmer. A ZOO IN THE TREES Prod. compa[...]tate Film Centre) Synopsis: Intimate observations of arboreal animals including feeding, grooming and caring for their young, with emphasis on their adaptations t[...]nc- tion. DOCUMENTARIES SHORTS — THE ACTRESS AND THE FEMINIST Producer/director ..............[...]ntal/complication film which explores the impact of feminism on the actress and filmmaker. THE BASKING SHARK Prod. company .Sea[...]...... November, 1981 Synopsis: The Basking Shark of the west coasts of Scotland and lreland is the se— cond largest fish in the world. it is unique, gentle and abundant. The documentary examines the sharks, ob[...]styles, works with the scientist who knows them, and interviews the people who de- pend on them for their livelihood. A CHRONICLE OF CHANGE: LILYDALE Prod, company .....[...] |
 | [...]), Bruce Brown (The Groom), Maree Teychenne (Lady of the Manor), Alyce Platt (Young Guest). Allan Goed[...]s: A short film which charts the dramatic changes of lifestyle and environ- ment that have occurred in the country town of Lilydale in the last century.A DAY IN THE LIFE OF AUSTRALIA Prod. company ............ Kestrel[...]ationed all over Australia to capture the country and the people for a photographic book to be called A Day in the Life of Australia. DEADLY HARVEST Prod. company ......[...]1981 Synopsis: A documentary based on the harvest of opium in the Golden Triangle.[...]release ........... June. 1982 Synopsis: A study of the aid effort in battle- scarred Kampuchea. YOU[...].......... June 4, 1981 Cost: The parents, staff and students of Ferntree Gully Primary School. Synopsis: A documentary for teachers showing what they can be doing to put the philosophy of education for a multi-cultural society into practice. The film concentrates on the experience of Ferntree Gully Primary School. AUSTRALIAN FILM AND TELEVISION SCHOOL — THE ANIMATION GAME Prod, company ...... Australian Film and Television School Producer ................... E[...].... Geoffrey Rush. David Johnson Synopsis:Laugh and learn about animation. DESIGN Producer ........[...]e-production Synopsis: A three-part investigation of design in the studio and on location. THE ENG REVOLUTION Produc[...]elease Synopsis: An introduction to the hardware and techniques of Electronic News Gather- Ing. EXPOSURE FACTORS P[...]hing film explaining ex- posure factors. HISTORY OF AUSTRALIAN CINEMA THE PERSONAL CINEMA OF CHARLES CHAUVEL Producer ...............[...]ess ........... Pre- production Synopsis: A study of the work of this famous Australian director. MOUNTING A TELE[...]A teaching film designed to show the preparation and transmission of a television outside broadcast. NED KELLY Produ[...]ction Synopsis: Videocrit, looking at the history of bushranging films. PICTURES AND WORDS Producer ................... Eric Hailiday[...]Synopsis: A film which examines the relationship of narration to visuals. and the techniques of writing documentary narra- tion. POST-SYNCHING T[...]production Synopsis: A film explaining techniques of post-synching and dialogue replacement in film production. RADIO — THE LAW AND THE BROADCASTER Producer/director ...........[...]aul Marx talks about defamation. the Broadcasting and Televi- sion Act and the Trade Practices Act, as they affect the broad[...]in release Synopsis: An introduction to the role and function of the production studios within a radio station.[...]n, Harry Griffiths, dis- cusses the “Golden Age of Radio”. THE ROLE OF CONTINUITY lN FILMMAKING Producer ..............[...]heldon, Wendy Strahlow. Synopsis: An explanation of the importance of continuity in film. SCRIPT T0 SCREEN Producer/d[...]ynopsis: This short film follows the transi- tion of stage plays to the television screen. with Brian[...], Tony Rees. Synopsis: A documentary on hardware and techniques of editing Super 8 films, SUPER EIGHT — ADDING A[...]tion Synopsis: A short film on the basic methods of adding music and narration to Super 8 films. . THE[...]Progress . ......... Production Synopsis: Music and effects 7 their use to add a further dimension to[...]guage" series, distributed by the Australian Film and Television School. VISUAL LANGUAGE SERIES — RH[...].............. Pre-production Synopsis: Part nine of the "Lessons in Visual Language" series, which d[...]Synopsis: A short animated film about the history of music from the beginning of time to punk rock, Made for secondary school children and general audience release. AUSTRALIA IN THE ’80[...]t ......... ...Rod Hinds Length ......... 24 mins and 5 x 10 mins Gauge ........................... 16m[...]release ..... September, 1981 Synopsis: A review of activities throughout the nation during the 1980s[...]. June 1981 Synopsis: A film on the prolongation of the Great Australian Mythologies i.e. the[...] |
 | [...]ducer Wayne Groom on Super 16 6‘ I chose Atlab for my laboratory because they have complete liquid[...]egular 16mm. Atlab have really perfected the art of Super 16 technology. 9 9 Producer Wayn[...] |
 | [...]ry. 1983 Synopsis: A lilm covering the background and lead-up to the 1982 Commonwealth Games as well as[...]Synopsis: A short film on the Federal Elec- tion and the voting procedures entailed in the election of Members of Parliament and Senators.FOURTEEN WAS GOOD BUT EIGHTEEN’S BETTER Prod. companies ...... Film Australia and The Big Picture Company Producer ...............[...]s ago Gillian Armstrong made a film called Smokes and Lollies — about the lives of three 14 year-old South Australian girls. This film revisits them and reViews their present lifestyles and the changes in their attitudes and aspirations. LIFE AT SEA Prod.[...]......... July, 1981 Synopsis: A recruiting film for the Royal Australian Navy. THE LITTLE WORLD OF DIETMAR Prod. company ..... . . . . ...Film A[...]lease ............ July. 1981 Synopsis: The world and work of internationally-famous micro-photographer Dietmar[...]ors from the Australian Cinematographers' Society for the past four years. for his exceptional work in this highly-specialized field. The technique combines the challenging use of camera and microscope simultaneously. A MAN AND AN ORGAN Prod. com an ........... John Bushelle[...]ngth ................ 26 mins Gauge ........ 16mm and 35mm Shooting stock .Eastmancolor Progress ......[...]................ June. 1981 Synopsis: The story of Ronald Sharpe and the organ in the Sydney Opera House,[...]............ July. 1981 Synopsis: A training film for trade union delegates. MEGALO MEDIA Prod. compa[...]gned to introduce secondary students to the study of the media. It traces the history of media and communication,_ in a light- hearted way. from the beginning of time to the present day. THE NEVER NEVER LAND P[...]h .................. 25 mins Gauge ......... 16mm and 35mm Shooting stock .. ...... Eastmancolor Progre[...]lease ............ July. 1981 Synopsis: A montage of Australia and its lifestyle. usmg the words of Henry Lawson to describe this unique continent.[...]NOISE Prod. company ......... Dept of Science and Technology DISI. company ............. Film Austr[...]n emotional short film about dealness. The impact of this film is made stronger by the lack of dialogue.[...].............. April, 1981 Synopsis: A videotape for the Com- monwealth Department of Education designed to encourage the use of a kit for non-English speaking secondary school children, d[...]ry. SEAWATCH Prod company ............ Kingcroft and Film Australia Dist. company ............. Film A[...]ketts Length .. ......... 20 mins Gauge .. ..16mm and 35mm Progress . Post-production Scheduled releas[...]A film to show the reason Australia needs a Navy and the Royal Australian Navy in action. SPONSOR PRO[...]released .......... June. 1981 Synopsis: A film for prosp tive sponsors. setting out their responsibi[...]g a film. videotape or audiovisual presen- tation and defining the ideal relationship with the producer[...]Prod. company ......... Dept of Industry and Commerce Dist. company ............. Film Austral[...]take business management training. STOWAGE, CARE AND USE OF LIFESAVING EQUIPMENT. SMALL BOAT ENGINE MAINTENANCE AND SAFETY Prod. company .. ...John Blackett Smith Productions for Film Australia Dist. company .. ' ...... Film Aus[...]about early detection 01 alcohol abuse. Produced for the Health Commission. AWARD Prod. companies ........... Victorian Film Corporation and Vincent O'Donnell Producer ..[...]release .. ...... August. 1981 Synopsis: The Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme. Made Ior the Department of Youth Sport and Recreation. CRIME DETECTION Prod. company .....[...]ion Synopsis: A training film, on the techniques of crime detection. for the Victoria Police. DRAMA Prod. company .......[...]roduction Synopsis: A short film on the teaching of drama techniques. Produced for the Educa- tion Department. FIND OUT — TALK ABOUT Prod. companies ........... Victorian Film Corporation and Ukiyo Film Productions Dist. company .Victorian[...]hips across cultural boun- daries. The beginnings of the development of a multicultural SOCIety breaking down of prejudices through language. Made for the Department 01 Immigration and Ethnic At- fairs MELBOURNE Prod. companies ........ ‘. . .Victorian Film Corporation and Cambridge Film Productions Director ............[...]Synopsis: A feature documentary about Melbourne for international release. Made for the Melbourne Tourism Authority and the Victorian Government Tourist Authority. 4 MU[...].............. Preaproduction Synopsis: A series of animated films about music for educational use Made for the Education Department. A SPECIAL FREEDOM Prod. companies ........... Victorian Film Corporation and The Moving Picture Company Director ............[...]lease Synopsis: A documentary about therapy care for mentally-handicapped children. set in Kew Cottage[...]rod. companies... . ..Victorian Film Corporation and AAV Australia Producer ............... ..Jill[...]ngth ......................... 20 mins Gauge 16mm and videotape Progress ................... Production[...]about the film in- dustry in Victoria. THE STATE OF THE ARTS Prod. company ............ Victorian Fi[...]: A short film about the arts in Vic- toria. Made for the Ministry for the Arts. STREET KIDS ........... Victorian Fil[...]............ 1981 Synopsis: A feature documentary of the urban streetlife of homeless children THE 1934 LONDON TO MELBOURNE A[...]A documentary about the classic air race produced for Victoria's coming 150m anniversary celebrations Being filmed in London and Australia. Made tor the Department of the Premier WESTERNPORT CATCHMENT AREA Prod. companies. . ..Victorian Film Corporation and the ABC Dist company Victorian Film Corporation[...]ancolor Progress . In release Synopsis: A series of three documentaries on the eilects ol industriali[...]ity Co-produced by the Victorian Film Corporation and the Australian Broad- casting CommiSSion tor the Department of the Premier THE WET FLYMAN S DREAM Prod companies Victorian Film Corporation and The Film House Director Gordon Glenn Scriptwrite[...]is: A documentary on the native lishing resources of Victoria 5 rivers and the need to conserve them Produced for the Ministry for Conservation (Fisheries and Wildliie DiviSionl THE UNSUSPECTING CONSUMER Pr[...]ated lilm on the pitfalls ot the marketplace Made for the Department of |
 | [...]e are not the largest, but we are proud to be one of the major international completion guarantors in[...]s associated companies, has guaranteed completion of more than 200 films since 1970, including feature length movies with total budgets in excess of $35,000,000.Our policy is to assist the producer in every possible way with counsel and expertise. We conceive our job as helping the Pro[...]! Frequently producers have told us that we were of material help in spotting difficulties early and assisting in their solution. We are able to offer bonding for the largest-budget films as well as smaller, at s[...]ll be pleased to consider bonding your next movie and invite enquiries by telex or telephone (collect).[...]ilm pro- duction. KEM now introduces versatility and economy to the Australian film industry. FILMWEST, the sole import agents in Australia and Asia can supply a full range of KEM tables, and provide interchangeable modules for 88, 16mm 816 and 35mm picture and sound editing as you need them. The KEM RS8-16 8-plate twin pic editing table is available to pro- ducers for a free demonstration and trial. KEM & FILMWEST, the state of the art. For information and appointments contact: FILMWEST Equipment Pty Ltd,[...]4150 FILMWA Telex: R521586 Raffles We are agents for AATON in Australia, Singapore and New Zealand. |
 | [...]‘ GallipoliBrian McFarlane The opening image of the film is that of a boy doing loosening and breathing exercises to commands rapped out by an[...]him just before the final scene as he climbs out of the trench at Gallipoli, stepping over the dead and wounded, to run madly into the line of the Turkish artillery. And the film’s last frozen frame holds the boy in the heroic posture of the runner, now streaked with blood. Between the opening and closing im- ages, Peter Weir has considerably ex- tended his range, thematically and aesthetically. in his earlier feature films, he s[...]upied with the extraordinary lurking at the edges of the mundane, with rational man confronted by matt[...]ipoli, his concerns are at once less metaphysical and more sociological, less an illustration of a pre-determined thesis and more an exploration of at- titudes. In spite of its title, the film is not a war epic; in fact, it deliberately refuses invitations to be so. Its first and last shots are of an individual and this proves to be more than mere artistic tidines[...]” so much as a film about war; about the kinds of attitudes Australians and par- ticular individuals took towards it in l915;[...]ense, what it felt like to be Australian then — and perhaps still does feel like. The second halfofthe film’s length is taken up with scenes of war (in Egypt and later at Gallipoli). The earlier half has to do w[...](l: lilo, Archy defeats at an athletic meeting, and their “joining up”, Archy in the Light Horse, Frank in the Infantry. The two halves of the film fit together because there are continuin[...]h Weir explores in an un- hurried, unemphatic way and which gain in cogency through being pursued in different milieux. I mean ideas like competitiveness and mateship and sporting spirit as aspects of our national myth. As well, the earlier half of the film reinforces the idea of Australia’s isolation from the rest of the world and the second half dramatizes the enforced surrender of that sense of isolation. Archy’s being a sprinter is a way of stressing the individual competitive aspect of the Australian character; its solitariness is created in Russell Boyd’s glowing images of the austere blankness of the landscape. Stronger than the competitive urge, though, is the feeling for mateship: the friendship between rural Archy and urban, know- ing Frank which develops after Archy[...]s developed in a long sequence in the first half of the film, in which the two head for Perth where Archy plans to join up: Stranded in t[...]ing, they are told there will be a two weeks wait for the next Perth train, “unless you‘re game eno[...]e snakes don’t get ya, the blackfellas will”, and two incongruous figures set off in a dry, empty landscape of shim- mering heat. This landscape will have a visual echo in the desolate crags of Gallipoli, but a more important aural echo is also set up. Frank’s joking reference to Burke and Wills pre-figures another doomed enterprise —[...]nal mythology. During their trek to Perth, Archy and Frank achieve a friendship that sur- mounts their[...]y war — it’s an English war,” Frank claims, and Archy counters with, “You’re a bloody coward.[...]When they meet an old Archy Hamilton (Mark Lee) and Frank Dunne (Mel Gibson) at Gallipoli. Peter Weir[...]came] in the desert, the old man hasn’t heard of the war (he has never been to Perth either, but he once knew a German), and Archy tries un- successfully to explain to him wh[...]psulates Australian isolation from world affairs (and underlines this by the very nature of the terrain), mud— dled patriotism to an undefined cause (and this notion gets its supreme ex- pression at Gallipoli itself), and casual indifference to another country’s quarrels. There is further an element of preposterousness in the very notion of. this discussion taking place in a vast stretch of desert. The two men finally reach Perth, are recruited and then separated until, months later, they meet in[...]ise in Egypt — an exercise in which Light Horse and Infantry get rid of their mutual animosity by acting as enemy to each other. An officer breaks up their friendly reunion with “Th[...]ows them to go to Gallipoli. They want to be part of the action; in time they get their chance, with inevitable results. if narrative were merely a matter of plot, the film would be thin and episodic enough. It would be a more or less interesting, even touching, account of a friendship casually begun and ar- bitrarily ended. However, the film‘s textu[...]ly a “war film": equally, it resists the label of “anti-war film". I don‘t mean that it celebrates war or that it approves of World War I and Australia’s participation in it, but, rather, that its interest is in the way people react to and in war. This kind of interest leads Weir to admire the feeling that grows between Archy and Frank, between Frank and his former railway- ganger mates, between Archy and his Cinema Papers, July—August — 285 |
 | [...]should involve themselves in Britain’s military and political problems, and what happens to them when they do commit themselv[...]shot. (In the mock battle between the In- fantry and the Light Horse, there are some stunning long shots of serried ranks. and it occurred to me that this was the last of the CinemaScope wars, but this is not where Weir’s interest lies.)In his exploration of why these Australians go to war, Weir suggests t[...]e (races, bets on races —- on anything) is part of the Australian consciousness, that it‘s no more to be resisted than the sex and booze the soldiers are warned about in Egypt , Th[...]e film is full ofpeo- ple challenging each other and ofothers betting on the outcome. The challenge of a war, however dimly its causes are understood, takes its place in a context of competition. Archy's first reference to joining[...]re under age", but Archy counters this by talking of his uncle‘s youthful escapades, competition. sporting spirit, enterprise: war offers a wider opportunity for their display. Also, for all Frank’s cynicism about its being England’s bloody war, the ties of empire are still there, strongly, ifnot articulat[...]e. Uncle Jack reads to Archy’s younger brothers and sisters and, while the Australian wind whistles round their i[...]unobtrusively made that Kip- ling is as much part of this scene as the kerosene lamp. When a soldier w[...]y-August the Light Horse", it is not incongruous for another poster to proclaim, “The Empire needs y[...]g about Gallipoli. The connec- tion between Archy and Frank is first established by their reading of news- paper accounts of the war: Archy’s cutting about Gallipoli is kept, significantly, in Every Boy’s Book 0/ Sport and Pastimes; Frank is reading a newspaper at the rai[...]ext shot. People are responding to the “baptism of fire on the rocky slopes of Gallipoli”, even if they are not sure where those slopes are. In the marvellously-lit scene of night farewell as the troopship leaves Perth, the soundtrack has snatches of “For England, home and beauty” as well as “Australia will be there”. The men may be marching to different drums, but one of them is clearly the drum of empire. This is not to say that Weir and David Williamson (who wrote the screenplay) are t[...]ctionary line: they arejust implying that motives for going to this war were mixed — and muddled. In Egypt, men from the youngest country[...]seen playing football at the base ofthe pyramids and the camera offers a close-up of the Sphinx, no doubt bemused by this dis- play of colonial competitiveness. Against this ancient b[...]p them there where they are wholly at the service of the British. The anti-British feeling glimpsed i[...]with the British Light Horse in Cairo where Frank and his mates are dismissed by British officers as “undisciplined". And, at Gallipoli itself, it is clear that they are to draw the Turks out of the way so as to protect the British. Of- ficer/men resentment (hinted at as the soldier[...]the Turks hav- ing dug in. They are cut to pieces and the camera pans slowly over the dead and dying. The men who are left know that the next order will send them to death, and medals, watches, rings and other mementos are left in the Australian trench when they climb out into “the valley of the shadow of death” as the 23rd Psalm is read on the soundtrack. For a change, a freeze-frame ending means something: the final frame leaves us with a clear sense of lives cut short in utter futility. Near the start of this review, I suggested that this film shows Weir ex- tending his range and changing direc- tion. In doing so. I suspect he has made his most successful film to date, and also that David Williamson’s screenplay has been a major asset and influence. Williamson is not the kind of writer likely to embrace the sorts of concepts Weir explored in Picnic at Hanging Rock[...]tidy in his structures as The Cars that Ate Paris and The Plumber were. Gallipoli is more loosely incl[...]pelling out its themes. It manages to be a humane and moving reconstruction of times past without succumbing to nostalgia; those[...]events, but this will not be crucial to a reading of the film. Gallipoli: Directed by: Peter Weir[...]d on an original idea by Peter Weir. Director of photo- graphy: Russell Boyd. Editor: Bill Anderso[...]lf appeared in its final form in the first half of the Eighth Century and it described, in its first part, the activities of King Hrothgar of the Danes who built a great castle, Mead-Hall, as a meeting place for all his subjects. However, the hall is regularly terrorized by Grendel, a monstrous representation of the savage world outside the hall, a world populated by creatures who are not the “children of men”. Grendel, a man- eating monster bearing the mark of Cain, is eventually confronted by Beowulf, the hero from the land of the Geats in Sweden, who kills the monster. Although Beowulf goes on to kill Grendel’s mother and then rule as king until his death in a fight with a dragon, American medieval scholar and novelist John Gardner utilizes only the first part of the epic for his 1971 novel Grendel. This, in turn, forms the basis of Grendel, Grendel, Grendel, an animated feature written and directed by Melbourne animator Alexander Stitt, of the Christian Television Association commercials and the ubiquitous Norm of the Life. Be In It campaign. Gardner’s reworking of the Beowulf epic consists largely of writing the events from Grendel’s point of view. Thus, instead of a parable about the role of kingship, political respon- sibility and the evolution of a culture, there is a contemporary, ironic view of the stupidity of mankind, the illogical superstitious development of religion and the ego-building role assigned to folktales spun[...]they had little or no basis in act: “He spoke of how God had been kind to the Scyldings, sending so rich a harvest. The people sat beaming, bleary-eyed and fat, nodding their approval of God. He spoke of God’s great generosity in sending them so wiSe a king. They raised their cups to God and Hrothgar, and Hrothgar smiled, bits of food in his beard.” One can easily see the appeal of such a story for the film’s producer, Phillip Adams, who in his[...]el, Grendel remains faithful to the sardonic tone of the novel while injecting the film with a good d[...]m. Also, Stitt creates a different person- ality for the selection of Hrothgar’s idiotic Viking warriors and assemb- lage, and then provides them with an English, notably Yorks[...]delivered by Bobby Bright, Ernie Left: Frank and Archy in Perth, before going to war. Gallipoli. |
 | The Long Good Friday t A plea for understanding and tolerance: Alex- ander Stirr's Grendel, Grendel, Grendel. Bourne, Ric Stone and Ed Rosser. Keith Michell provides the voice of Shaper, the balladeer, Arthur Dignam for the Dragon and Peter Ustinov for Grendel. The film begins on Tuesday 515 AD, wit[...]articularly since he provides her dietary staples of humans and frogs. For the rest of the film, Grendel is a rather passive protagonist, content to watch the foibles, brutality and deceit of mankind, although he occasionally rushes into Mead-Hall to fulfil his function by biting off the heads of a few unlucky humans. Initially, Grendel is moved by the Shaper’s ballads concerning the achievements of the community and the developing communal spirit. This cul- minates in Grendel’s plaintive cry for inclusion into their society (“Why couldn’t t[...]eir world, Grendel visits the all- knowing dragon and this sequence, as in Gardner’s novel, crystalli[...]ed negatively by their relations with other terms of the system. Their most precise characteristic is in being what others are not. Thus, the dragon explains, for everything good there must be something evil, for everything positive there must be a negative side[...]ight, whereby humans are forced to develop poetry and religion to explain his existence. Thereafter, G[...]umans in their attempt to deal with his existence and he begins to realize that they are an inferior sp[...]ly in the past when they sacrificed a couple of live virgins instead of a deer. Grendel decides to give them something to worry about, so, in front of everybody at Mead—Hall, he bites Wiglast head o[...]lier been humiliated by Grendel. However, instead of a battle between a godlike hero and a vicious monster, as in the original epic poem, Gardner and Stitt’s film transform Beowulf into an insane figure who leaps upon and destroys a vulnerable Grendel. Grendel, Grendel,[...]er, intelligent film incorporating a subtle plea for understanding and tolerance, although it may have trouble finding an audience. Except for the sporadic attempts by Ralph. Bakshi, the anima[...]relegated by the public to the restricted field of children’s entertainment. The reasons for this are complex, although the importance placed on considera- tions such as realism and verisimili- tude by popular audiences are obvious[...]h consider- ations by generating an understanding of the animated film as a legitimate form of adult entertainment, Certainly Stitt’s film d[...]rtant land- mark in the Australian film industry and as a development of that form of animation pioneered by UPA in the US. in the 1950[...]ters in the horror film are a logical expression of a culture’s dark or repressed side, and his speculations regarding the motivation of such monsters (e.g., Dracula viewed as the manifestation of a “blood-sucking aristocracy”) are interesting. Yet these comments add little to an under- standing of the film, as such senti- ments are best left to[...]ise explanation to Grendel regarding the function of a monster in the human cosmos. Overall, Stitt and his small produc- tion team, who had been working on the project since 1975, deserve recog- nition for a rather remarkable achievement. ’ Grendel, (.[...]The Long Good Friday begins as an action thriller and ends as a study of a man incapable of adapting to a new set of historical circumstances. The central character,[...]out to present a meticulous sociological portrait of him and his situation. Things have been good for Harold in the past few years. He has emerged from a series of gang wars, a decade ago, as the dominant force in[...]has consolidated his position as the con- troller of the local grog, gambling and prostitution trades. As an “honorable man”, h[...]hrough his “corporation”, he oversees a range ofof this arrangment. He has his yacht, mistress (Helen Mirren), casino, penthouse apartment and cars, and his religious ‘mum’ can be chauffeured to church in a Rolls, presumably to atone for Harold’s sins. He has a range of other trappings of the successful crime boss a city councillors and police superintendents in his pay and a number of establishment business con- tacts through whom he[...]clear, however, that Harold is a classic example of British post-war social mobility. He is basical- ly a working-class boy who, with a bit ofluck and a lot ofthuggery, has made good. He is depicted as crass and un- sophisticated despite his wealth. On top of this, he has the appropriate beliefs in individual effort and empire loyalty. In many ways, this is the familiar stereotype of the British underworld figure. Hoskins, however, gives the role an invigorating freshness. The interest of the film lies in its development of a context in which Harold is forced to act. The film opens with a shot of an isolated farmhouse where three men ap- pear to be waiting inside. The film then cuts to another scene of a man arriving at an airport with a suitcase and getting into a taxi. He dismantles the false bot- tom of the case, revealing a board of British currency, and helps himself to some of it. Then he hands the case to another man. The sa[...]atting up two younger men. An arrangement is made and the younger men go outside while he pays for the drinks. The two men are immediately grabbed, bundled into a car, shot and dumped by a roadside. The next scene cuts back to the farmhouse. A suitcase arrives for the three men, but before they open it they are held up at gun- point by another group of unknown men. This series of short scenes builds con- siderable dramatic tension. There are no clues as to the meanings of these events. This technique narrows the dis- tance between the narrative and the audience. The importance of such a technique is revealed when Harold becomes the centre of a new sequence of mysterious incidents. It makes the confusions of the characters, like Harold, those of the viewer as well. In this way, the meaning of events is cir- cumscribed by Harold’s own attempts to discover their significance. The next series of incidents begins with the explosion of a bomb in Harold’s Rolls-Royce, while his mothe[...]a public pool. Soon after, a bomb is found in one of Harold’s casinos. By a stroke of luck the wires have come loose and it fails to explode. Harold is worried by these[...]s. As a final blow, another bomb explodes in one of Harold’s restaurants. His Mafia plans are on the verge of being ruined. Harold has to act. In doing so he returns to the tried-and-true methods of the street thug. Strong-arm tactics are what got Harold to the top and they are his resort in this time ofcrisis. The “ex- ecutives" of his corporation are given instructions to ferret[...]minor crime bosses in London in an amusing parody of a Western cattle round-up. Harold himself goes ba[...]in a Jaguar, but on arrival it is fists, knives and guns that are going to get him the information he needs. The central analysis of the film con- cerns the impotence of Harold’s methods in confrontation with this new set of circumstances. An interesting contrast is drawn between Harold and the Mafia. The latter is depicted as a group of essentially middle-class Cinema Papers, J[...] |
 | [...]day business executives, more at home in a world of boardrooms and corporate deals. They are smooth, unflappable and the youngest is a product of the Harvard Law School. This serves to highlight Harold’s working-class origins and his inability to deal with a new force in the Lon[...]ong. The Long Good Friday has all the ele- ments of a good action thriller. The early sequences are engrossing and Hoskins gives a skilful portrayal of Harold. The film, however, creates a dilemma of purpose for itself, between developing the complexities of the historical context, within which Harold is situated, and focusing more narrowly on a deeper psychological portrait of this central character, The film opts for the latter course of action. Unfortunately, this narrowing of focus away from the dynamics ofevents towards the psychology of Harold en- tails a number of sacrifices. Other potentially interesting charac[...]rold's mistress is initially depicted as a person of considerable intelligence and strength, and not the standard sup— port for the male ego. Harold, in fact, relies on her to help negotiate some of his deals. The film resolves the problem ofwhat[...]ities but by rendering her traditionally feminine andof this character. As a consequence, when the new di[...]nization, the film can only depict it as a bunch of fanatical killers 283 — Cinema Papers, July-August with no legitimate reasons for struggle. lmportantly, for the structure of the film, the emphasis on individual psy- chology disrupts the pace of narrative developments. Instead of continuing with greater intricacies of plot, Harold and his mental anguish become the centrepieces. This results in a number of superfluous scenes that do little but let Hoskins parade some of his un- doubted acting talents. Two notable examp[...]bbed at the pool turns out to be his best friend, and a longer shower sequence after Harold has killed[...]ust a thriller. In the last analysis, the casting of Hoskins creates problems forof Harold and his situation to emerge. The plot becomes thin towards the end. The strategy of focusing on Harold pays dividends in the interest[...]Barr) Hanson. Screenplay: Barrie Keeffe. Director of photography: Phil Mcheue Editor: Mike Taylori Mus[...]es Brian McFarlane A heroine called “Hitch” for most of Roadgames isjust one of the jokes in a film full ofthem. It points, ofcourse, t0 the source and kind ofjoke that makes Richard Franklin’s new f[...]me-down Hitchcock, but that Franklin‘s obvious (and stated) veneration for the master has helped to shape his own style in a[...]a confidence no other Australian director equals and uses it to manipulate his audience between laugh and scream with impudent ease. In the penultimate scene, the girl, Hitch (Jamie Lee Curtis), lifts her arm and the camera cuts to a ferocious cleaver falling — on to a hunk of meat on a butcher‘s counter. A murdered girl‘s mouth opens for a final scream, but a cheeky aural cut replaces the sound with the din of clattering rubbish bins. These are not mere rheto[...]but point to a director with a distinctive grasp of narrative tech- nique. And this technique is at the service of a vision that sees life as a black joke. In an i[...]showed considerable self-awareness when, talking of his indebtedness to Hitch- cock, he said: “But[...]could bring all those technical things together and turn them into an emotional experience which was never diminished, but only heightened, by one being aware of .\ I what he was doing technically.” This is as true of Franklin as it was of Hitchcock, and it is what makes him unique among Australian dire[...]an do. It was already clear in Patrick (1978 — and too long ago) that Franklin’s was a talent to r[...]viably commercial talent, one that wants to amuse and shock by drawing on the cinema‘s resources. If[...]signifi- cance” in his films (that is, Patrick and Roadgames), it is in what he has himself identified: his capacity for securing our emotional/visceral involvement while[...]on to how he has worked on us. The significance of the film is not an imported one. By that I mean[...]ing Serious Themes. What is serious about Patrick and the considerably more accomp- lished Roadgames is[...]ms alone can achieve. He has an instinctive grasp of the way film makes its own meanings, for the way it alters rather than merely represents reality. In the literal-mindedness and, indeed, high-mindedness of a good deal of Aus- tralian cinema, Franklin’s exploitative concern for narrative technique and what it can do to our perception of reality is as invigorating as it is rare. Roadgames is more tightly plotted than Patrick. An admirer of the latter, I would nevertheless acknowledge some narrative sloppiness and some unabsorbed incredibilities. In Roadgames, if wejudge some events on a criterion of credibility they will be found wanting (for example, when all the supporting cast turns up in[...]lmost insolent in daring us to react with concern for literal realism. One doesn‘t register the recurring presence of an accountant’s fiorid wife, a motor-cyclist i[...]epresenting the prota— gonist‘s growing sense of bewilderment and harassment. In Patrick there were some loose ends and some strainings of credulity that drew attention to them- selves as inadequacies; in Roadgames, Franklin’s control and confidence have markedly increased. Ifone’s credulity is strained, it is meant to be, and one can see why. And there are no loose ends — and no fat. The pre-credits sequence, for instance, wastes nothing. The film opens on a line-up of garbage cans, pans to the Car-o-tel entrance, up to the neon sign and down to the truck arriving. The camera confronts the truck head-on and cuts to Pat Quid (Stacy Keach) talking to the uns[...]d in a garbage dump. Quid‘s fatigue, his taste for clowning (using the truck radio microphone as a razor) and his literary leanings are quickly established, and so is his observer’s capacity. He watches as a green panel van draws up and, as it happens, he thereby loses the last vacant room. As he lies down in the sleeping compartment of the truck and starts to pluck a guitar, the camera cuts to the naked back of a girl in a motel room, also with guitar.[...] |
 | [...]wire in hand linked visually with the guitar wire and the girl’s thin metal neckband; and as her mouth opens in a scream, the film cuts to the morning noise of garbage bins being rattled, and Boswell sniffing among the green garbage bags as Quid sees a hand and face appear around the edge of a motel- window curtain.This is all fast, dense and resonant. Everything in it — garbage, Boswell, truck, news broadcast, panel van, wire and, above all, Quid’s weary, playful voyeurism — assumes an unobtrusive narrative significance. Visual and aural signifiers make their points about plot and character — and directorial inten- tion — with wit and economy. The cross-Nullarbor journey (its beauty and emptiness stunningly evoked by Vincent Monton’s camera- work), as Quid transports a trailer-load of refrigerated carcasses to Perth, is the setting for the long central section of a teasing thriller. Its events are given a more than episodic shape by Quid’s gradual surrendering ofand others as he goes, the tone is casually comic as he plays his favorite road game of inventing little dramas about the other traveller[...]cal- culation, he confides these to the dog/dingo and the film teeters on the brink of whimsy. Teeters, but doesn’t quite topple, beca[...]She is Hitch, the pretty girl he is about to pass for the third time before he breaks regulations and picks her up. And the film needs her company at this stage even mor[...]ins Quid in his determination to catch the driver of the green panel van and a new strand of sexual banter is added to the film’s dramatic texture. Stacy Keach and Jamie Lee Curtis recall all those Hitchcock duos from Robert Donat and Madeleine Carroll, through James Stewart and Grace Kelly, to Bruce Dern and Barbara Harris. There is enough good humor and grace in their performances and enough wit in Everett de Roche’s l screenplay[...]eading embraces Donne, Hitchcock, The New Yorker, and Grunt, all glimpsed in one brief shot), and how to keep the audience guessing about the other[...]r, Captain Careful, etc. — but they are written and directed for the same sort of enigmatic fun and tension Hitchcock got from assorted nuns in high heels, professors with missing little fingers and gourmet cooks. These characters are each given a scene in which they are thoroughly worked for suspense (at cliff-edge or in roadside toilet) or for laughter (in the roadside wreck of a motor boat), and they all assemble at the finale of the chase in the narrow back-streets of Perth. It is in the overall rhythm of the film that Franklin and De Roche really show their skill. They know precisely how to build to a climax —— and then deflate it (witness the scene where Quid bre[...]the ice— box, expecting to find who knows what and finds instead ...). They understand, too, the superiority of suspense to surprise, so that the film’s impact[...]ructured cunning, rather than reliance on moments of shock. The latter are there too, but to sharpen t[...]k. Roadgames. Par Quid (Stacy Keach), Boswell and Hitch (Jamie Lee Curtis) on the road. Richard Fra[...]games. Franklin knows equally well what he wants of his cameraman, and in Monton he has one of Australia’s ablest. The sparse beauty of the Nullarbor, with terrifying cliffs providing a[...]ation in a sandy waste offering a reflective lull for Quid and Hitch before a sudden lightning flash illuminates their quarry; or the mesmerizing effect of the long straight road and the red tail-lights that superimpose themselves on Quid’s tired eyes: an account of the film’s visual style is an account of the director‘s concerns and how he has realized these. it is tempting to go[...]e where no one will admit to seeing the panel van and where the juke box is turned up to make Quid’s phone call difficult, or the brilliant montage of feet, hands, speedometer and so on that gets Quid‘s truck moving — but it[...]re amusing than any other Australian film I know. And, above all, it is a pleasure to recommend a film[...]Schwartz. Screenplay: Everett de Roche. Director of photography: Vincent Monton, Editor: Edwar[...] |
 | [...]ourke's brilliant new film about the introduction of American TV (complete with ads for carpet shampoo and Cadillacs) to the small Pacific island of Yap, on the eve of the island's independence. The film is a witty and disturbing view of cultural imperialism at its most cynical and blatant.(16mm - 53 mins) and other films by Dennis O'Rourke available from R[...].C.T. 2601 Telephone: Canberra (062) 480851 SOME OF THE " WORLD’S BESTMOVIES ARE SCREENING ° . ONCHANNH 0/28 Top movies from every corner of the globe will be shown on Channel 0/28 in Sydney and Melbourne.Watch for these outstanding films that will be seen only o[...]BiCycte Thieves Italy Vittorio De Sica Scent of the Woman Italy Dino Rasr The Hidden Fortress Ja[...]Wild Strawberries Sweden Ingmar Bergman Renaldo and Clara USA. Bob Dylan Battleship Potemkin USSR. Sergei Eisenstein The Childhood of Maxrm Gorki USSR. Mark Donsl<0i ammo“, (lumen H[...]d SUPER-8mm SOUND MOVIES Condensed versions of the top Hollywood productions are available for you to show your own home.Tit|es include: THE RO[...]vis. documentaries, travelogues, historical lilms and transportation films specialising in steam trains etc. Also a good range of older lilms including: Adventures of Robin Hood; 42nd Street: Gold Diggers of 1933; Captain Blood; Sea Hawk: Abbott & Costello:[...]in etc. Full length features available. Hundreds of lilms kept in stock. Prompt service. All prices h[...]77. Glenside SA. 5065 Please forward your listing of titles. prices and specials etc. NAME ADDRESS or telephone[...]es include: Free catalogue with a huge selection of tapes and accessories Free newsletter Free search service Members' annual convention For further information just fill in the coupon below and mail it today. TO Video Tape Network 338[...] |
 | [...]. Cain was once described as the “20 minute egg ofof- ficial) films drawing on the basic storyline. Th[...]directed by Bob Rafelson, finally captures much of the delirious fatalism that characterizes Cain‘s work.Two of the most significant characteristics running thro[...]erfly) are what are known as the “love-rack” and the “wish-come-true”. The typical Cain protagonist is found leaning over the edge of a cliff for a bet- ter look at the “wish” (a woman and sometimes money as well) and when he gets his wish, he usually falls over the precipice, clutching both. The wish, the lure of the forbidden, always invokes the love-rack, the pain that accom- panies desire. Cain’s original title for the novel was Bar-B—Q, but he changed it to The[...]wice, Cain pointed out that it was an ideal title for his novel as he (viz. fate) rang twice for the hero ofthe novel, Frank Chambers. On the second ring, Frank had to answer. Rafelson, and his scriptwriter David Mamet, establish this all-pervading sense of fatalism from the outset with the film’s opening shot. Transposing day (in the novel) for night, the film opens with a black screen as the audience picks out the figure of a man hitching a ride on a lonely country road. In the early hours of the morning the car pulls into a seedy hamburger joint and Frank Chambers (Jack Nicholson) hides in the toilet as the driver eats and then leaves the cafe. Chambers rushes out and tells the Greek proprietor, Nick (John Colicos), that the driver stole his money and cons a meal off him. But the Greek tries to con Frank into taking ajob and, as Frank refuses, he notices Cora (Jessica Lange[...]bout to accept a car ride, he looks back. A point-of-view shot ofthe cafe is followed by a shot of Frank pounding a tyre in Nick’s garage. When Ni[...]Frank, ever the opportunist, locks the cafe door and, through equal parts of pain and sex, establishes a bond between himself and Cora that quickly develops into an erotic obsessi[...]excitement, while Frank just wants Cora. His need for her even overcomes the guilt of Nick’s obvious, albeit patronizing, affection for him — superbly conveyed in a scene not in the n[...]iled murder attempt. The overwhelming passion of Frank Chambers (Jack Nicholson) and Cora (Jessica Lange). Bob Rafelson 's T he Postman Always Rings Twice. The hideous innocence of the relationship between Frank and Cora, together with the other relationships in th[...]Nick, Cora-Nick), generates alternating repulsion and sympathy for each character who, at different times throughout the film, is a victim ofthe relationship. For example, Nick, the feudal patriarch of the cafe, unintentionally humiliates Cora on vari[...]other hand, eagerly betrays Nick, exploits Frank and suggests murder as the only viable form of action. In fact, Rafelson’s film is totally con- sistent with Cain’s View of the world as a place inhabited by small, selfish[...]ript by the deal, between the defence lawyer Katz and the insurance rep, to save a few thousand dollars regardless of the guilt or innocence of Frank and Cora. In this petty, self-interested world the only positive quality is the strength of the relationship between Frank and Cora, and thus Cain and the film are able to manipulate audience sympathy for an otherwise illicit romance between malevolent l[...]Postman Always Rings Twice was in the examination of the lovers after the murder. Predictably, as in D[...]Frank, however, is content to sit beneath a tree and paint the garden rocks white, a nice comment by D[...]ale animal trainer fails to weaken Frank’s need for Cora and he accepts her desire for the trappings of a middle-class ex- istence although fate intervenes. It is the love-rack or the bond between Frank and Cora which is at the heart of the film, andof the lovers is killed, but to leave it like that ignores the conventions of a melodrama which requires that the ending must be satisfy- ing to the audience. Rafelson and Mamet have gone to great pains to underline the melodramatic basis of the story throughout the film — particularly in the aftermath of the courtroom scene when Frank is wheeled down a corridor full of hyperactive reporters and court officials — yet they deny an ap- propriate ending for such a melodrama. Certainly they may have rejected the ending in the novel (and MGM’s 1946 version) as too sentimental, but it was certainly an appropriate conclusion for two people who ultimately refused to let anything intrude upon their obsession for each other. Rafelson’s ending denies Frank’s man-under-the-sentence-of— death desire tojoin Cora, but he refuses to substitute an alternative form of reconciliation. Because of his track-record (Five Easy Pieces, Head, The King of Marvin Gardens), Rafelson should have seemingly been one of the least- qualified directors to adapt Cain’s lean narrative style to the screen. However, in place of the self-indulgence, the tor- tured self-anguish, and the preten- tiousness of those earlier films, Rafelson (and Mamet) have crafted a superb, tough film where everything is kept to the essentials. By means of ellipsis, they frequently plunge the viewer into a sequence which appears to be halfway through and then conclude at an even higher point. This is to[...]in’s habit ofneedling a story at the least hint of breakdown — always striving for what he called the “rising coefficient of intensity”. Certainly the lengthy murder/acci- dent fabrication sequence in the middle of the film bears this out. The actual murder takes[...]However, as Frank hits Cora, she becomes aroused and, in a scene which is still as shocking today as i[...]s love to Cora beside the car containing the body of her husband. But the se— quence continues as Fr[...]ar further down the cliff, becomes trapped inside and suffers multiple injuries as Cora screams for help from an oncoming car. Nicholson, receding hair and bags under his eyes, has never been better. The way the shabby clothes hang on his body and the expressions and move- ments — watch the way he runs towards Cora’s body at the end of the film — convey beautifully the loser and the “inside-dopester” all rolled into one. And Jessica Lange, after emoting to King Kong, makes[...]ctress who is able to pro- ject Cora as an object of desire, a vic- tim, and a dominating petulant figure. Similarly, the exteriors, the lighting in the cafe and its decor match Nicholson and Lange in conveying an appropriate forlorn, spoiled quality to a film set in the middle of the American depression. The Postman Always Ring[...]amet. Based on a novel by James M. Cain. Director of photography: Sven Nykvist. Editor: Graeme Cliffor[...]g a QUALITY sci-fi/adventure/war/ car chase film and being perfectionists and award winners both (producer + director) wish to leave no stone unturned in our search for anything and anyone useful and FANTASTIC (e.g.: props, wardrobe, etc; consultants and/or suppliers of weapons, warfare, cars, heavy vehicles, computer[...]k you have anything to contribute, or if you know of anyone Who has, please send fullest info ([...] |
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 | [...]igures exclude N/A iigures. I Box-oiiice grosses ofand inner suburban llrst release hardtops only[...] |
 | [...]ers, July-August Laurence Olivier: Theatre and Cinema Robert Daniels A. S. Barnes & Co., U.S.,[...]t stage actor in the world; as a film star he is of considerably less significance, and' Robert Daniels’ sycophantic collection of adoring reviews and his own comments does not persuade one otherwise. The book’s sub-title is “Theatre and Cinema", which suggests an equal divi- sion of interest between theatre and films, but this is patently not what the book de[...]eraldine Fitzgerald’s the “one remarkable bit of playing” in the film.) The rest of the book bears out this emphasis. Nearly 250 pages are devoted to Olivier’s films, for each of which is given cast and chief credits, a synopsis of the film’s plot, and a selec- tion from the reviews: The latter are he[...]mes where the egregious Bosley Crowther held sway for what seems an eternity. On Pride and Prejudice, for in— stance, Daniels finds it worth quoting Crowther‘s gush about “the most deliciously pert comedy of old manners, the most crisp and crackling satire in costume that we in this corn[...]itive critical sources as Variety, Time. Newsweek and Judith Crist. The overall effect of numbing adulation makes one yearn for a viperish thrust from John Simon. And, more seriously, these glutinous snippets make cl[...](Sleuth), Otto Preminger (Bunny Lake is Missing) and Stanley Kubrick (Spartacus) — and it would be interesting to know how they influenced one whose training was essentially for the stage. Not for a moment does this book offer any such insights.[...]ors like these are given the same weight as those of more or less compe- tent journeymen like Guy Hami[...]adopted here is similar to Citadel’s The Films of. . . series and I can’t imagine who would find it satisfy- ing[...]-baked meats offered here, Olivier’s great trio of Shakespearean films -— Henry V, Hamlet, and Richard III — are ripe for careful reappraisal. (I deliberately ex- clude Othello which, like The Three Sisters and The Dance of Death, is valuable as a record of a notable stage triumph rather than as a film.)[...]eos” in all-star trash like Lady Caroline Lamb, and enterprises like The Boys from Brazil and The Betsy, are, I hope, helping “to pay for three children in school, for a family, and their future”. There is cer- tainly not much else to be said for them. Not much sense of the actor’s life emerges from this dreary catal[...]er married three fine actresses — the incisive and under-rated Jill Es- mond, Vivien Leigh, and Joan Plowright — and made films with them all, and he has worked with all the great actors ofhis day. A good many ofthem are quoted in this book, but none of them throws much light on his working habits, and this is a pity since the work seems to have been[...]e which has more printing errors than l’ve seen for some time. As well, there is already a thorough, comprehensive biography of Olivier by John Cottrell, and Daniels’ indiscriminate bibliography lists seve[...]need to know about the great acting peer’s life and work. What is to be said for Charles Higham’s version of the Life and Disgusting Times of Errol Flynn? That it reveals the hitherto suppres[...]he was apparently a Nazi agent; that Tyrone Power and he were lovers (insofar as Flynn was able to love[...]were nothing if not eclectic, with a strong taste for voyeurism and ex- hibitionism; that he was an unreliable drunk for much of his acting career; that he was outrageously dishonest and, indeed. wholly corrupt in all his finan- cial dealings: if this is the kind of dirty linen you want to see washed in public, then this is the book for you. lf you are interested in the pheno- menon of Flynn’s star career or in the phenomenon of stardom at large, Higham‘s account will not be[...]ard to see how this physically glamorous figure, of such dubious morality and with about as much talent as Vera Hruba Ralston, could have dazzled the world’s filmgoers for well over a decade. But he did and it would be instructive to be shown how, in the face of his overwhelming limitations, he managed It. Wha[...]tten perceptively on the Golden Age (as they say) of Hollywood, in books like The Celluloid Muse and Hollywood in the Forlies (both with Joel Greenbur[...]Flynn films, but there is precious little sense of how they worked towards creating a star persona. How important, for instance, were the con- tributions of Michael Curtiz and Raoul Walsh, or the rigors of working with real actors like Bette Davis or Barb[...]Rains? The films are, in the end, the least of Higham’s concerns. He is more in- terested in t[...]various Nazi agents, especially Dr Hermann Erben, and his indefatigable pursuit of sexual gratification. In the former cause, he ha[...]lassified documents which establish a clear case for Flynn’s fascist sym- pathies. In regard to his sexual activities, all sorts of people have been ready to attest to his voracity and the chilling egoism it involved. Higham thanks th[...]Nora Eddington, who seems to have been quite out of her league, and elegant, generous Patrice Wymore —- for their assistance. None of them seems to have had any real idea of the darker side of the Flynn character — the trips over the border for Mexican boys, the treasons worked with and for Erben. At this late stage, it would be hard to ca[...]Flynn was secretly mobilizing an Eskimo invasion of the US. or that he was intimate with Nanook of the North. Overall, it is a repellent story and it is hard to see why Higham thought it worth telling. Certainly, he doesn’t seem to know what he thinks of Flynn. On p. 363, he speaks of Flynn as “play- ing [in The Sun Also Rises] against his natural charm and open-hearted good- nature”; on the next page he writes, “Like many evil men, Errol was drawn to kindness and goodness only as tem- porary peaceful refuge from the misery of being himself.” The latter statement fits the information given, but the idea of “evil” and “open-hearted good- nature” seem to be immiscible. As actor and man he seems to have had little more to recommend[...]ooks which deal with the cinema or related topics and released in Australia between May and June 198]. All titles are on sale in bookshops. The publishers and the local distributors are listed in each entry.[...]imported (Imp). The recommended prices listed are for paperbacks, unless otherwise indicated, and are subject to variations between bookshops and states. The list was compiled by Mervyn R. Binns ofthe Space Age Bookstore, Melbourne. Popular and General Interest Academy A wards I 980 Os[...] |
 | Books ESE. $1 1.95 All categories of the Academy Awards examined in depth. with black and white and color photo- graphs. Cathedrals of the Movies David Atwell Architectural Press (Arnold). $36.95 (HC) An entertaining and scholarly book which re- evaluates a hitherto neglected part of the architec- tural heritage. The Elephant Man: The Book of the Film Joy Kuhn Virgin/Nelson. $10.95 A behi[...]lls. $11.95 Photographs that chronicle the faces of person- alities over the years. Film-star Portraits of the '50s John Kobal Dover/Tudor, $9.75 163 glamor photographs of 19505 film stars, The Films of the Sixties Douglas Brode Citadel/Davis. $25.50[...]n 500 photographs from films which mark a period of transition — the 19605. Forgotten Films to Rem[...]pringer Citadel/Davis. $32.95 (HC) Five decades of films are recaptured. with hundreds of rare stills from private collections. Great Animals of the Movies Edward Edelson Doubleday/Tudor, $9.55 (HC) The world of the great animal stars of film and television. The Great Sci-fl. Memorabilia Book[...]$20.30 Volume one. with nine separate categories of col- lectables, all in color. The Great Show Bus[...]95 (HC) A behind-the-scenes introduction to most of the greatest animal stars. with more than 180 pho[...]ding men. with filmographies. critical judgments and rare photographs. Hollywood Trivia David P. Strauss and Fred L. Worth Warner/Gordon and Gotch, $3.95 The book comprises anecdotes and achievements from the lives of many favorite stars. Popeye: The storybook based on the movie Armada/W. Collins. $4.95 The “new" story of Popeye taken from the film. with color photographs and text. Science Fiction Studies in Film Frederik Phol and F. Pohl 1V Ace/KG Media. $10.45 Soon to be a Major Motion Picture Theodore Gershuny Holt Rinehart and Winston/Holt Saunders. $18.50 (HC) The anatomy of an all-star. big budget. multi- million dollar di[...]hn Engstead Dutton/Bookhouse. 59.95 Fifty years of pictures and stories by one of Holly- vbvood’s greatest photographers. New in[...]Arlington House, $22.75 (HC) Focus on the actors and their films which didn‘t receive Oscars. What[...]Rogers Fireside/Ruth Walls. $11.95 Photographs of famous stars in black fur coats. Biographies, Memoirs and Experiences in Filmmaking and Filmographies Errol Flynn Michael Freedland Coronet/Hodder and Stoughton. $4.95 The real Errol Flynn story. told objectively and with the benefit of extensive new interviews. Kim Novak on Camera Larry Leno Barnes/Oak Tree. $24.95 (HC) _ informal and informative biography of Kim Novak. The Last Hero: A Biography of Gary Cooper Larry Swindell Robson/Hutchinson. $21.95 (HC) The book captures the enigmatic essence of film- land’s favorite cowboy. Fantasy and Horror Movie Laurence Olivier: Theatre and Cinema Robert L, Daniels Barnes/Oak Tree. 325 ([...]ok with cast listings. credits. reviews. synopses and observations of each of Olivier‘s films. Oliver Reed — "Reed all about me" Coronet/Hodder. $4.50 An autobiography of the leading British actor. Shelley Shelley Winters Granada/Methuen Aust.. $17.95 (HC) Outspoken memoirs of an earthy and unusually intelligent actress. Sparks Fly Upward[...]. $24.95 (HC) Granger discusses his private life and presents a vivid insider‘s view offilmmaking: told with humor and honesty. Swanson on Swanson Gloria Swanson M.[...]on, 825 (HC) The veteran actress tells the story of her life: from the early Mack Sennett one-reelers. through her years of spectacular stardom and several mar- riages. Directors American Film Di[...]ngar/Ruth Walls. $41.95 (HC) A remarkable survey of what film critics have been writing about American directors and their work since the hey-day of the 19605. The Hollywood Professionals ( Vol. 7)[...]k Tree. $14.50 (HC) The focus is on Billy Wilder and Leo McCarey and their work is examined in detail. Critical Feat[...]K. R. M. Short. editor Cfiocom Helm/Cambridge University Press. $28.50 ( ) The book deals with the period 1924-1945. and provides in—depth studies and an introduction on the problems of the type of documentation appropriate to the study of film history. The Film In History: Restaging th[...]film- makers‘ attitudes to events in the past and present have altered. Grierson on the Movies Forsyth Hardy, editor Faber/Oxford University Press. $21.30 (HC) A collection ofreviews and critical articles on films and filmmakers. entertaining and penetrating. Journey Down Sunset Boulevard Neil Sinvard and Adrian Turner BCW. $25.50 (HC) First full-length critical study of Billy Wilder’s films. May '68 and Film Culture Svlvia Harvev BFl. $10.65 A comprehensive guide to developments in film studies. Our Films. Their Films Satyajit Ray Orient Lo[...]5 The indian filmmaker looks at various aspects of 1ndia's film industry. History David 0. Selznick's Hollywood Ronald Haver Seeker and Warburg/W. Heinemann. S75 (HC) The story of Hollywood and its people from 1925- 1965. The book has more than 1500 illustrations and rare Technicolor frame enlargements. Fifty Great American Silent Films (IO/24920) Anthony Slide and Edward Wagenknecht Dover/Tudor. $9.75 A pictorial survey. with 210 photographs. Paramount Pictures and the People who made Them 1. G. Edmond: and Reiko Mimura Barnes/Oak Tree. $22.50 (HC) An intimate and informative history of one of the dominant studios that created Hollywood’s g[...]Information on the stars. the studios. the awards and the festivals — a wealth of entertaining and useful information. Film Review [980-198] F. Ma[...]W. H. Allen/Hutchinson. $25.95 (HC) _ The films of the year and the festival awards. International Film Guide 19[...]Barnes/2nd Back Row Press, $16.95 Unique blend of reference and criticism. trade news and succinct writing about the latest releases aroun[...]lly, Science Fiction Film Awards Dr Donald Reed and Patrick Pattison ESE. $17.95 (HC) Complete record of science-fiction award winners 1972-1979. Illustr[...].95 An elementary introduction to the principles and practice of professional filmmaking. Film Magic Don Dohler[...]fects filmmaking. Film Tricks Harold Schechter and David Everitt Harlin Quist/Tudor. $14.35 A comp[...]nes book dealing with special effects in films. Of Mice and Magic Leonard Maltin Plume/Methuen Aust.. $14.9[...]cartoons. An invaluable reference book. Puppets and People S. S. Wilson Barnes/Oak Tree. $14.50 (HC[...]le animation in the cinema. explaining techniques of special effects animation. The World o/Animalion[...]k. $11.95 The author tells how animation is done and traces its historical beginnings. The book also includes sources for equipment and materials, and has a helpful glossary of terms. Television and Media Collected TV Plays I David Mercer John C[...]e- vision: Where the Difference Begins: A Climate of Fear: and The Birth of a Private Man. Everyday Television: 'Nationwide' Charlotte Brunsdon and David Morlev BFI. $5.80 Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television Jerry Mander Harvester/Cambridge Univ[...]C) The book questions assumptions about the role of television and the media in society. Haze/l: The Making ofa TV Series Manuel Alvarado and Edward Buscombe BFI. $9.65 ‘ . For students. teachers or anyone interested in tele- vision programs, Television and History Colin McArthur BFI. $5.80 The author loo[...]relationships between historiography. television and ideology, Media and Education Texts Broadcasting and Accountability Caroline Heller BFl. 55.80 The Co[...]8.95 The author discusses ihe role ofadvertising and the American mass media. How to Use the Media in[...]s Fontana/W. Collins. $5.95 Invaluable handbook for anyone who wants to use the media‘s vast resources. simply and effectively. The Media Machine John Downin Plu[...]s. $14.95 The author confronts the worst threats of media manipulation. outlining the way the established media functions and the alternatives. Non-Cinema Associated Titles[...]a Fyodorova Hamlyn/Nelson. $4.50 The life story of the successful actress and model. This Fabulous Century Peter Luck Lansdo[...]Brad Benedict Nelson/Nelson. $19.95 Portraits of celebrated people make up this stun- ning collection. Gertrude La wrence Sheridan Morley Weidenfeld and Nicolson/Hodder and Stoughton. $24.95 (HC) Siory of the first lady of the musical comedy stage in London and New York. The Great Songwriters of Hollywood Warren Craig Barnes/Oak Tree. 525 (HC) The author looks at 32 talented composers and lyricists vhose songs brightened some of Holly- wood's most memorable musicals. Sir Henry at Raw/inson End and Other Spots Vivian Stanshull Eel Pie. $12.60 Eccentric saga. successful on radio. stage and record. starring Trevor Howard. The World of Musical Comedy Stanley Green Barnes/Oak Tree. $24.95 (HC) Novels and Other Film Tie-Ins The Blue Lagoon H. de Vere St[...]tura/Tudor. 52.75 Dressed to Kill Brian de Palma and Campbell Black Arrow/Hodder. $4.95 The Final Con[...]eI/W. Collins. S295 Going Straight Dick Clement and lan La Frenais BBC (Carnation). $2.50 Based on a[...]teve Race Penguin/Penguin. $3.95 From the radio and television series. Nanny Jean Bowden Granada/Gordon and Gotch. $4.95 A major BBC TV series. ‘9 (0 5’[...]Futura/Tudor. $4.50 Tales from the Little World of Don Cami/lo Giovanni Guareschi Penguin/Penguin. 5[...]5 A major television production Elliott. Willie and Phil Joyce Thomson Avon/Tudor. 52.95 The Women of Dallas Burt Hirschfeld Corgi/Transworld. $3.95 Some of the titles in this list were published in[...] |
 | 6'3 Australian Film and Television School TRAINING ACTION We offer Australia: SHORT COURSES, VIDEO TAPES, FILMS and BOOKS, on all areas of production. Course Guides and Catalogues Free from: Australian Film and Television School Open Program PO Box 126 NORTH[...]ph (02) 887 1666 THE ASSOCIATION OF TEACHERS OF MEDIA will hold the first annual EDUCATIONAL SHOR[...]1982. Am The awards will recognise the work of those involved in the production of educational short film and encourage the pursuit of excellence in the production of educational short film. For information regarding entry procedure contact: J[...]stopher Frayling. Paperback — $25.95. Write now for a free current list of titles available. WE ARE OPEN 70A Y5 A WEEK 305[...]62 3040 Edited by Peter Noble ESSENTIAL READING FOR ALL FILM ENTHUSIASTS Europe’s leading film in[...]d with: Reviews Reports from Film Festivals News of Films in Production Technical Developments Available weekly. Send for free specimen copy to: Helen Woodhouse, Screen In[...]9; Bilitis (Lai) $8.99. NEW BROADWAY SHOWS Woman of the Year (Kinder & Ebb) $10.99; Sophisti-[...] |
 | Tax and the Film Industry The New Tax Concessions Con[...]he Commis- sioner to reduce the amount qualifying for a Division lOBA deduction is Section 124ZAL, whic[...]expended by the investor in producing, or by way of contribution to the cost of producing a film, if at any time the investor, b[...]tion agreement be treated as a partial assignment of copyright? The section seems calculated to deter producers and investors from entering into any marketing agreements prior to completion of the film. Ifso, the effect will be to retard the commercial development of the industry. Section 124ZAL should be borne in[...]ion is intended to limit expenditure qualify- ing for a Division lOBA deduction to amounts in respect of which the investor is at risk of loss should the film venture fail. The explanator[...]enerally be taken to reduce the taxpayer’s risk of loss, but that comment seems quite misleading in the light of Section 124ZAL. Moreover, as is typical of the new legislation, the actual wording of Section 124ZAM goes far beyond the intent referre[...]taxpayer) shall be taken to be at risk, by virtue of his investment, in respect of “an equal amount of the loss that, in the opinion of the Commissioner, would be suffered by the tax- payer by reason of the expenditure if the relevant taxpayer were not[...]r from the taxpayer’s interest in the copyright of the film”. For this purpose, income is “excepted income” if[...]e paid to the tax- payer “or another person”, and if the Commissioner is satisfied that the agreement was entered into for the purpose, or for purposes that included the purpose, of enabling the moneys to be expended by the taxpayer in pro- ducing, or by way of contribution to the cost of producing, the film. That description seems wide[...]ting the extent to which the investor is at risk. For instance, the Commissioner could take into accoun[...]ZAM in practice? The cumulative deterrent effect of the pro- visions referred to above can be appreci[...]hat if a deduction is allowed under Division lOBA for any part of the investor’s capital expenditure, the investor cannot write off under any other part of the Act such part of his capital expenditure in relation to the production of the film as does not qualify for a deduction under Division lOBA. It is not poss- ible for an investor to take part of his deduction under Division lOBA and the other part under Division 108. The depreciation provisions of the Act do not apply to investment in films. So a[...]nough to rely on Division lOBA faces the prospect of some of his capital outlay being entirely non-deductible[...]ion that Section 124ZAF attaches to the obtaining offor the purpose of producing assessable income from the exhibition of the film to the public in cinemas or by way oftel[...]hibit the film to the public in cinemas or by way of television broadcasting; or “the taxpayer deriv[...]hibit the film to the public in cinemas or by way of television broad- casting”. This provision appears to assume that the investors, as owners of the copyright, deal directly with exhibitors and broadcasters. Normally, however, investors (or pr[...]in the new Section 26AG, which introduces a code for the assess- ment of receipts from the use or disposal of film copyright by the taxpayer whose capital expenditure on the film has qualified for any deduction under Division lOBA, such receipts are described without any of the narrow language used to qualify the relevant[...]duction account, the time referred to is the time of contribution or the time of outlay from the account. The Commissioner must b[...]ded at that time to become the first owner or one of the first owners ofthe film copy- right. Unlike D[...]me first owners in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act, and not technically assignees from the producer who a[...]e film. Where a taxpayer incurs a loss by reason of the allowance of a deduction under Division lOBA, such loss may on[...]ated with a film invest- ment which has qualified for a deduction under Division lOBA. Perhaps this sec[...]al film budget, such as publicity costs, the cost of stills, the cost of making a trailer, and producer’s marketing expenses. An unfortunate effect of Section 124ZAO will be to deter investors from adopting the sensible practice of authorising producers to invest surplus moneys from time to time held in the production account, and applying the interest earnings towards the revenu[...]gs are assessable, but not under Section 26AG; so for tax purposes the revenue expenses in the budget c[...]o rely on Division lOBA is the loss ofthe benefit of Sections 23(q) and 23(r) in relation to foreign source income derive[...]rce income which is subject to tax in the country of source, will only apply to so much of the foreign source income as, in the opinion of the Commissioner, is attributable to the exhibition of the film in the country of source. Obviously this is a severe limitation in[...]ntract is entered into (e.g., the US), since much of the income under such a contract would be attributable to the exhibition of the film in other countries. There is a similar limita- tion on the application of Section 23(r), which normally exempts the foreign source income of non-residents; however that will be unlikely to affect Australian resident investors. Instead of the exemptions enjoyed by other taxpayers under Section 23(q) and 23(r) the taxpayer who has relied on Division lOBA and who received foreign source income from his inves[...]n 160AGA only a credit against his Australian tax for the amount of tax actually paid on the foreign source income in the country of source. It seems that this treatment is regarded by the Government as a quid pro quo for the promised exemption (up to an amount of 50% of the investment that qualified for a Division lOBA deduction) of the income derived by the investor from his film[...]with the one hand it is taking away a substantial and possibly more valuable benefit with the other. I[...]ng from desperate producers seeking clear, honest and commer- cially rational incentives to ensure the flourish- ing of a successful Australian film industry. it amid/law- is looking for properties. If you have a son , a. draf‘tcr Just an . for amovnewriteto orr'mg: ALAN SIMPSON GPO B[...] |
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 | [...]igan Continued from p. 229no real understanding of what they are, but the song some of them are singing seems to speak directly to her, although to the demonstrators it is a song about writing and change, and to hard-nosed intellec- tuals, perhaps, it is expressing some kind of naive amorphous “message”. But the little group of demon- -strators are trying and, however, cynical one might be of their likely effects, the attempt itself is important. For Lou, there is a sense of personal loss — of Lisa and Rob — but equally, there is the loss of idealism which Lisa felt — she went down to the demonstration the day she committed suicide -— and which Rob has recognized in his final scene. As for what will happen to Lou, it is very much on the k[...]e a sadness in the fact that she is there as part of the group. Throughout the story, one is hoping for a resolution on a personal relationship level. So, while finding her joining of the group positive, in a way it also signifies a[...]vel . . . Lou is someone who, by contrast to Rob and Gretel, operates on a very spontaneous and emotionally- vulnerable level. She is really at the mercy of a rationally-operating world which is increasingly reducing the mercy it shows for people who don’t, or can’t, play the game. So, despite the movements of the 19605 and 19705, you think it is getting increasingly difficult for people like Lou . . . The polarity taking place[...]ated in the swing to the right, with the election of people like Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. There is emerging an unforgiving m[...]self-centred approach by those who have the power and those who are in work. It is also true that this[...]mitment to others, an unwillingness to compromise for another’s sake in a relationship . . . Yes. One of the things that happened in the 1960s was the ver[...]ly preoccupied by personal issues, such as health and individual sexuality, and the exploration of esoteric religions. It was the time of going off and making your own little world: getting a plot of land and so on. Allied with this was a feeling that thing[...]no longer affect the way things were going. More and more, you hear people talking at dinner parties about the inevit- ability of a nuclear conflict. That is symptomatic not so much of a cynicism as a feeling that the activities and actions of the 1960s were rather naive in the face of the enormity of the problems, and the machinery that is up there. There are many references to this sort of thing scattered within the film. As these references remain the background, is there a danger of people merely viewing them as scene-setting details and not of major relevance? They are just an atmosphere in which we are living, so they have their appropriate amount of time and focus in the film. The thrust of the film is simply happening within this framework. Rob, who is caught between echoes of the past and the securities of his present. Winter of our Dreams. Why did you cast Judy Davis and Bryan Brown? I wanted Judy for Lou after seeing her in Water Under the Bridge and My Brilliant Career, although Winter of our Dreams is very different territory. She has a great energy level which makes her compelling to watch and she is extremely versatile. Bryan has been involved with a number of good films, and I had for some time been wanting to work with him. Judy and Bryan have very different approaches to acting, but both have marvellous levels of concentration and will turn on sustained performances over multiple[...]erses as their on-screen lines — which is great for whoever’s playing opposite them. I think that reveals a lot about their professionalism. Judy, for example, also moved into the Cross and spent a good deal of time going around the area talking to prostitutes and heroin users. The other main actress is Cathy Downes who plays Gretel. I tested fairly exhaustively for this part and it is Cathy’s first film appearance. She is known for her portrait of Kathryn Mansfield in the play of the same name, which she wrote and performed. She is a really effective contrast to[...]ay? No. When I came up to Sydney towards the end of last year, I had just finished the script and decided to approach the producer. I talked to Ric[...]quickly. He has a very strong artistic commitment and contribution to make to the project, as well as h[...]. . . Yes. We needed to go into production early for a number of reasons. One was the availability of the cast; they had commitments, Judy in particular. Also, there was the availability of crew. We were sensitive to this sudden rush of production, and if we had waited we would have been struggling to compete with the offers that some of the larger production films would have been able to make to members of our crew. When making a low-budget film, how difficult is it to get together a good crew and cast? People like Judy and Bryan would always choose to do a project they liked and accept the level of pay the production could afford; that is the sort of people they are. The crew was probably drawn to the project for a number of reasons. Some were attracted by the script and were perhaps keen to work with the leading cast, others were old friends of Dick Mason’s, and people like Tom Cowan and Lloyd Carrick I have worked with regularly for years. While the rates of pay we offered were, of course, above union minimum, they were nothing li[...]n most other productions this year. The decision of crew members to work on Winter was an expression ofcommitment to the project and, I think in particular, to Dick Mason. The atmosphere generated by the crew and the cast was terribly good on this film; it was t[...]hope to have the opportunity ofworking with a lot of them again. Most of the crew will be doing one production after another for the rest ofthis year. But I think they enjoyed th[...]Obviously, there are important creative reasons for doing a film like this with a small crew. It takes a little of the pressure away from the actors by producing a[...]ich the actors can perform. On a film like Winter of our Dreams, which depends so drastically on the performances, this is vitally important. How did the size of crew compare with those you have worked with befo[...]art department, a unit runner, a second assistant and a clapper-loader. We had to shoot fairly quickly, as it was a tight schedule for six weeks. But, again, that was a bonus for me, as I did Mouth to Mouth in four weeks, Dimboola in five and The Tres- passers in four. I was able to give mu[...]u feel now? It would have meant an extra $25,000 and that was a hell of a lot of money as far as that budget went. With a budget like this [$362,000] the difference of$25,000 or whatever is fairly small. But I don’[...]oting on 35mm because I liked the additional kind of grain we got with the blow-up. They probably spend a lot of money on Saturday Night Fever to get the same look. For a film like Winter of our Dreams, 35mm is much more appropriate. The centre part of the film is in Rob and Gretel’s home, which is a huge house in[...] |
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 | Alienation and De—alienation ____——___—_______——_—____——_ Alienation and De-alienati'on Continued from p. 249 from the montage of psychic stimuli, influenced by the reflexology of Pavlov — to his theory of “intellectual montage” in which he proposes t[...]significant that Eisenstein, at barely 22 years of age and without having yet produced anything of importance in the artistic realm, arrived at the[...]ve, but constituted a real threat to the progress and development of society. Above all, during the period he lived th[...]in the revolutionary “leap” to a higher form of social organization, Eisenstein found his own concerns echoed among the members of the Leftist Art Front (LEF) who nourished an “ac- tive hatred of art”. However, as the young artist matured and gained a better grasp of effective expressive techniques, he concluded that rather than destroy that kind of art completely, it was more practical to utilize[...]eserve to wear a crown, But why not scrub floors for a while? To influence minds through art had, after all, a cer— tain importance, And if the young roletariat State was to fulfil all[...]t needed to exercise great influence over hearts and minds.”” Although at first he devoted all h[...]ess”.‘5 Thus we see that Eisenstein, in spite of perhaps over- emphasizing the dominant role of the director, began, little by little, to branch[...]ed him to implant “con- tradictions in the mind of the viewer”."5 It is clear that he did not inte[...]to one open to conflicts, one who could be moved and stimulated. He did not embark on a formalistic s[...], but also on the as- sumption that it was an act of inevitable ideological repercussions. Thus Eisens[...]he screen’s potential to provoke a “new kind of perception” within the viewer — the same goal[...]fect. In 1939 he wrote an essay, “The Structure of the Film”, in which he posed “one of the most difficult problems in constructing works of art, touching the most ex— in a given direc[...]ould be seen as one possible phase in the process of artistic communication, one which might yield rev[...]f those aggressive or irritating moments we speak of can act to spur the viewer into finding his own answer and consequently into acting on his own reality; that[...], op. cit., p. 62. 16. lbid., p. 46. citing part of our work: the problem ofportray- ing an attitude[...]at further on, he wondered, “With what methods and what means must the filmically portrayed phenome[...]t simultaneously shows not only what the fact is, and the character‘s attitude towards it, but also how the author related to it, and how the author wishes the spectator to receive, sense, and react to the portrayed phenomena.””‘ He pr[...]interesting ideas on “composition”, conceived of as “a law for the construction of a portrayal”. As his point ofof a portrayal where the author’s position is in contradiction with the ap— parent meaning of the portrayed act —— that is, when a distance[...]her words, Eisenstein defends pathos as the motor of transformation within the viewer. That transforma[...]d that intellectual cinema has before it the task of “restoring emotional fullness to the intellectu[...]ut schematically as followszfrom image to feeling and from feeling to idea (or thesis). In other words, a series of images provokes an ef- fective (emotional) movement which in turn awakens a series of ideas (reason). intellectual montage breaks from[...]ense). Film also has as its mis- sion the forging of “accurate intellectual con— cepts from the dynamic clash of opposing pas- sions”.22 Eisenstein’s goal, i[...]tion to film Capital is not, then, so surprising. Of course, one must also take into consideration the[...]e fact that he never fully developed this concept of intellectual montage is also well known. Eisenste[...]c form, as the first steps towards the synthesis of art and science to which he always aspired. What matters[...]dedicated to developing the expressive potential of film in such a way that one day, through his med[...]s? Born —— as was Eisenstein — in the bosom of the bourgeoisie, his first work (Baal, 1919) dep[...]by flashes oflyricism, anarchy, irony, scepticism and nihilism. In this way, he struck out violently against the values of a bourgeois world, verbally assaulting it, vexing[...]. IS. lbid. I9. [bid 20. “The decisive factors of the compositional structure are taken by the author from the basis of his relation to phenomena. This dictates structure and characteristics, through which the portrayal itself is unfolded. Losing none of its reality. the portrayal emerges from this. im— measurably enriched in both intellectual and emotional qualities." lbid., p. 157. 21. lbid., p. 125. 22. lbid., p. 46. with grimaces and grotesque goblins which in the end also ~ to some degree — served as a source of exciting entertainment for those bourgeois prepared to search outside themselves for power— ful emotions. In the midst of this barely controlled poetic outbreak, once his goal as an artist and a revolutionary was defined, Brecht began to arm himself theoretically and scientifically, to dis— cipline himself. At the same time, he viscerally reaffirmed his rejection of“those spectators who leave their reason in the[...]ith their overcoats”.” He began to speak then of an epic, narrative theatre that assumes a distanc[...]ex- perience” an event through the exacerbation of conflictive elements. Brecht wasn’t alone: oth[...]his political theatre. But Brecht had the virtue of taking his ideas the furthest, not only on the level of theoretical systematization, but also in terms of artistic achievement. in 1930, after seeing the opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny, Brecht drew an out- line showing how the values of dramatic theatre had been displaced by those ofepic theatre. This little summary of his views on theatre es- tablished a guideline wh[...]“This outline does not show us absolute points ofof sentiment in any absolute sense, but he does emph[...]ers’ intellectual process, to provide knowledge and lead them — by way of the emotions — to a prise de conscience. The sc[...]osed on himselfprompted him to formulate the need for a new kind of viewer, one capable of understanding the events developed on stage in al[...]nowledges the role that emotions play in the work of art, he rejects character identification as the only mechanism for evoking them. He dedicates himself, therefore, to the task of rationally expressing the viewers‘ interests, w[...]be more legitimate than the constant improvement of human relations (in the sense of social progress, development, revolution) in a wo[...]ationally, he attempted to teach them dialectics, and elevate their consciousness. That is the route he[...]is didactic plays, where he worked with a mixture of rigor and asceticism which markedly reduced his success wit[...]tired. Brecht then began to grasp the complexity of dialectics. After Rise and Fall of the City of 23. Brecht. op. cit.. p. 38. 24. lbid[...] |
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 | Alienation andDe-alienation HM Mahagonny and especially The Three-Penny Opera (1928), his work[...]urage (1938). With this work, he attained a level of maturity, complexity and efficacy which he was to sustain in his later wor[...]works that made him the most important playwright of our time. Starting with Mother Courage, Brecht w[...]al elements into his plays with a masterful sense of proportion. After expressly acknowledging that the most important and noble function of theatre is to “entertain”, to provide pleasure and diver- sion, and that this function is its own justifica- tion, he developed in all its complexity his con- cept of pleasure as a concrete, Ahistorically- conditioned phenomenon, thereby postulating a type of pleasure determined by the circum- stances of our times — which he called the “scientific a[...]ditional dramatic devices like the exacerba- tion of conflict, plot and even character iden- tification. Yet he would not let himself be carried away. Instead, he would make use of them for his own purposes, which in essence continued to b[...]need to transcend the “antinomy between reason and emotion”:27 “The separation of reason and feeling must be attributed to the effects of conventional theatre that persists in nullifying[...]ss truth, Brecht placed human beings historically and materialistically defined who, without hypocrisy,[...]at “life involves before everything else eating and drinking, housing, clothing and various other things.”30 Brecht thus situates[...]Vol. I, October 17, 1940, p. 192. 30. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, La ideologia alemana, Pueblos U[...]'s Battleship Potemkin. himself on a level of immediacy which not only favors rational communication but also true emotional comprehension on the part of the Viewer. We have seen that Eisenstein also argued for a synthesis of art and science, and repeatedly had to defend himself against those wh[...]e hand, Eisenstein moved “from image to feeling and from feeling to idea”, Brecht went a step further and observed that if feeling can stimulate reason, th[...]directed his investigative work towards the logic of emotions. while Brecht, apparently colder and in any case the more rigorous of the two, was won over by the emotion of logic. It would be erroneous, then, to shelve Brecht under distancing devices and Eisenstein under pathos without keeping in mind the subtleties which draw the two tendencies closer together and which permit a bridging of the two. We would also be in error if, carried away by our zeal for integration based on the common principles which[...]n which separates them. That contradiction exists and has been seen. It is possible to find objective causes for it in the disparate social contexts from which each artist derived and in the different medium through which each chose to express himself. It is not simply a matter of the different emphasis that one placed on reason and the other on emotion. The fact remains that each[...]ces to arrive at an “emotional understanding” of the spectacle. And, above all, there are certain mutually ex- clusive points, particular aspects of each theory which cannot easily be combined: Brecht firmly rejected the state of ecstasy in the viewer, while Eisenstein defended[...]ercome if we consider that Eisenstei- nian pathos and Brechtian distanciation are but two moments in th[...]ion/de-alienation) within which each man isolated and emphasized a different phase. In the broadest sense, both concepts are part of the same approach to film or theatre and, conse- quently, to life. But in a stricter sense, they are contradictory and in opposition to each other. Neither concept alon[...]jective. This is only brought about as the result of a process in which both elements in- teract. Emotion, character identification and ec- stasy, as well as reason, critical perspective and lucidity, are all necessary moments within that p[...]assume an eclectic stance to dilute the position of one artist into the other, but to explain their reason and their passions and, in the last analysis, the consequences of each. They represent opposite poles in a dialec-[...]; they are in opposition, yet they also form part of each other. Their most productive contribution ca[...]s consis- tent with the present historical period and the chosen medium of expression. In socialism as in capitalism, in theatre as in film, it is possible to make room for both posi- tions only if they are adopted as different mo— ments of the process in which they are inscribed: dialectics of reason and passion within the 31. “To accuse me of tearing the emotional from the in— tellectual i[...]ary! I wrote: ‘Dualism in the sphere offeelings and rationale must be completely overcome by this new[...]to give back to the intellectual process its fire and passion, to dunk the abstract thinking process into the boiling material of reality.’ ” M. Seton, op, cit., p. 333. framework of the relationship between the spec— tacle and the viewer. Like a wish-fulfilling- dream, the er[...]amusement, rapture or pathos provoked by the work of art can also constitute productive moments in relationship between human beings and the world around them —— but always on the co[...]they might have a drink or make love.) This state of “separation” or “inebriation” can not only comfort and restore energy, but can actual- ly generate it as[...]person lives in reality, suffers its consequences and enjoys it. Their lives are based on reality; howe[...]nt. We have here two moments in the relationship of spectator to performance: on the one hand, pathos[...]alienation; on the other, distanc- ing, awareness of reality, de-alienation. Move— ment from one state to another can occur at various times in the space of a single perfor- mance. This movement which trans[...]d by the experience, is an exercise in alienation and de-alienation. We have seen that Brecht question[...]s great revolutionary contribution to the theatre and, by extension, to all kinds of spectacles that provide us with an image or an illusion of reality. The systematization ofdistancing devices per- mits us to opt for a spectacle which acts, not as a substitute for reality, but as an illuminating, penetrating instrument of that reality through fiction which presents itself as such. It is clear that when one speaks of film or fiction, one speaks of illusion — not necessarily in the sense of an error or deception, but as play. It can —- and it should — be an illusion that we are aware of such from the beginning. For an illusion to provide not only aesthetic pleasure but also instruction and stimulus, it must be carried out in such a way th[...]foreground to the reality they portray: the life of man in society”.32 Within the framework of the process, which takes place in those who momentarily acquire the role of viewer to reintegrate themselves sub- sequently into their everyday space, the contrast between Brechtian and Eisensteinian points of view helps us understand the process of the spec-, tacles which take place during the vie[...]se: that is, the fictional moment. The new rules of the game which give rise to this relationship not only allow for the spiritual enrichment of the viewer and a greater knowledge of reality through a (lived) aesthetic experience, but also favor the development of a critical attitude in those viewers towards the[...]will confront it not as a given but as a process of evolution — an evolution to which they t[...] |
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 | Government and the Film Industry Collections T estifv Continued from p. 243 heading a cast that includes Clark Gable and Jean Harlow, and has many of the qualities of director’s best, realistic work. His last film,[...]odium with Stalin in May Day. As in Blessed Event and The Nuisance, Tracy is seen to advantage and the film shows a surprisingly shrewd observation of the interface of terrorism and the media. Hill’s work has elements which were not to surface in the American cinema for another 20 years. Equally interesting is the early work of W.S. (Woody) Van Dyke, once associate of D.W. Griffith, William Flaherty and Frederick Mur- nau. Van Dyke’s Trader Horn (1930) is still a uniquely evocative and savage contrast to the usual Hollywood jungle sag[...]king with its inset titles translating the speech of the authentic Eskimo actors. Joe Sauers/Sawer also gives the performance of his career as the mountie. Despite weak process photography and studio inserts, the film has a complex point of view and achieves several powerful scenes. Equally remarkable, Van Dyke’s The Prizefighter And The Lady of the same year also manages surprising realism. A[...]riking performances from Myrna Loy, Walter Huston and Otto Kruger, with boxer Max Baer handling the lead. MGM was not the studio for this macho stuff and Van Dyke found himself guiding Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in operettas and Joan Crawford in weepies. Though vapid beside his[...]e films most often viewed today. The collection, of course, continues to the 1950s and, along with more familiar items, it has oddities like the bulk of Jules Dassin’s career as a second-string direct[...]i Agent (1941), with Conrad Veidt in a dual role; and the two charming and long forgotten comedies he made with Marsha Hunt, also star of Fred Zinnemann’s first feature, Kid Glove Killer (1941). These films, Affairs of Martha (1942) and Letter for Evie (1945), have considerable appeal and are a world away from his Naked City or Riffifi.[...]intriguing aspect. The early sound period was one of the most intense technical innovations. Not only were such devices as mixing, play-back and post- synchronization developed, this was when the optical printer, and with it the wipe dissolve, ap- peared, along with back projection and the short- lived Dunning process. Experimentatio[...]uality which makes them seem dated to programmers and viewers, by comparison with the post-1935 titles[...]The earlier films also have their own curious set of taboos — no nudity, bad language or violence — and yet they freely dealt with sub- jects soon to be[...]the unwary. Indeed, one film records the process of decay which overtook the filmmaking of the day —— Van Dyke’s Laughing Boy with Novarro. Made in 1934, it is set among the Navajo Indians and shot in tribal lands using more genuine Indians t[...]rt players are fronted by Novarro in an awful wig and Lupe Velez, and the authentic material is broken by unconvincing studio shooting. There is a glimpse of the old Van Dyke in the rough lovemaking of Velez and William Davidson, but more characteristic is Novarro’s song in front of the back projection screen. The actor made only one more film as star and Van Dyke’s own style vanished into a studio glo[...]epeated. The earlier, rougher films have a charm and a conviction which is lost in the Collections T[...]catch attention —— possibly not even the best of the batch, but one with unex- pected qualities: O[...]2), with Laughton. Also, unlike many 16mm copies of color and wide screen films, these black and white, stan- dard screen-shape copies accurately[...]ple made from originals in an early color process and a handful cropped in reduction from the original[...]e negatives. Some ofthe copies are virtually mint and appear never to have been on air or screened publicly. We ran that collection for months and came nowhere near touching bottom, and yet the pleasure of this was undermined by the knowledge that these w[...]many had little television use will keep them out of the local screening situations. The National Film Theatre did do seasons of a half dozen of the films of each studio, but appears unequipped for anything more ambitious. The Weekend Australian ran an interview with Neil MacDonald and reported that, as a result of their intervention, the copies had been saved. 1 wish I shared their optimism. The Australian Film Institute has reacted favorably to the suggestion that they might wish to mount a touring exhibition of the material with introductions which would make possible the use of titles which are not immediately ap- proachable. This would fit with the plans to cir- culate a display of their vintage cinema equip- ment. Without action[...]n lost in an Australian context. * Government and Film Continued from p. 23] further Tariff Board[...]d conduct another inquiry to assess the viability of the industry and the impact of its recommendations. As with its more controversi[...]Mitchell Report in 1979 was commissioned in lieu of the second Tariff Board Enquiry.5 PMM’s brief was to investigate the effectiveness of the Australian Film Commission’s policies and operations, to inquire on various aspects of the industry and to explore the options for industry development, particularly: 1. tax amend[...]state film corporations; 3. alternative methods of development; and 4. what, if any, further support would be justi[...]t have the capacity to absorb the current output and cover its costs.” 5. Towards a More Effecti[...]such films should be budgeted to earn 60 per cent of their earnings from international sales. PMM also[...]es within the AFC to give it greater independence and a greater semblance of a commercial opera- tion. Such recommendations gave the AFC the authority to approve projects of $250,000 without ministerial intervention and involved the removal of AFC employees from the Common- wealth Public Service Act, the appointment of a general manager and the abolition of full-time commissioners. Unlike the ill-fated 197[...]by federal parliament, in early 1980. The impact of these measures (if any) has been overshadowed by[...]e PMM report on face value gives rise to a number of questions: 1. How sincere was the Federal Govern- ment’s gesture of holding this inquiry if it allowed the PMM report to be conducted under the auspices of the AFC rather than an independent board? 2. How far will restructuring of the AFC go towards solving inherent problems in t[...]more success- fully than it has done in the past? and 4. To what extent would gearing films solely for the international market have on the development of an identifiable, national film culture? The report gives relatively scant consideration to this aspect of the film industry. The Federal Government’s offering of a generous tax incentive to stimulate private inv[...]e film industry will no doubt ensure an abundance of productions — at least until the new perks are[...]with the industry’s problems — even the cost of the tax incentives does not appear to have been thought through at the time they were promised. The problems of foreign- dominated distribution and exhibition, high- lighted in the 1972 Tariff Boar[...]governments, as have the particular funding needs of an industry that is part art and part commerce, and have been glossed over by the PMM report. The result of the flurry of film activity will reveal whether the maligned and heralded tax incentives kill the industry[...] |
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 | [...]tavio Cormzar Cortazar Continued from p. 251 of knowledge. You have to remember that Grierson and others used to say: “You can use a docu— ment[...]What was your response? It is a beautiful film, and important precisely because it reveals to me an Australia which has an ethic, and real cultural values, expressed through its peopl[...]ign penetration has become inserted into the life and culture of the nation. Australia is notjust a population of isolated people where selfishness prevails, but one which has many values of which it is not very aware... It is important to realize thatsits [white] culture and population has a short history and is in formation. That is why it is important to deal with the problems of national identity. Newsfront is also a very well- directed film, and l really like the freshness with which the film passes from black and white to color, from past to present, from newsre[...]g a nation with a nationality still in formation, and a culture which is about l00 years old. It is imp[...]e our cultural values, the Cuban idiosyn- cracies and history, its language. The Cuban language is a very special way of speaking Spanish. This is something that the Cuban finds difficult and tends to think is due to a low cultural developme[...]But that’s not true. The particular conditions of the nation meant that the sons of the immigrants didn’t speak as their fathers did. And the language was shaped as a condition of national integrity. It became a very important cu[...]n Australia, where there is a very particular way of speaking, and which you have to defend as a factor of national identity. Our culture in Cuba is very young and facing enormous danger. We have, in front ol'us, the most aggressive imperialism of this modern earth, with 250 million inhabitants t[...]at our population, which could be under the power of this invading country, have deeply internalized cultural values. Only this way can it resist the imposition of another culture. And, after 10 or 20 years, we will be able to liberate ourselves — as the Vietnamese people did —— and still retain our national identity. The Literacy[...]The Literacy Teacher is nothing but a chronicle of an epoch in which a whole section of the population which left behind its comforts to[...]live in un- comfortable conditions, without pay, and teach that part ofthe pop- TO ADVERTISE IN elm-[...]. Belgium. 2468m. Sydney Film Festival The Trials of Alger Hlss (16mm): History on Film Com- pany. U.S[...]ilm Festival Films Registered With Eliminations For Restricted Exhibition (R) Desires Within Young G[...](t-m-g) Deletions: 56.3m (2 mins 3 secs) Reason for deletions: S (i—h-g) Sensual Encounters of Every Kind (second reconstructed version) (b): U.[...]I-m-g) Deletions: 38.5m (1 min. 24 secs] Reason for deletions: S (i-h-g) (a) Previously shown on Oct[...]before the revolution, Cubans were not conscious of their own values. But with the revolution, they have seen their possibilities as a Cuban *people, and regained the patriotic feeling which had been lost with the first American invasion and all the subsequent neo-colonialist govern- ments of the “pseudo” republic. So. that is what The[...]really have heroic people among them, courageous and without self-interest; to show them their real. n[...]p. 253 thinking must be at odds with the notion of getting an industry going, at least on a smallish[...]at those actors would normally be on a percentage of the film, which he didn’t allow them. So, he paid them a very high salary because of the simple, good, old-fashioned American idea that they would supply that much money at the box- office and, therefore, be worth it. You see, a producer lik[...]r ways, through television markets or what- ever, and taking a fair-sized profit himself. He would arg[...]also be entitled to the profit, if there is one. And it is a perfectly fair way of seeing things. But It doesn’t actually add up t[...]a sense, because he has gone on to produce again and again. Every time it sounds like an indi- vidual enterprise; not like the old days of MGM or even London Films... I think it is all a[...]the maligned studio system really had more going for it than was commonly supposed? I am sure it had.[...]eople, you have become identified as the epitome of English aristocracy. Do you find this a constraint on your choice of roles? I don’t really feel restricted. One is,[...]a degree by one’s nature. In a way, Trimingham and King Edward VIII are certainly in a class structure, and Lord Warburton in the BBC’s Portrait of a Lady is definitely. But if one came to film the plays of Ibsen, say The Master Builder, one would play tho[...]ruel wicked man, there was not really an overtone of aristocracy. I wondered if it exercised any kind of constraint on the sort of parts you are offered? I don’t really feel so,[...]ase. Those who know one’s range know it anyway, and there are many who have not seen other things tha[...]the change? Oh yes. It is a play I am very fond of and had done with the same director and a lot of the same company in 1973. We wanted very much to[...]play, actually, but I think it is too difficult for most companies. Would you prefer to concentrate[...]three. I think one is very helpful, in the sense of the practice of one’s craft, to the other. 15 one more demandi[...]rmance every night — no matter how you feel — and sustain it for two hours. As I have said before, the stag[...] |
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 | [...]printed in this country. So we Hollywood and London as sound side of what is, after all, in post production trying[...]do the research on the being the centre of the industry, a visual medium? re-create them. configuration of the negative as but our negatives out of here In fact I did start in the[...]sity, fog levels, cross print as well as any of them. I know you’ve worked on cancellation and that sort of visual side of the business - as many features, but what is[...]thing. Then print it and process You must be really busy an assistant projectionist at the film you’re most proud of, as[...]i! far as your own contribution it and hold it to the control happening at Colorfilm? Very glamorous. And I guess, is concerned?[...]‘Gallipoli’ is ready for Oh, I t[...]D o you expect to do more printing now, and coming up movies I was intrigued by the was shot in 1978, just after I of these? realism of the tracks; how the[...]we’ve got: ‘The Best of Friends,’[...]t really see us ‘Partners,’ ‘Heat Wave’ and director used sound to create very proud o f‘Tim’ because the illusion and build the right[...]few. My personal aim here at atmosphere, and I wanted to the picture. We had location[...]tment in the So where did you start? and out of cars, and it’s all moment there are only three[...]eles, one in supplying magnetic xfers of supervised the music score and London and one in Munich. dailies to producers, and I’m everybody who worked in this made the optical neg when it industry through the 50s and The o[...]s library. 60s worked at Supreme. It was our Film and TV school in Any others? Stereo Porn movies. I’d dearly Plus, of course, our new preview those days, our studio system. love to go and see that! room which will be ready[...]November. It has suspended And I was lucky enough to tram[...]walls and ceilings, big screen for four years under the finest[...]transfer side of the business is 35mm and 16mm projection, technician this country has[...]Now Les, you’ve worked “Skippy” for three years. I did[...]in the States, at Universal. every episode - 91 of them and optical[...]“Picnic” was nominated for a[...]e States And so do RCA in America. British Academy Award for for a while: then back to Aust[...]For Disney’s, United[...]Yes. So what does it take to be a think of that particularly hand fitted by the man[...]d man? impressed you because of its created the system in the first[...]and live and work in America,[...]generation Australian and proud ‘Earthquake,’ and I enjoyed for 6 months. He’s 80 years old things you listen for, that you of it. Look, I don’t want to work expect to hear on a track? going over to the theatre and now and he really is the doyen of optical recording. In fact, he’s anywhere el[...]film industry is as old and Well, you know I really[...]Samuel L. Warner Award for sequences. T[...]cut And today it’s producing some the ones where everyt[...]outstanding achievement and elements in[...]es - a of the best films in the world. together so well tha[...]those cameras together for me were 59 e[...]Well, of course, the people any means, but I do like it al[...]6 sequences. And to sit there and make t[...]weeks, and when those cameras[...]working, it was one of the most arrived here they were so well and you don’t often get the W hat do film make[...]remember. It stands out. and started running track. I did like Arthur Ca[...]not have to do a thing. And now Cardin, Bill Gooley and Roger always phone it in later. And I understand Colorfilm RCA ar[...]did all the release prints for Cowla[...]t the for the cameras they’re making We respect each other, and we performance the artist gives on ‘Elepha[...]ou And what does that mean as that. should do[...]t means we can produce a producer money. A couple of minutes on the set getting the[...]track for him at least as good as[...]e in the colorfilm right atmosphere, effects and track, the first that has been[...] |
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 | [...]Government and the Film Industry[...]Alienation and De-alienation[...]: 226 Some Aspects of Australia[...]New Products and Processes[...]Broadcasting and Regulation[...]The Liberation of Skopje Edward Fox[...]The Film and Television Interface[...]Laurence Olivier: Theatre and Cinema[...]ra. Proof-reading: Articles represent the views of their authors and not necessarily those of the editors. While every Arthur Salton. Design and Layout: Keith Robertson, Meredith Parslow, Andrew Pecze. Business care is taken with manuscripts and materials supplied for this magazine, neither the Editors nor Consultant[...]air. the Publishers accept any liability for loss or damage which may arise. This magazine may[...]oduced in whole or in part without the permission of the copyright owner. Cinema Papers is Nicolaidi ([...]Front cover: Robert Grubb, Mel Gibson, Mark Lee and David Argue in Peter Weir’s[...] |
 | [...]“ Australian producers and directors[...]It was only a few years ago that for skill, integrity and dedication to their Associated R & R Films has an inserters of film advertising in trade craft.”[...]ho has been a producer has been taken up for distribution by “These credits are not deemed to be for 20 years, said producers here are to Paramo[...]contractual.” This arose out of litiga be congratulated on avoiding m[...]e being made in other countries of tributed an Australian feature.[...]nted turning out cheap, carbon-copies of and the films starting production. Hol[...]lar proviso. The two recent corporation and is in negotiation with a examples are Wall to Wall and We of number of Australian and New Zealand The following dates have been set for the Never Nev[...]pletion the 1981 Milan 44th Session of MIFED: Keith Salvat, director of Private Col bonds. “We are very servi[...]— director of Wall to Wall, for which he interests of the producer and his October 25-30[...]at did in fact guarantor are identical, and we pull all 3. Traditional MIFED — Oct[...]ly in the stops to help him come in on-time and 30[...]r. Neither Salvat nor producer Part of Motion Picture Guarantors’ place for buyers and sellers of feature Errol[...]vice is to provide, at its own films and television programs. Applica We of the Never Never, the first expense,[...]m the feature of Adams Packer Films, started to closely monitor each film. “ Pro marketing and distribution branch of shooting with[...]ducer. Murray was then chief of pro spotting difficulties before th[...]the shooting, Murray left the film and[...]Greg Tepper, formerly of the Experi mental Film Fund and the Victorian[...]Film Corporation and now general[...]er. Brian In the May 6 issue of Variety there is Palme d’or[...]also brought in as associate a listing of the “ All-time Aussie Rental Man of Iron (Wajda)[...]Champs” , as of January 1, 1981. The Jury Prize[...]recently completed shooting, and 1. Star Wars $6,[...]$5,100,000 Isabelle Adjani (Possession and claimed it has the lushness of Gone 3. Jaws $[...]though adding wryly it 4. The Sound of Music $4,437,000 Best Actor[...]$4,327,000 Ugo Tognazzi (Tragedy of a Ridicul a[...]n $3,323,000 Istvan Szabo and Peter Dobai[...]which he is producing inde Life of Brian $2,587,000 pendently for Adams Packer.[...]The top Australian films in the list Prize for Artistic Contribution[...]. Picnic at Award for Contemporary Cinema[...]Hanging Rock $1,767,000 Looks and Smiles (Loach) and Neige[...]vin Purple $1,643,000 (Berto and Roger)[...]Stone $550,000 Man of Iron[...]P e tro v and D o u g la s S lo c o m b e[...]Centre and the audio-visual branch of[...]ing the move, the Minister of Educa[...]The biggest upshot of the announce[...]Igor Amins ’ We of the Never Never. is because the new[...]assistant general secretary of the[...]“ We recognize the need for people to[...]ors Nine or Hollywood and assist. We are thè Special Jury Tribute.[...]whole lot out of the Public Service.”[...]are continu of the major international companies in[...]ding completion guarantees, has hope of avoiding a strike. Meanwhile,[...]ations to include the larger issue of whether amalgama Australia and New Zealand. Company tion will benefit film production and film United Artists, a subsidiary of the chairman Douglas Leiterman, and legal culture in Victoria is still to[...]the legis sold to the MGM Film Company for tralia in June[...]ch will be introduced in the $380 million, of which $250 million was[...] |
 | [...]ominic Case, who with Glenn Eley tints and tones, and a composite print has done a lot to revitalize hi[...]which also sponsors the was responsible for preparing the new was finally made in time for the closing pany and he sees the acquisition of award for Best Feature Film. print at Colorfilm Film Laboratories, night of the Melbourne Film Festival. United Artists as a[...]ibrary valued at $300 million (in tion of the 1981 awards via an exclusive[...]Many stages of editorial and labora cluding the James Bond and Woody live telecast of the event by the national tory work were invol[...]ins a functioning dis network (156 stations) of the ABC. The struction of For the Term of His Natural tribution unit as well.[...]rch, Life, beginning with the duplication of Betty Archer According to Rosenfelt, United and Jacqui Culliton will be directing the nitrate prints onto safety stock, and Artists and MGM will operate as show. A compere for the presentation ending with a color release print with Betty Archer, who for the past three separate production companies, but[...]be distributed by MGM. Screenings, for voting in the feature The incomplete Australian copy of editor for Warner Bros in London, has[...]h, Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney re e ls of a re c e n tly -d is c o v e re d Australian Fi[...]t in and Brisbane during June and July. American version, stills and out-takes advising w riters and film m akers Greater Union Awards[...]Curious discrep Archer was story editor and personal were announced at the 1981 Sydney[...]e two assistant to the European head of Film Festival. The winners are: versions of the film: variations in story production wi[...]The 1981 Melbourne Film Festival cast and titles. Film (1971), story analyst and personal Bradbury) prizes for short films were announced Nevertheless, historian and film assistant to the managing director[...]omplete film from the various (1970), and story analyst and personal Fiction[...]opticals assistant to the European head of Meatheads (Wayne Moor) Grand[...]ynal) stills replaced missing scenes and a Productions (1965-70). Groping (Alexander Proyas and Second Prize number of new titles were inserted to Archer, w[...]stein) Amy (Laura Mulvey and Peter clarify the densely-woven s[...]Act of God (Peter Greenaway) ing brought[...]acoota Stampede (Peter Tam- Black and white fine-grain positives David Charles Fi[...]mer) of the two basic versions were cut into[...]ecial Awards one, and a dupe negative was made The general manager of the AFC,[...]Groping (Alexander Proyas and tion had to be made, to fit the full-width appointment of David Charles Field as[...]to academy frame. director — marketing and distribution.[...]la m e (K a w a m o to With various sections of the film shrunk An Australian, Field wa[...]ferent amounts, framing each director of Collier Macmillan Pty Ltd,[...]r from straight Cassell Australia Ltd, and has had[...]The tinting and toning in the original and internationally, in the field of Sy[...]ad, by this time, been lost in marketing and distribution. Previously, Tom Zubrycki’s Waterl[...]stic Arts Award black and white duplication stages. The he spent five years overseas and Documentary section at the Greater Union Ch[...]Scott) stocks and processing through special director (Far East) for McGraw-Hill[...]Down and Out (David Sproxton and practicable, and so at Colorfilm I Skrzynski said the AFC and the Comedy Week in Melbourne[...]ut also from his Well-known British humorist and Restoration of Australian effect of various base tints, while depth of knowledge of the related field stage, screen and radio writer Barry[...]normal color grading methods were of publishing rights, franchising, Took will be visiting Melbourne for the F[...]t sepia, neutral or blue tones development of story properties and Open Program of the Australian Film into the black and white image. copyright. and Television School.[...]appointment on In a round-A ustra lia series of A ccording to Ray Edmondson, seemed to be rather arbitrary and, for June 29, 1981. director of the National Library of Aus the reconstructed version, it was used[...]only as a rough guide. Selection of Michael O'Connell Joins OCP[...]tions (red for anger or confrontation); 1927 silent epic For the Term of His by situations (green in the bush, sepia when he wrote for the celebrated “Take[...]O’Connell, a producer- it From Here” series, and for television Natural Life. Edmondson claimed this for interior) or to aid continuity (rapid[...]from Ireland, joins OCP Ltd as with The Army Game and its sequel,[...]film and television producer next ence of the International Federation of fied by sepia toning in the officers' Bootsie and Snudge. In the mid-1960s Film Archives in[...]month. he teamed with Marty Feldman and[...]film archivists from the captain’s wife, and blue tinting for O’Connell worked with Radio Telefis s[...]Eireann, the Irish state-run television and television shows. every na[...]ference knew of the restoration of For Music was arranged by the Palm organization, for eight years and his After serving as comedy consultant the Term and of the work being done[...]experience includes a weekly arts for commercial stations and the BBC, Court Orchestra from film scores of the[...]nchronized magazine, a comprehensive range of including work on shows such as and preserve early Australian films.[...]documentary productions and current Father Dear Father, Laugh In and[...]The restoration of the film, he said, Festival, a track was reco[...]and drama production. joined the BBC in an advisory c[...]Former executive producer of OCP, on literacy projects. pensive and one of the most success[...]of the Sun, a series of films about[...]Edmondson said, The Australian Film Institute has “The AFC’s investment of $68,030 Terry Jackman, managing director of announced that the 24th annual enabled the Library to tint and tone Hoyts Theatres Lim ited, recently presentation of the AFI/Australian Film various sequences[...]announced the appointment of Tony Awards will take place at the Regent were originally, and to add . . . a Malone as general sales and market Theatre, Sydney, on September 16,[...]ing manager of Hoyts Distribution. 1981.[...]ence in all aspects of the film business. lished by the AFI in 1958, are[...]and progressed through bookings and tralian filmmakers and to draw of the Library’s National Film Archive[...]sales to become director of advertising attention to outstanding achieve is im p o r ta n t and s h o u ld be and publicity. ments by individuals and teams supported. We are hopeful that[...]one moved to United involved in the production of Aus AFC will recoup its investm ent For the Term of His Natural Life, which[...]esentation is funded the capital cities and on television.” Australia’s film section.[...]1979 and general manager in 1980. ★[...] |
 | [...]s is pleased to announce that the 1981/82 edition of the Australian Motion Picture Yearbook can now be[...]tures, including: • Comprehensive filmographies of feature film scriptwriters, directors of photography, composers, designers, editors and sound recordists • Monographs on the work of director Bruce Beresford, producer Matt Carroll and scriptwriter David Williamson • A round-up of films in production in 1981 • Actors, technicians and casting agencies For further details see tear-out order form. |
 | [...]his article “The Medium of the Future”[...]cends to the level of schoolboy debate: _[...]presenting one side only of a somewhat[...]made in black and white, while color is[...]used for ‘trivia’. Is this the age-old argu[...]ment of ‘art’ versus ‘entertainment’?[...]L’Avventura and Zabriskie Point? As[...]for Bergman, when he uses color it is[...]for obvious reasons: to be symbolic, as[...]in Cries and Whispers, or ‘clinical’, as[...]Marriage (made for television, by the Director of A Town Like Alice, David Stevens, left, during location filming. way). Director of photography, Russell Boyd, is at right. The inspired lunacy of Bringing up[...]the insipid imitation of Bogdanovich in[...]black and white. Anyway, if this Poor Man’s Cinema[...]structure of Nevil Shute’s novel. deemed black and white a necessary[...]agree that television drama is not element of the screwball comedy, he[...]was would have used it, as he did in his For- Dear Sir,[...]making was that series and serials are It is hard to im agine how any different forms of television drama, with By the way, there[...]in color, and it was at least as good as executed, which deals[...]their own “traditions, conventions and s[...](aside from the common the others — and streets ahead (roads and Christianity, coming down firmly on ahead?) of the later black and white at the side of the former but allowing a structure imp[...]e tempt to re-live past glories. place for the latter, can be so airily intervals i[...]s admitted that a dismissed as “soap opera” ; and it is[...]stinc Raging Bull in color was the spate of absolute authority, exclusive insight t[...]“We just into the late Nevil Shute’s motives for[...]look” , he has said. Scorsese is The review of this program read like[...]ved in a move by American film a sounding board for the prejudices The Editor replies:[...]makers to preserve old color films. and preconceptions of the reviewer As David Stevens implies a lack of With all but one of his films in color, about television in general,[...]ing Jill Kitson’s Scorsese — definitely one of the most this program in particular, and ended review of A Town Like Alice as written, important of contemporary directors — up as a vicious and unjustified attack several points need b[...]ew Water in that medium. So must Altman and man who has done more to improve the Under The Bridge, The Last Outlaw Coppola and Lucas and . . . standards of television drama in this and A Town Like Alice in October Mike Nichols’ preference for long country than your elitist reviewer will[...]nyone at takes would be there in black and white ever begin to comprehend.[...]one feels sure. This is a question of Nor can I accept the argument that g[...]been chosen to reflect the Editor’s ments and some implausible argu over your reviewers, sinc[...]monochrome would not print Bert Deiing’s review of Kitson was also asked to make com[...]licy. general, on the basis of the three pro the 1960s can hardly be att[...]discussion. smaller screen and a black and white come when you begin to understand[...]through the usual sub-editorial cheaper and more comfortable in one’s own right, with its o[...]own living room. In any case, the ventions and structures, and that it is views. In fact, an observant r[...]icans were receiving color televi not some form of poor man’s cinema. well have noticed that Kitson and I dis sion in the 1960s. Until that day[...]over Jack’s motivations in up As for A Man and a Woman, it hardly you cannot reasonably expect a[...]s quo in Willstown, at qualifies as a black and white film. Nor future co-operation from me, nor[...]o Stevens’ allegation that co lo r. And you ca n ’t re a lly call David Stevens[...]w “ended up as a vicious Newsfront black and white either — Director, A Town Like Alice and unjustified attack on the pro even i[...]ducer” , I can find no passage even and white. remotely supporting of such a view. Would Ellis honestly c[...]Kitson’s opinions are considered and, I the loss of the Yellow Brick Road magic Jill Kitson replies:[...]suggest, well argued. of The Wizard of Oz (or does he count If it is elitist to assess television Stevens also claims that Kitson, and that as a black and white film because drama for its integrity, originality and Cinema Papers, sees television as of the opening and closing bits)? Would credibility, rather than for its Christian “ some form of poor man’s cinema” . he deny us the[...]irstly, a careful reading shows Kitson look of a surrealist painting” (as Farber clearly elitist. And it was elitist of me to maintains no such thing. Secondly, has it) of The Quiet Man? Does he truly praise these qualiti[...]necessarily those prefer the portentousness of High Noon Alice. of the Editor. to the epic grandeur of The Searchers? Of course, in a m edium th a t Stevens ends by making a piea for Would An American in Paris be the measures success in terms of a mass intelligent debate on televisi[...], “ elitism” is a dreaded slur. think of no publication in Australia that Rain? (About[...], programmers tend to fall has so regularly and conscientiously seldom in black and white as they were into another trap — that ofof The Crimson with the blandly predictable. This[...]ronizing approach is, I more in the form of a production report comic-strip texture in Flash Gordon, suspect, responsible for many missed than the review we require[...]en the opportunity to rewrite it, but beauty of Dersu Uzala (and so much of In particular, it seems to have been d[...]Japanese cinema); the restrained responsible for some of the weak missioned. His review was as favor Impressionist charm of the French nesses of A Town Like Alice, though able as Dei[...]cinema; the sensual exciting heart of
|
 | [...]Letters Yank flicks like American Graffiti and From my experience, though, most his involvement with the University of Taxi Driver; and . . . the list is con[...]readers of Cinema Papers to give their people I know (outside of “ cinemato Adelaide and geological studies in the opinions about the process of review siderable.[...]ondering i- Bob might consider 1958 and his State funeral. the script? Ellis, of all people, should whethe. it is also a cultural thing, of a Would anybody with any information[...]commercial con people, like he and I, are “afflicted” ? Gibson, ABV 2, G[...]lephone (03)524 2239 Issue 32). of supposing something superior to vi[...]“ Do I detect a stern tone of moral something else by virtue of one ele crete ideas, which before were, for me, Jenny Gibson[...]e. Are oils ‘better’ than water- hazy and unformuiated. Asst Film[...]only one view (that of the author) can I look forward to further articles from gether - content, format and layout.[...]e Thank you for some entertaining and notions as: the existence of ‘scientific[...]objectivity’; the negativity of authorita[...]tive writing and the possibility of Ellis replies:[...]areas, “the particularity of an individual antagonist, collaborator and creditor Back Issues[...]film ” and “ general considerations Denny Lawrence an hon[...]about the cinematic apparatus” , with of opinion. He has correctly pointed out[...]regard to the theory. some of the several exceptions to my Dear Sir[...]ions “about contention that, as a rule,, black and We are trying to complete our librar[...]white is a better narrative, dramatic, of back issues of Cinema Papers. We the existence of some equally definitive tr a g ic , e x p o s ito r y , c o m ic and are missing issues 4, 6, 7 and 8 and are and universally accepted concept of fa n ta s tic a l m e d iu m th a n c o lo r,[...]the function of the act of review. Cer because, in Satyajit Ray’s words[...]way over Lesley Stern’s review of The tion.” The contention I was arguing[...]the function of review might differ from to wit, color is always[...]writer to writer, let alone reader to medium, and that, ergo, Citizen Kane, Still Knocki[...]reader. Wild Strawberries and Casablanca[...]By ignoring the question of ‘function’, would have been better films in[...]review for such ‘sins’ as effacing the (Flash Gordon, P[...]personal identity of the reviewer and The Crimson Pirate, Robin Hood and Rod Bishop’s letter (Cinema P[...]minimizing the power of the viewer. The Wizard of Oz). It is certainly an[...]No. 31, p. 10) is a load of absolute gar It is interesting to note that one of the arguable contention that children, and bage![...]hildhood, prefer Is Bishop asking for reform of the is that of pedagogy. This stems from a to do it in the vivid and joyful colors of C re a tive D evelopm ent B ranch's[...]Scenes distaste for authoritative writing which the original comics and storybooks. I method of allocating funds for specific abounds in Australia and seems to grant him two bob each way on the projects? Or is he perhaps looking for a[...]authoritative is to ‘teach’, and that ‘to be childhood sense of joy), three to two on who, in his opinion[...]a position where the women’s films, like A Man and a[...]Gods (my expression) of the industry I am moved to write so as to make the ‘pupil’ is stripped of ‘individuality’, Woman, Gone With the Wind,[...]fashion accept married Woman, Maybe This Time and you aware of a feeling of disgust felt by[...]p obviously does not under myself and others studying drama at able to the teacher, in other words to be so on, because costumes and interior stand the process by which f[...]the University of New South Wales.[...]derstand the The past three issues of Cinema If this is the case, why i[...]responsibility, on both sides of the native review so repugnant? For this I think that on the statistics, how[...]Papers have all used cheap, sexist and fence, for making available/receiving myth-perpe[...]much such a film ‘puts into place’ and successful in black and white — most[...]school and building blocks for him! print such photographs (throug[...]ion from which the especially bad comedy (Abbott and While the success of Don McLen- viewer can perceive and respond, in Costello, The Three Stooges, Martin[...]ding accord with the ‘dominant ideology’. and Lewis, etc.). Tragedy however, and end result by no means is justification[...]The review, also, makes no pretense epic, and those films most involved with[...]that a stop be put to this spate of for the methods. In the light of what sickeningly sexist covers. Surely your about formulating an illusory ‘open death, and the hugeness of life (Casa happened, perhaps McLennan[...]eve you can cor apparently does. Jules and Jim, Citizen Kane, Julius elsewhere[...]rect the present trend of your covers[...]theory, that states the ‘function’ of Russian King Lear, and so on) look so Donald Crombie, I belie[...]ew is, “to show the text exactly right in black and white that it is[...]who financed two of his early films (no Cinema Papers and the AFC evince a [film] as it cannot know[...]any Creative Branch in those days) and, if I manifest those conditions of its making other way. Unknowingly, Lawrence is[...]remember correctly, Davis Cup and can be a medium for a continuing about which it is nece[...]national film culture. The effect of yóur[...]ative review is valid insomuch as that what black and white makes noble. My suggesti[...]ly what it does: ‘shows the text There are, of course, honourable ex Issues 30, 31 and 32 is to imply that you[...]w itself. To ask a review ceptions to every rule, and honourable viously knows his ABC, so n[...]to examine how a film works, “ in the hybrids of every rule and its opposite ist and myth-orientated as Hollywood’s. him aside and teach him the rest of the Well, often this is indeed the case. But I context of television drama or in the (like If, and Newsfront, and The Wizard alphabet.”[...]context of contemporary Australian of Oz). But the prevailing rule of the[...]ike to work on as editor, are capable of taking a path Cinema” , is assuredly to ask questions cinema that color is a must for every my latest scripts: The Bermuda[...]of style and/or approach, but to posit subject and black and white has no[...]and 47 Interesting Things to Make With ism, the myths of perfect screen idols such approaches as p[...]thout first defining function strably destructive of the cinema, which and cinema as superficial sensual I did indeed finance two of Don’s arousal. would seem to be faintly ludicrous. For is now so like its trivial, free-iunch[...]proaches above others, other than point of expiring altogether. Cinema working[...]no access it used to be or it has no future. Part of and brooks no argument because of its that experience, what we call the silver screen, is what people in their thou The Making of Mawson intensely private and closed nature.[...], a debate between spective cinemas in the cities of the 185 and 211), Lesley Stern reviewed two writers, it might be more productive world. And they are not disappointed. Dear Sir,[...]he Alter to turn the broader questions of ‘func B[...]Douglas Mawson and hope one of your November 1978, after the film w[...]ulations to Bob Ellis on a fine We know of the Frank Hurley Ant by Stern in April 1981 to coincide with a film published and used to initiate this article (“ Perspective”[...]re p e a t te le v is io n scre e n in g and argument? about color as against black and white Archive, Canberra, but are keen[...]a. I have not read anything until hold of other material, particularly film, film, al[...]t should be what one by on his life and work: his Antarctic denda raised questions about the 1. T. Eagleton, Criticism and Ideology, intuition feels is the case.[...]907, 1910-15, 1928-32; preceding review and ended by inviting London, New L[...] |
 | [...]ts o f D im boola and the anticipated success o f his latest project, W inter o f our Dreams, starring Judy Davis and Bryan Brown.[...]positive during the screenings of the pe[...]ilm b efore its relea se. The festivals to try and amass a good embittered and paranoid fairly[...]some of the critics in the right Why has it[...]I tried a number of projects, write, or over which I have ultimate It is a matter of degree. Certain some of which I had been preparing script control. A majo[...]submitted some scripts Hibberd, the scriptwriter, and I had succeed irrespective of how the did you take away from[...]their reception. com e in and taken over the influenced by the cri[...]Generally, the scripts were about direction and stuck more to Jack’s Australian films whi[...]e a film that fails, political subjects. One of them was concept, or if Jack had released good critical receptions overseas, you need to try and separate your about the ethics of violence as a control and I had done it more to for exam ple, have alm ost in self as a person from the failure of political weapon in advanced mine. Understandably, as author of variably done very well here. the[...]director, I rightfully received much story of a woman who had been so and we ended up making How difficult is it for Australian of the blame. Certainly, I made a involved wi[...]filmmakers to experiment? number of mistakes and misjudg- Army Fraction in Germany, and However, I don’t share some of me[...]lled when a bomb he had been inbuilt expectations and didn’t[...]longer believed in the usefulness or operated. For example, it was[...]ethical validity of that sort of tactic widely criticised for its theatri[...]in the particular circumstance of an cality. Certainly, it was larger than[...]in the death of someone she loved. Jack’s writing.[...]searching for an alternative form of resembles two geriatric buttocks, is[...]political expression. the ancient under-rump of the[...]That was a project for which I world, so to speak — hence the[...]was unable to get money. I Australian passion for steak” , you[...]submitted it to a number of film can’t have them delivered natural-[...]bodies and did a great swag of istically. I was asking for a height[...]the screenplay — the actors weren’t to blame for any[...]about political issues? a number of excellent perfor mances.[...]expressed in terms of saying the perception was shared by the[...] |
 | [...]I think there will be a tendency to beginning of the film and that her different to Lou, just in terms of the sales in Europe and a moderate centralize in Sydney. In most presence, or rather her death, is the type of person she is. release and television sale in countries there is probably only one trigger for events that then take Australia, I would have got[...]In the screenplay of “Winter of our money back. So, I didn’t accept U.S., most of it is in Los Angeles, Dreams”, the social, political and that argument as legitimate. though there is a certain amount There seems to be continuity of economic forces have less influence I had anot[...]Some people, for example, will view films. You seem more concerned[...]r o f our Dreams having Lou in “Winter of our Dreams” as with personal interaction . . .[...]a lot of similarities with street. The building was being[...]o Mouth”. Is this Political comment in films and as a meeting place by a group of[...]books can take a variety of forms. pensioners and by the youth in the What is “Winter of our Dreams” continuity intentional?[...]was obviously quite overt another low-budget film and also the edge of society, but otherwise in its political approach.[...]s. It is about the relationship of a the similarity between them is see as no less p[...]there was a screenplay prostitute and the owner of a solely in terms of how they earn a operates in a different way. abou[...]was also brought together by the suicide of in massage parlors in Mouth to attempting to exam[...]he book Mouth — though that was a small tives of a generation who were onceAbove: The bride (Natalie Bate) and bridegroom (Bruce Spence) at their wedding reception. John Duigan’s Dimboola. Right: Lou on the streets of Kings Cross. Winter of our Dreams. when I was developing and shop owner, Rob (Bryan Brown), rewriting a number of scripts. In was a radical student lea[...]put up about 20 applications late 1960s and Lisa was his girl to various bodies before I got The friend during those days. Winter of our Dreams accepted. At the start of the film, Rob[...]ng this period, you left suicide and he wonders about the Melbourne for Sydney. Why the direction her life[...]enough. I wanted a Lou had been sort of adopted by change and thought of Sydney Lisa in the last year of her life, Lisa because I like the beach. There ar[...]eeing in Lou someone who was additional benefits, of course, like following in her footsteps. the fact that the laboratories and The film then follows Rob and most of the equipment-hiring Lou’s relationship and contrasts services are in Sydney. The[...]yles. Lou has the diary locations are also varied and that Lisa kept on her relationship[...]with Lisa and the more her part of the film’s canvas — and Lou allegedly radical, or who once paid You[...]there is that lip-service to radical ideas, and to filmmaker to move to Sydney p[...]have gone. In part, because it is more the centre of the Rob is thus confronted indirectly by But in terms of their characters, I it is an indictment of educated industry . . . the memories of Lisa and the sort think they are quite different. middle-class people. Because of of person he was 10 years ago. Carrie had a much stronger sense of their various advantages, they have Yes, I probably did. The Winter of our Dreams actually se lf-p re s e rv a tio n and s e lf the greatest potential for generating Australian Film Commission is up derived from some of those earlier orientation. Lou is more a mosaic social change. So, while the ap here, and the New South Wales scripts. The male character, for of bits and pieces of behaviour she proach is more indirect, it is[...]cal. larger budget than the Victorian of the characters in the script about impre[...]ng came as elements into an amorphous and There is a lot of discussion today as make a difference. There are[...]le. Carrie is more to whether the radicals of the 1960s lot more actors and technicians up was writing. I decided that the main consistent and more directed by her “sold out” or realized that much of here.[...] |
 | [...]John Duigan Rob and Gretel (Cathy Downes), two people who are making their independent-style Gretel and Rob have independent is confronted by those elements of relationship work “reasonably successfully". Winter o f our Dreams.. affaires and are open about it. And, his personality he has put in cold[...]except for a moment of dialogue, storage.[...]our script does not appear sum up the tone of the script, and backed out of his lunch with Lou, to take a strong line .. .[...]expensive art book in who were making this choice of life good she didn’t get too close.” I It is too easy to simply say the Rob’s bookshop and she complains style work reasonably successfully.[...]me, in a sense, a pre comment about the dangers of iums have sold out. The kind of might reduce it; he doesn’t. Ten occupation of theirs; it is, for Gretel and Rob’s relationship — momentum that a society[...]er, had he been in example, a more important part of i.e., of cutting oneself off from has is very difficult for people that girl’s position, he would[...]obably thrown the book at the political. Elements of jealousy and Rob shutting a door on an uneasy hard to detach[...]emain, however. past . . . to take stock of what one is doing[...]n a way, the events I am hoping, in the way and Gretel is that Gretel is some It is both. Rob is very much of the film cause Rob to do just characters have been drawn and the one whose life is fairly successful making a choice to opt for a this: he is briefly dislocated from way they are played, the irony of and goal-oriented. She is working continuation of his present life the mainstream of his life and this kind of behaviour will be as an academic and she likes her style, and to opt for a drier way of glimpses its direction. There is a evident[...]elating to the world. But, he is great diversity of pressures being too heavily pointed o[...]er obviously hit in the guts by seeing involved, and it would be too simple Likewise, the behaviour of Rob and hand, has no such rewarding job. Lou disintegrating in front of him. to condemn him out of hand. Gretel is full of ironies. He d o e s n ’t a p p e a r to be One could equally speculate that he With Rob and Gretel, I have There are many films[...]go somewhere quite different. reflect some of the diversity of really telling criticisms of the At the same time, Rob’s rela influences and pressures that have middle class. It is ver[...]tionship with Lou revives the The disintegration of Lou is so occurred in the past 10 years. It is up the middle class and make it memories of the sort of direction strong that one continually expects ver[...]r end to be the same as Lisa’s . . . likes them and is aware that these more likely to touch p[...]choices when he was people are complex, sensitive and can have them identifying with involved w[...]sympathetic characters who exhibit opted for a different lifestyle, with image of the film ties the general just that their commitment has, in a some of the contradictions and its cerebal and rational approach to and particular elements of a major sense, become displaced.[...]An audience the world. But this rests rather part of the film's theme. Lou is seen If the film functions properly, has far more room for personal uneasily with the more emotional, allied[...]tive person he can still remem this small group of people demon the audience’s sympathies towards engage itself with characters it ber from university days, and can strating against uranium. She has Lou. But if it’s too great, the rest of likes. At the same time, it can also still feel inside. And the more Lou the film will collapse.[...] |
 | [...]n 1970, intensive lobbying by the Australian Film and fe[...]ing for an elusive formula to foster a A compromi[...]relatively non-elitist character of film culture. between October 1, 1980, and May 27, 1981. Films are also, of course, potential domestic and This amendment-to-the-amendment-to-the-[...]spawned , the recommendations of the 1972 cessions to investors in 52 films, invol[...]Tariff Board Enquiry, the creation of govern budget of $45 million. m[...]ster government But the question of "whether it is appropriate grants and investment, the Peat Marwick for government to support the industry by giving Mitchell Report in 1979, and private invest high income earners its blessing[...]essary if lems of a high-risk industry, involving continu the Gov[...]ally increasing film budgets, in a country of industry lobbying when it introduced its first tax small and dispersed population and with foreign- concessions to the film industry in[...]Despite industry pressure at the time for a 100 Inco[...]promises in 1980 of increased incentives has also schemes for film investment which did not have[...]ering discontent over the tax the government seal of approval. Such schemes deduction as a method of assistance. enabled investors t[...]inal write-off for investment in Australian films. He amount. also promised tax exemption of up to 50 per cent It became pretty well acknowledged that to of the original investment. The write-off was to att[...]be allowed in the first year of expenditure. It was employ the more dubious tax s[...]In December, the Federal Treasurer, Mr for investors is to abuse it slightly.” 1 Howard, and the then Minister for Home A trickle of such tax money found its way to[...]on promise. They also resulted in a proliferation of “ Barrier Reef reiterated that investors would “be eligible for box brownies” . the write-off in the first year of expenditure” . As If genuine money was a[...]if to allay fears about the risk of investing on the H ow ard’s announcem ents in June and strength of an election promise, the ministers September, 198[...]sound base for investment decisions by Treasurer’s subsequent[...]tment ment of the necessary legislation . . .” woul[...]uation. primed for the faithful implementation of the Shortly afterwards, the Federal[...]reports that estimated costs of the incentives had increasingly high media profil[...]hich was intro industry to Howard’s clampdown and an duced in fe[...]owners of the copyright would be In view of the Treasury’s $2 million cost eligible for the 150 per cent write-off estimate of the original proposals, it seems that[...]outcry about breach of faith and it was suggested by Jenny Byrne,[...] |
 | [...]introduced to encourage a national industry and wealth constitutional powers which might be c[...]mate escalated from yet large proportions of budgets may be spent in useful for such regulation. $2 million to $130 million and Treasury procuring imported talen[...]rofitable Presumably, a Labor Government of the reportedly received 170 applications for the con overseas sales and so secure the tax-exempt 1980s would have been more prepared to take on cessions, the stage was set for some amendment profits.[...]the new tax mendations. Labor’s former Minister for the O generosity of the concessions had led to their[...]o “exploitation” in “unacceptable ways” . Of earners with the Govern[...]ment scheme nor a single purchasing agency. used for tax deferral: an investor could commit and it is questionable whether this Instead, it was suggested that the Government funds at the end of a financial year so that if the gels with the much-vaunted intention of rely on the Trade Practices Act to break down[...]income bracket’s tax problems to the extent of Practices Commission’s refusal in 1976 to grant[...]t Such questions aside, if there is a need for clearance for a standard form film hire contract i[...]the short term to stimulate between distributors and exhibitors.2 also doubtful whether t[...]he reasons supporting divestiture of[...]te major theatres from chains and shaken confidence in government promises. off and the more outrageous schemes with which[...]promise reached on June 3, 1981, sections of the film industry had been associated.[...]attractive. While it might not was clearly a coup for the film industry and the But presumably the industry would p[...]ey in the long term. preference for the Australian product, such fi the situation for most investors attracted by the The Federal[...]also suggested, before the Accordingly, the need for big budgets and im would not have been able to claim the deduct[...]he Labor Party’s ported talent would be reduced and so would the before March 1982 in any case, under[...]Shadow Arts Minister, Senator Susan Ryan, need for financial assistance from the Govern original p[...]centives may be necessary in the short ment. year of expenditure. Neither will it affect term, but “in the long term, the restructuring of However, it has been suggested that reducing investors in television and film documentaries, the distribution/exhibition system in Australia the bargaining power of the exhibition majors nor in other productions that can be completed may obviate the need for such measures . . .” may disproportionat[...]nator Ryan’s suggestions hark back to the power of the distributors. They could achieve The year-of-m arketing write-off will, Tariff B[...]973 on Motion this situation through manipulation of film print however, affect films which take more than two Picture Films and Television Programs. The supply according to their own assessment of an years to reach release. In this respect, the Board’s principal recommendations were for: outlet’s revenue.’ AFTPA’s complai[...]ndment will 1. The establishment of an independent statu Perhaps the solution is for either government- discourage the making of quality films rings tory body to administer grants and other subsidized exhibition outlets with specific[...]nverse argu financial assistance, and to operate a dis national cultural objectives or subsidy of local ment that the year of marketing deduction will tribution[...]been argued before encourage “quickie” films of dubious merit. existing network[...]ry is 2. A scheme to reduce concentration of investment — is unlikely to have much appeal to[...]ocal industry. control by the Hoyts and Greater profit-conscious investors/ The legislation for The 150 per cent write-off and the tax exemption Union/Roadshow exh[...]ts on profits offer far more protection than that of forcing them to sell a proportion of their for film investment recently introduced to the clothing, footwear and motor vehicle cinemas and to remove vertically-inte federal parliament ma[...]certainly the grated distribution and exhibition through redundant, as shown by the amount of tax most generous under the Income Tax Act. divestiture of shareholding; and money now available to the film industry. But in It is the very generosity of the incentives — so 3. A single television program buying agency. terms of policy, the box-office subsidy may be it is argue[...]distribution/exhibition system, Australian films of taxpayers — they would not enable the pro was desired as a matter of policy — there is now would be given an[...]bracket to minimize their tax prob little need for producers to seek financial Resurr[...]ed to restrictive trade practices such as methods of government assistance to the film tions, through the involvement of the Austra block booking. This not on[...]evaluated would have been a lian Film Commission and the state film standard of films shown, she said, but it also put corporatio[...]Concluded on p. 305 Presumably some sort of control will exist in package — at a disa[...]1976. Decision by Dr Venturini. the determination of films that qualify for the To solve this problem, Senator Ryan sug 3. Cinema Papers. January. 1974: “A view of the Tariff tax concessions, but by whom in Home A[...]strategy for regulation of distribution/exhibi 4. Hodson.[...]Cinema Papers. April. 1977: "The Case For Subsidy” . It is an irony of the incentives that they were tion. Sh[...] |
 | [...]oncessions as by rectifying certain uncertainties and anomalies 124Z. generous, and the Treasurer, Mr Howard, in Division 10B.[...]No change has been made to the eligibility of has done so publicly on several occasion[...]films for certification as Australian films under[...]Division 10B, nor to the procedure andfor such certification. tions, conditions and uncertainties that the[...]10B is separate from any certification for the Treasurer would have the public suppose.[...]purpose of the new tax concessions, and must be Following the election campaign anno[...]he latest amendments have left separately applied for. T ment of the Prime Minister, Mr Fraser, of the largely untouched the scheme of The certification provisions of Division 10B proposed concessions on September 3[...]Division 10B, which permits the are rudimentary and contain some illogicalities. and the joint announcement of the Treasurer and capital cost of acquiring an interest For instance, the Division clearly contemplates the Minister for Home Affairs and Environ in the copyright in[...]ok the Government until at the rate of 50 per cent per year, commencing[...]s — e.g., the owner May 27, 1981, to prepare and introduce the when the film has been completed (so that the ship of the copyright in the film, which may not necessa[...]last-minute copyright has come into subsistence) and the be known until the film has been made. amend[...]n June 24, 1981. copyright interest has been used for the produc The former Minister for Home Affairs, Mr About a n)onth earlier, in response to tion of assessable income.[...]difficulties with a blend enquiries by producers and investors who were The amendments to Division 10B (some of liberality, commonsense and a sympathetic becoming increasingly nervous at the Govern additions to Section 124K, and the insertion of attitude towards the practical needs of film pro ment’s tardiness, the Treasurer explained that new Sections 124KA and 124WA) are technical ducers. It remains to be seen whether the current the matter was complex and that care was being provisions designed to ensure[...]to frame the concessions so that they in the case of investing partnerships, where a Despite these uncertainties and the modest would not be used for tax avoidance. “Tax deduction is taken under the new concessions it rate of write-off that it offers, Division 10B has avoida[...]ion 10B. some attractions for investors. There is no pro term, frequently par[...]tators who It remains uncertain (because of the require vision in Division 10B for a certificate to be do not stop to analyze its me[...]Income Tax Assessment Act is an appropriate form of organization for Division 10B is not subject to many of the enables the taxpayer to avoid tax that would investors wishing to obtain deductions under limitations and conditions attached to the new otherwise have bee[...]Yet no one would argue company acting as trustee of the film for the may apply for a Division 10B certificate; that all allowable de[...]surely is whether the clearly the most convenient and efficient method of films, nor is it limited to first owners of copy allowance of any particular deduction is con of organization, it is a pity that the Government ri[...]ing deductions in respect sistent with the scheme of the Act or with equity has not demonstrated its sincerity towards the of capital expenditure under Division 10B are or wit[...]exemption under Section going through the motions of fulfilling its Commissioner may, under Section 124Z, reduce 23(q) and 23(r) in respect of foreign source promises, the Government was seeki[...]he allowable deduction under Division 10B income; and capital expenditure for the purpose discourage reliance on the new conces[...]where the taxpayer is obtaining from his copy of Division 10B does not have to be “at risk” or[...]film is generating foreign income. (It to qualify for deductibility. some investors may prefer to rely on the conces is fear of this section, not any wish to avoid tax[...]sion 10B sions still available under Division 10B of the able income, that explains why Australian film should however be aware of the amendments to Act, with which Australian film[...]law on June 24, become familiar over the past two and a half investors from receiving any share of a film’s 1981, and which (with retroactive effect) applied 2[...] |
 | [...]Tax and the Film Industry the expenditure recoupment provisions of qualifying Australian film — but it appears that fees for arranging that a group of people join Division 3 to capital expenditure that would a separate application must be made for a final together to produce a film” .[...]lowable as a deduction under certificate, and as there will inevitably be further logical[...]10B. facts for the Minister to consider (e.g., the ducer of assembling the finance needed for a film These amendments were particularly aime[...]n which the production moneys have and the cost of assembling the men and the restrict film investors from obtaining levera[...]materials. Would the Treasurer argue that the for the purpose of Division 10B by financing were budgeted), what assurance does an investor costs of transporting cameras and crew to a their investments with non-recourse or[...]course loans. of course whenever the Minister has granted[...](and not revoked) a provisional certificate? To th[...]it clear to what extent the following categories of called upon to repay such a loan, the Commis[...]costs will be regarded as direct costs of produc sioner may treat the investor as having obtained directed to take into account in determining, for tion: an “ additional benefit” . If the sum of such the purpose of certification, whether a film has • The Costs of acquiring underlying rights; additional benefit and the tax that would be or will have signifi[...]The script development costs; saved by allowance of the deductions exceeds the (save for the addition of “details of the produc • Other pre-production costs, such as in amount invested (i.e., in the case of an investor tion expenditure incurred . . . or[...]curred on research, location surveys and who is in the 60 per cent tax bracket, if more respect of the film”) substantially the same budget preparation; than 40 per cent of the investment is financed by under Division 10[...]oneys), the investor is not only certain kinds of film are eligible for cer • Executive producers’ fees; allowed a deduction in respect of any part of the tification for the purpose of the new tax con • Film producer’s indemnity and negative investment. There is provision for the Commis cessions.[...]that is wholly or to a sub • Errors and omissions insurance; to allow the deduction if t[...]• Completion guarantee fees; and becomes satisfied that the investor will in fact be (a) a film for exhibition as an advertising • L[...]shing to rely on Division 10B (b) a film for exhibition as a discussion pro costs, it is clear that a substantial percentage of should also be aware of the new Section gram, a panel[...]will be excluded from the 124ZAE, which provides for a taxpayer to elect gram or a program of like nature; new concessions. th[...]ncessions shall not apply. It (c) a film of a public event (which includes a A fu[...]ctivity, a theatrical per practice of a film producer getting a production an investor[...]until the Division 10B must take the precaution of other activity, performance or[...]s’ re tion has been made to certify the film for the whether free of charge or on payment of a imbursement of such costs does not constitute purpose of the new concessions, because the c[...]ure in producing the film? investor has no means of preventing such a (d) a film forming part of a drama program Another worrying provision is Section certificate from being applied for and issuing series that is, or is intended to be, of a con 124ZAH(1) which provides as follows:[...]d capital moneys 124ZAB(9) or Section 124ZAC(4) and may Subject to those exclusions, to be eligible the by way of contribution to the cost of pro operate to exclude Division 10B unless the[...]lly or prin ducing a film; and election has been made. The election should be cipally for exhibition to the public in cinemas or (b) an amount of moneys has been expended made in writing lodged with the Commissioner by way of television broadcasting, being a in producing the film out of moneys that on or before the date the investor lodges his tax feature film or a film of like nature produced for include the moneys expended by the tax return for the year for which a Division 10B exhibition by way of television broadcasting, a pay[...]documentary or a mini-series of television then, for the purposes of this Division (10BA),[...]AA[4].) “Television so much of the moneys expended by the tax[...]Note that a film produced principally for dis be taken to be included in the a[...]tribution in the form of videocassettes would not to in paragr[...]lanatory memorandum he general scheme of the new tax Section 124ZAA(4) as including the pu[...]ion fined to films produced wholly or principally for have contributed towards the production of a (under a new Division 10BA) for the Australian market.[...]film,' to attribute actual expenditure out of the capital invested in the production of What is meant by a mini-series of television production account to the contributions of a par[...]power is needed. The wording of the section, amount equal to 50 per cent of such investment. Will a certificate be obtainable for a pilot film however, goes far beyond that i[...]he limitations on these concessions have not made for the purpose of obtaining a production face, it[...]well publicized. order for a continuing drama series? If so, will[...]eries? invested by means of contribution to a produc needed to the questions raised below. Does the exclusion of a “drama program tion account f[...]ivision 10BA, an irrevocable certi series . . . of a continuing nature” disqualify a expenses are to be paid (the normal case). What ficate for a film — i.e., a final certificate under contin[...]s not. use will the Commissioner make of Section Section 124ZAC — cannot be obtained unt[...]lm is made. deduction for film investment is available are set S[...]sioner, in a case where a producer pays for goods be obtained for the reassurance of investors. The first condition is that[...]film is or will be a qualifying ducing, or by way of contribution to the cost of arm’s length dealing, to recognize a[...]only such portion of the payment as the Com investor have against th[...]A similar pro changing his mind or his policy, and deciding in Division 10BA to moneys expended in pro vision is in Division 10B. For all its uncertainty that he is no longer satisfie[...]“at arm’s length”), this power availability of a final certificate. The pre expended directly[...]appear to have caused practical diffi condition offor producers and investors. same as that for a provisional certificate — i.e., explan[...] |
 | [...]ay Unquestionably the major talking point And while the number of registered three shots of The Deer Hunter, for ex at this year’s Cannes Festival was buyers and sellers was down from 2548 The Films[...]Angeles Film Market to 2100, the amount of business done[...]As there are up to 30 films screening at and ideals of an isolated American by Americans reportedly disc[...]time, selecting what to see is the perspective and those of an outside the confusions and expenses of Cannes, year, for example, the daily attendance at m a jo r d ile m m a c o n fro n tin g the world, are riveting. And if Cimino does, the L.A. Market premiered this ye[...]Palais theatre averaged reviewer/journalist. And if one comes like his fellow Italian-Amer[...]the Festival liking only five or Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese, slip producers and distributors, it proved a and journalists. No other festival comes so out of 48 seen, as I did this year, one too easily in[...]epared to confront or arouse it looked as if many of its delegates tion of world press. A successful main tion proces[...]ent screening can result in extra- range of films was just poor. Equally,[...]ted — his characters can third spot behind L.A. and Mifed as an in French have long known the value of this, be on the ‘wrong’ and ‘right’ sides ternational marketplace. As[...]opening many of the major Festival films A. Competition sim u lta n e o u s ly — and he resists[...]her was this year tors tend to let a lot of this publicity[...]n’s Gate are replaced by concern about the size and dissipate with long lead-ups, but this is Michael Cimino’s epic account of the Averill (Kris Kristofferson), the Harvard importance of the crowd on the Carlton often inevitable a[...]s Gate, is graduate-come-backwater sheriff, and terrace, a favored meeting place. As the seen for the first time at Cannes. clearly a me[...]s is a shambles mate who has taken the path of least wonder if the crowds would ever appear. Cannes is primarily a festival, and only of a reconstruction. Despite that, parts resist[...]y a market. This year, with a are brilliant and the film still ranks as a the immigrant settler[...]ile, the critical func major American film of recent years. Best of all, though, is Champion well as many of the bigger foreign tions of the Festival gained a renewed Cimino is[...]er. Even put the landowners to track down and Summarizing the Festival, market mine[...]market, its posi ting aside his themes — and he is one of eliminate cattle thieves, invariably poor di[...]He sees himself as being clearly that the number of films shown in the unlikely to be seriousl[...]nsummate technician. The opening claim for the settled land, he finds[...]The ambiguity of his position, and of[...]him. And in the film’s best scene, he in[...]of local hunters at his modest timber hut.[...]The complexities of the scene — Cham[...]simple purity of the life of the hunters[...]compared to prostitution of sex by Ella[...]and killing by Champion — are beautiful[...]ly conveyed in hushed tones and silence.[...]scenes: the final battle, with its echoes of[...]dance; the waltz between Averill and Ella;[...]the overly-pointed scenes of the land-[...]owners’ fiendish scheming) and the[...]madame, and Kristofferson is, at times,[...]John Hurt, for one, gets second billing[...]on the credits but is rarely seen, and at[...]in verbally enunciating the ideals of the[...]would decay into the alcoholism of the[...]class-m otivated sadism of Canton[...] |
 | [...]as that between people of any age; What is most disappointin[...]it is not the seduction of a minor. is W ajda’s unashamed su p p o rt of[...]u p le s w idely forgive him, but a total lack of objectivity[...]arated in years (one need only notice makes for a toneless film. This is doubly[...]how many American and British feminist surprising as Wajda is o[...]tween Prince Charles and Lady Di). Blier, the ideals of the noble, and highlighted[...]onfronted moralists in all his the virtues of the damned. This-lack of[...]xplicit as his story demands slightly out of date look, like that of a six- (and that is emotional rather than visual), month o[...]wish Solidarity already adopting techniques of[...]trade unionism) — just the sort of savage[...]of Iron), predictable winner of the Palme[...]jugated aesthetic considerations for casional charms, is a disappointment.[...]remony. Heaven’s Gate. Top right: Willie Nelson and James Caan in Michael Mann’s Bressonian Violent Streets (Thief). Below right: step-daughter (Ariel Bresse) andof illicit desire begins: Michael Mann’s Violent[...]urney one man (James Caan) ages of the most bewitching, dazzling makes through the crime world, as he and amazing sort. She had decided to tears away the veneer of those profiting use my eyes as her mirr[...]father, after ail, is ness, the film is a triumph of technique. still a man, like any other, and there Ignoring the “ neo-realistic” conven was nothing to stop her from seducing tions of the genre (as Mann put it), he has him. Sh[...]trated on those aspects that, melt and then to rule over my downfall. when highly formal[...]y, I never had the luck to be psychological state of his character. born a hero. I’ve a[...]ity works well, the with fine little cracks and the least jolt camera making much out of neon lights makes me cave in. reflected on greasy road surfaces or run “ So, think of me what you like. Yes, ning along the distorting curves of a it’s true, I caved in.” chrome[...], Mann relies on Clearly, a difficult and delicate subject. . Taking up the threads of his earlier ing what is in essence a frag[...]handles it with ferocious honesty Man of Marble, Wajda tells of many the games played between the powerful which helps unify the totality as well and clarity. Marion’s desire to seduce is Poles affected by the birth of Solidarity, and the subjugated. As Isabelle Adjani is as heighten[...]Mann’s extraordinarily romantic, sensual and, in a sense, in nalists and filmmakers searching for the never looking down on her luck or in dire detailed depiction of a safe robbery. evitable attraction. When their moment values of the new movement and the need of support, her knowing accep of first sexual contact comes, a delicate political corruption that necessitated its tance of social and sexual tyranny, in Another excellent film is[...]ng build-up so growth. But instead of devising a return for financial security, is un Blier’s Beau pere, the story of sexual masterfully prolonged by Blier, it[...]believable. attraction between a thirtyish man and triumphant moment of sensuality. Rarely, only character but[...]us, as he puts it, the “ moral shading” of The film opens with Remi (Patrick quence in cinema. for little more than a Four Corners-style characters. He criticizes aspects of per Dewaere] playing the piano in some Remi and Marion’s subsequent affaire reportage[...]b. Abruptly, he turns to is the consummation of a desire as valid discussing the problems of Poland and challenging an audience's predilection the camera and recounts his story. His[...]the possible solutions. It is fictionalized for quick judgments. In particular, live-in companion[...], from Remi’s point documentary interviewing, and rather Maggie Smith’s Lois Heidler, wife of the the same boat for eight years without of view, and printed in the Beau pere press uninvolving i[...]ly sympathetic, one recognizing much of[...] |
 | [...]Pigs and Pearls is a virtual re-make of his[...]story of a girl/woman who drifts acci[...]world, and who, by experiencing its[...]varied horrors and delights, is forced to[...]Instead of a hippie theatre group in[...]Stockholm nightclub for immigrant[...]ual and culinary, habits, Marilyn Jordan[...]ing her family and her husband’s psy[...]judged satire of the preceding 97[...]been saved by his sense of outrage and[...]flaccid as his narrative is repetitious of[...]yet another Hungarian tale of middle-life[...]stagnated; his feeling for life lost. He[...]tors and psychiatrists; even an encounter[...]catalogue of failed exterior solutions[...]before hitting on the supposedly reveal oneself and others in her pathetic at Bertolucci now trails them), before the visual boldness of his best films. But ing one: only by himself ca[...]everything is ‘resolved’ in a spate of one product of this “ mature period” Is a correct his state. This Gaal shows by childish game-playing of the type H.P. Borges-like ambiguities of the kind that strangely hesitant camera. Instead of his having his protagonist help an old lady de[...]ategy. usually spectacular cranes and tracking bring her pot plants out from insid[...]iv e m is ju d g m e n t shots, there are jerky and meaningless home into the rain. The ironic[...]m had one metre tilts, or short pans back and that seems to have eluded Gaal is: Can who i[...]d Maddox Ford). H.J.’s downright unpleasantness and A d ja n i’s inap propriateness as the girl, Marya, counter all Ivory’s attempts to liven this drama. And as is the habit in most period films (this is set among the chic foreigners of 1930s Paris), the set and costume designers seem determined to swamp the action in gratuitous demonstrations of their crafts. Bernardo Bertolucci’s La tragedia di un uom o rid ic o lo (T ra g e d y of a Ridiculous Man) is, in the director’s words, the first film of his “ mature period” . Returning to the much-used Po valley, B ertolucci tells of a peasant (Ugo Tognazzl) who has become a wealthy cheese manufacturer and owner of a hideous villa which apes the local architectu[...]t his new binoculars — given to him by his son, of course). But, the kidnapping Is not all it seems: did, for example, the son plan it? While frantically t[...]ho shares those Italian cinematic characteristics of being affected, un- likeable and ungrateful; a son who rebels against bourgeois values as much out of boredom as anything else), he also wonders if he[...]Marino Lindhal, Per Oscarsson (psychiatrist) and Erland Josephson (husband) in Dusan Makavejev s Montenegro or Pigs and Pearls. (instead of being ahead of his audiences, 236 — Cinema Papers, July-August |
 | [...]ort Isabelle Huppert, as Alphonsine Plessis, and Fernando Rey as her suitor. Mauro Bolignini’s La Isabelle Adjani and Sam NeiH in Andrzej Zulawski’s Possession. dam[...]After pouring the magic potion into literal and dramatic coloring. with known actors before and he seems (themselves) by helping/im pinging on[...]unsure about how to handle them — and, others, thus depriving them of their right still clothed. As the charme[...]the water splashing about violently and collapse, signalled by her abrupt leave- Incest is also the theme of Christian B. Divers[...]contrasting with the blank dimness of the[...]taking of her husband and retreat to the[...]d second childhood, seeing in her love for feelings between parents and their small[...]s, aflare with her father the possibility of a new, truer children. Thomsen argues that sup[...]s demonic passion. kind of relationship with men. sion of this natural desire leads to camelias, already a critical and financial Eroticism plays a lesser p[...]Borowczyk’s other films — measured and intense to be dramatically fascinating, but[...]irector. despite the presence of Marina Pierro, satisfying, and though Jane Birkin and too quickly for one to be convinced. The film is based on the novel by Alex seen in his Heroines of Evil. The film ’s M ich el P icco li do m[...]any, demanding roles, they remain Birkin and[...]o n fo r the co u rte sa n , reminding one most of Story of Sin in its Piccoli. Doillon has not really w[...]e to expect. which is set in parenthetical codas of the[...]Patrick Dewaere is Serge, a university beginning and closing of Dumas’ play,[...]several classes at the university. Bored from the death of Alphonsine to its[...]by marriage and the stifling nature of representation on stage.[...]meeting at The m ajor problem with the film, and it[...]pe. But the escape near ruins it, is the casting of Isabelle[...]proves its own trap, a penniless and Huppert as Alphonsine. Huppert, an[...]he opts for adventure, for the unknown. sexuality. This is a m ajor handica[...]most engaging when Serge loses grip of ual power to subjugate men, in her drive[...]his senses. And Clio Goldsmith, as the to rise out of the poverty in which she was[...]girl he meets, shows fine comic flair and born.[...]its lesser moments. memorable for the exquisiteness of Piero[...]n’s Tendres cousins is T o s i’s co stu m e s and the e x c e lle n t[...]the least interesting of his three features photography by Ennio Guarnieri[...]on with adolescent sexuality, particular desire and commits suicide, make the[...]ly of girls, Hamilton has attempted to film an interest[...]style of Clochemerle. But the result is[...]of m is tim e d s la p s tic k and c ru d e et les femmes is his best film in years.[...]racterization. Only in the last part, The subject of a rave critique by French[...]on. reputation. r In this umpteenth adaptation of the[...]Terayama's The Fruits of Passion, an czyk has naturally concentrated on th[...]adaptation of Pauline Reage’s Return to aspects suited to his[...]se e m in g ly friv o lo u s La femme de a-brac of the era, andof[...]prisingly uninventive The Moral of Ruth labyrinth of unknown chambers that[...]e r r a tic a lly m a g ic a l E x c a lib u r and Jekyll (Udo Kier) assum es the p e r[...]rzej Zulawski’s crazed, hysterical sonification of Mr Hyde, are cleverly[...] |
 | [...]that, because they had never Stepping Out. Made for $55,000 from diverse sources, it demands attention because this is the performed for a mass audience, it International Year o f Disabled Persons and the film is about the mentally retarded. It also[...]accustom them to lights and all the power to make an audience feel elated, wh[...]how people come paraphernalia of a shoot. That way to be tagged mentally handicapped and what happens to them as a result.[...]they would not be awed by the The groundwork for Stepping Out was laid more than two years before[...]film? up a nightly drama workshop, and out o f those workshops came “Life — Images and Reflections ”, a season o f mime and dance performances staged at the Sydney Opera Hou[...]atrical event. It is also a glimpse o f the lives and aspirations board of the home and get their o f the people who took part.[...]permission. It took a lot of One o f the things that emerges most clearly from the film is that the residents love Gennaro and convincing. their expressions o f affection for him are some o f the most moving scenes in the fi[...]orking months after the Opera House performances, and shortly after some board members saw an early[...]n Stepping Out: Chris Dobbin, who is 31 years old and an 1 think every member of the crew extraordinarily expressive dancer; and Romayne Grace, 21 years old, who provides the fil[...]Most people who see Stepping Out was produced and directed by Chris Noonan — his first independen[...]of coming in contact with the[...]were all sorts of barriers between us[...]and them, but they are such warm[...]and em o tio n al people they[...]ourselves, and that was one of the[...]m ajor rewards of the whole[...]Boy”, for example, all Philly wants[...]caused quite a stir and we did have[...]problems with a couple of people[...]by the effect of the light on her eyes[...]and thought it was affecting her[...]day a week for three successive Did you have a project ready when to the home a number of times and Director Chris Noonan (right) talks with weeks, set up the lights and did a bit you left Film Australia? ha[...]I Chris Dobbin. of filming. This was to capture[...]some of the early rehearsals, and There was only the possibility of Christmas play the residents were Was Aldo Ge[...]certain. I had to raise the seemed distant enough for me to[...]t radio mics to capture candid working with Aldo, and knew the performance and he really got me what the presence of the crew would conversations, particularly betwee[...]in the residents as the do to the event and to the our two main characters, Chris and Opera House. I had been invited up subject for a film. performers. Bu[...] |
 | feeling they were an invasion of t h e i r p r iv a c y . R om ayne particularly resented the intrusion and it put a great distance between her and us until we realized what was happening and discarded the mics. Why did you select Romayne Gr[...]he suggested herself: she was the most articulate of the residents I met. When I first went to the hom[...]retarded” . . . Exactly. There are a number of people I felt should not have been in the home. They are there only because they have been deprived of the normal training we receive, which enables us[...]Stepping Out. Left: from the performance of people in the home should not be “Life — Images and Reflections”. Stepping there?[...]about Aldo would have created an That is one of a number of intellectual focus at the end of the themes which are implicit in the fil[...]is really on a very high emotional level and about how these people are to have[...]s a commonly- on the International Year of shared feeling that the value of a Disabled Persons in making the mentally-handicapped person is one film? of a living thing, but not of.a human being.[...]have mentioned Incredibly hard, except for the it. But we didn’t, because my i[...]oach to the film was a non Department of Social Security. It intellectual one and I had decided put in $30,000 and for that has the against a commentary. I wanted the right to an unlimited number of audience to experience the players’ prints at cost price and full non reality, rath er than have it[...]ed into a digestible form. different deals for the other To have inserted the information[...] |
 | [...]I have had from they reject a lot of things she says. words as “the script” , wi[...]been very Certainly, some members of the assumption that I had written what Unilever and GMH — did not want positive. From the p[...]s administration felt the she had to say and asked her to read rights to the film . . .[...]parents, for example, were very film were- not r[...]her think it is a wonderful film. after a lot of hassling. I approached 70 companies with a' two-page typed letter. Those three were the only successes, and they put in about S1000 each. Did any of the financial contributors want to see a script?[...]proposal explaining that there was no possibility of having a script in advance, because it was an event and we could not predict what was going to happen. I agreed to show all sponsors, including the board of the home, the film just before we approved it for printing. Naturally, I could not give anyone e[...]rol, but I guaranteed to listen to their comments and to consider them before making the final cut. Tha[...]tried quite a lot. On what issues? The board of the home was very worried about the amount of affection shown among residents, and between the residents and Aldo. One of the board members commented that the relationship shown between Aldo and the residents was an unnatural one. Essentially, I think, it embar rassed them and they put a lot of pressure on me to delete those scenes. Some of the board’s comments were incorporated in the final cut, but only because we had to cut 10 minutes out of the film. How do audiences react to the film?[...]t gets an extraordinary response. Gennaro and residents during rehearsals. Stepping Out People[...]mmaker. He made his first film at school, on 16mm and in black and white. Called Could it response.[...]quite a curiosity. It was screened on television, and its makers institutionalization? were interviewed for television and written up in newspapers. The Sunday Telegraph, for one, ref[...]he world old-fashioned borrowed camera and a budget o f $187.35 can pick up third prize at t[...]” come down to a much more realistic assessment of its influence The success o f Could it Happ[...]eedback I’ve had, I think the film applied for, and got, a job at Film Australia as a production assistant. During two years at Film has changed a lot of people’s Australia, Noonan also star[...]rbo, financed by the old Experimental perceptions of the m entally Film Fund, then adminis[...]e one o f the first intake at the Australian Film and Television School, Have you had much reaction to the joining Phil Noyce, Gill Armstrong and Graham Shirley, among others, fo r the one-year film from parents and residents? “interim” course. 2[...] |
 | [...]Chris Noonan What was the AFTS looking for in Tracy. The day after the cyclone that[...]hit, Film Australia flew me and a cameraman up to Darwin. We had For people with at least limited two days in wh[...]a experience in directing who had short, and that had to be released shown they were som ehow by the end of the week. In an committed to film. extraordinary show of efficiency at Film Australia, that schedule was And what were you looking for? observed. Tony Buckley cut it and I recorded a personal commentary Confidence, essentially, and that for it. is exactly what it provided. I was The film was very successful. It quite scared of direction, because I was screened all over th[...]have enough experience to within a couple of weeks of release, know whether the decision I had mainly because Film Australia gave made off the top of my head, to it away to everyone. work in[...]right one. You also made one of the TCN-9 But the course was excellent, in[...]e year, with “Cass”. How did that go? each of us making three films and a number of studio, video programs. That was the on[...]at Film Australia, and it received If you had been offered the three- very mixed crits. It has a lot of fans year full-time course, would you still and I still have people saying how have been interested? much they liked it, but a lot of the revi[...]o spend mixed reaction to Cass as most of outside the mainstream of the my films have had very good press industry. As it turned out it was reaction and I was not used to being Cass, the only dramatic f[...]contrast, I could course had involved three years of a number of projects in the not see myself making a decent co[...]ve Film developmental stage which fell living out of independent pro have been interested. On the ot[...]cedents were not hand, the film school is looking for realized that Cass was as far as I good. different types of people now, with I was very lucky at Film[...]But I was in a situation of being less em phasis on w ould-be Australia and I owe the place a It was a very hard decision. I had frustrated and not making films — directors. great deal. Up until I made Cass, spent most of my life working in and the films I could have been[...]every project was a new challenge institutions and it was a very secure making were not exciting to me. So How did Film Australia react when and further extended my abilities. existence, with the money coming I just had to get out and trust fate. you said you were going to the AFTS?[...]y school libraries — but I threw myself into it and convinced the sp o n so rs th a t they w anted so[...]e me the respect they did. I had really long hair and must have made a strange impression. It was a bit of a surprise to be treated as someone who knew what[...]oach. At any rate, while we were shooting part of the library series at Sunshine North Tech I had the Chris Noonan (left) directs Michele Fawdon and John Waters in Cass. chance to make another film[...]en helped by the fact that it won the competition for Best TV Program in the shop in the area.[...]ronze award at the New What other films stand out of those York International Film and Television Festival, First Prize in the 6th Annua[...]cted at Film Australia? Festival o f New York and a Jury Prize at the Oberhausen Short Film[...] |
 | [...]idered it would make redundant the vintage black and white Hollywood features that had been bought as[...]ckages in their hundreds in the 1950s. The films of MGM and Warner Brothers were thus returned to the An ecstatic Ramon Novarro in parent companies and made available as hire Laughing Boy. cop[...]6 mm market. At this point, however, a number of things happened which are revealing of the Australian film scene. Most of the famous titles and the work of celebrity stars were found to be lost, worn-out[...]worth of silver, but also from a genuine interest in-the past of the film industry. We were allowed[...]to look at anything we wanted and the destruc conventional (David Burton, 1929). Charles the Jeanette MacDonald musicals and the Oscar tion order was cancelled — temp[...]Big winners were missing from the list. The last of Noel Cislawski, of the NSW Education Shakedown (John Fr[...]and Department, took the project seriously and had Janet Gaynor in Seventh Heaven. at the start of this year. That meant that what found us a c[...]hen The discovery is Ramon Novarro, star of the was left was not the material circulated by[...]g our activities among the peo 1926 Ben Hur and usually heard only as the the more intrepid repertory cinemas and film ple who one might have expected to be[...]o Marta societies. In particular, several hundred of these terested. Some of the reactions were amazing, Hari. A remarkably full collection of his work were the program films of the pre-1935 period including astonishment[...]st talkie, Devil May which are virtually unknown for a variety of terested in American films which didn’t[...]the infamies of the CIA. off his Spee[...]should tell The film challenges the limits of the studio’s as stage-bound and clumsy by comparison to the them when we were running Public Enemy and sound technique, recording speech and music at better known silent classics which prec[...]andful were able to appreciate the same time and running two cameras on some or the films of the so-called Golden -Years of that these films were a different and possibly scenes. Hollywood which follow. Season programming, more important part of the jigsaw to the known More impressive[...]which film museums devote themselves so and respected titles. Certainly one of the things 1931), where Novarro is an Italian[...]interesting is that they playing quarterback for Yale; Daybreak (Jac The stars and major filmmakers of this period provide an insight into the wa[...]er, 1931), an unexpectedly faithful are not known and no programmer will play to retained its g[...]on flawed only in an evasive empty seats a season of the work of, say, Lee period. ending; and The Barbarian (Wood, 1933), with Tracy or Sam Hardy, or of a director like So, on the copies went — sometimes five and remarkably torrid scenes with Myrna Loy. Ve[...]r Wesley Ruggles. six a day for two months — more films than the satile and personable enough to impress in all The result of all this was that when Neil Mac National Film[...]se characters, Novarro is clearly a major, Donald and I approached Amalgamated faint-hearted fell away and the determined sat neglected talent. Distri[...]ow there muttering, “Not Franchot Tone and Even more interesting are two leg[...]!” The survivors had the uni casualties of the early sound period who emerge of destroying the copies to make space. Several que experience of seeing a substantial cross- in a new persp[...]not had a booking in the years they section of the program films of the early years of have a voice unsuitable for sound film. However, had been on offer.[...]unlike the way the in Wood’s 1929 Way for a Sailor, he is victim Now, assuming the duplicating materials are habitual filmgoers of the period first saw them more of awful material written, in part, by still available and in as good condition as they and many ofof the copies One of the most fascinating opportunities was ings ([...]ld cost more than $1000 to the discovery of the voices of many people Gentleman’s Fate (1930), an exceptional film order, print, ship and acquire a new copy of thought of as silent film stars. Erich von which strikingly pre-figures The Godfather, one of these vintage titles. Such material would Str[...]0). Betty actor. are destroyed, one of, if not, the largest collec Compson, star of many of her husband, James Director Mervyn Le Roy, who did Little tions of this rare material outside the U.S. would Cruze[...]Caesar the same year, has given Gentleman’s go and such material would never again be lin[...]re in On With the Show (Alan Fate the look and much of the pace of the best of available in Australia.[...]he was then doing. It also has The management of Amalgamated treated us her provocatively exposed leg and growls, the Italian-American setting,[...]thing up.” Ernest Torrence from decors and mannerisms like the two-shot with see that it seemed bad business to turn a few Tolable David and The Covered Wagon proves to the profile at frame edge. Gilbert and Louis hundred thousand dollars worth of film into $42 have a ringing delivery[...] |
 | [...]Collections Testify and, even with its unnecessarily moralizing ending,[...]covery. It is also possible to see the last of Buster Keaton’s work as a star in the MGM sound films and it is true that these are only a shadow of his great silents. A few of the old routines are restaged on a smaller scale[...]han talented straight actors like Gilbert Roland and John Miljan. The story that he was undermined in favor of the studio’s new comic, Jimmy Durante, seems u[...]oge role in both films. Keaton’s delivery and agility have the qualities needed to make him a[...]films available suggest another plausible reason for his decline. These titles include the extraordin[...]st release. There is also an extensive selection of the work of round-faced, wise-guy comedian William Haines, now forgotten, though he was star of the studio’s first talkie. All these film[...]ing, clumsy style despite good production values and talented collaborators. This house style is a long way from that of Paramount which served so well at that studio in the contemporary films of the Marx Brothers, Mae West, W.C. Fields or Maurice Chevalier. Their films are still admired and widely cir culated. One team did manage to springboard a career out of the cycle where Keaton faltered — the Three St[...]ington, made by Raoul Walsh, where the beginning of a faster, more modern style is becoming evident. This was to develop in the Red Skelton and, later, Marx Brothers comedies. The work of the directors is similarly intrigu ing. Few ce[...]e are no films by John Ford or Alfred Hitchcock, and only one inferior Cecil B. De Mille: his re-made[...]films which give a new perspective on the range of the programmers with which he spaced his major w[...]plot. Midnight Mary (1933) is a faster prototype of the MGM woman’s film. College Coach (1933) sur[...]nto an attack on football in educa tion. Heroes For Sale (1933), though occasional ly misjudged, ha[...]ad” dragging left-wingers from the dinner table and running them out of town. And, of course, Public Enemy has survived. Warner staffers, notably Michael Curtiz, Mervyn Le Roy and William Dieterle, are represented by the lively, earlier co-features and also by the major works by which they are remembered, like Dieterle’s Emile Zola and Curtiz’ Sea Wolf. However, the discoveries of the batch are by two little known and misrepresented film makers. One is George Hill.[...]use (with All Quiet . . . the out standing film of the era), he has not become a celebrity.[...] |
 | [...]head of distribution and he simply bution problems with “Health”,[...]h is why it was shown at the 13 years and has developed a cult following going to work and it was his ¡Melbourne Film Festival . . .[...]litical? Are they Film Festival even got a print of it:[...]objecting to the film’s view of I am in a fight with Fox over have[...]sell. They didn’t think it production and distribution companies which[...]it’s political within the would be commercial and they just refuse to distribute it. I’ve had to[...]was at Columbia, did the same take my print and I will show it in Nashville, which have d[...]ired; Norman Levy had moved cinema in Los Angeles and they have up and he said, “ I don’t like this refused to show[...]ercial film, and we are not going to York. Yet my feeling from hav[...]ars later at Fox — the commercial than a number of films decision was made not to release[...]ently . . . in Australia. The films, Health and Quintet, Did Frank Barhydt come to you Most people are of that opinion,[...]with a full screenplay for “Health” including ourselves. When I made[...]None of the internal story was[...]tion came from. IPaul Newman, Bibi Andersson and Nina van Pallandt in Robert Altman direc[...] |
 | [...]Feiffer’s script, certainly not mine. and then we started making the the end,[...]ed, again But it’s collaborative and tends to political parallels.[...]r three months become incestuous, and you keep Is this what you are really saying in of Quintet, and it had no names in feeding back and forth to each This is the second time you have[...]produced all the films done that. It reminded me of the accessible, delightful film, but it and had control of them. campaign in “Nashville” . . . That is the basis of the film. I didn’t do business in the firs[...]think it ties in with gambling and days, and they pulled it out. You are know[...]g. You have to put Health was next, and I think it like to work with, so that[...]in jeopardy, or else you was on the basis of the failure of same people reappear in a number of and that was a campaign as the just become like those people in the Quintet and A Perfect Couple that your films . .[...]just p aro d ie d th e two p o litic a l and died. glad to get rid of me. There will be That’s true, and it’s not by design conventions and the way our system[...]me. and I can see how he can move into political conventions were on. I felt do you go to all the trouble of[...]d time filming ojn location, with the for it, but they didn’t agree with extraordinary climatic problems You grew up in Kansas City and in Are there subjects yo[...]I don’t have any big dream. ISissy Spacek and Shelley Duvall in Three Women. Allen Garfield and Ron nee Blakley in Nashville. game of the same name. There are have cost us a fortune t[...]concentrated on the two have no idea of being like John actually rules and one can play it stages and do that. This set — the coasts .[...]Arthur ruins of Expo ’67 — was already[...]ather. It was I have spent most of my adult life Excalibur. Oh yes, it’[...]are quintet clubs in the U.S. everything in sight and created our think there is no questi[...]take your roots with you, and they have been looking for a common tournaments.[...]certainly form your opinions and ingredient in your films and I think H ave there been distribution your view of things. I am definitely it’s stretchi[...]n person, although I What came first — the idea for the game or the idea for the film?[...]w The film first, but I always had on the basis of Paul Newman, and For the past 12 years, when you have immediately how to do. It has to the idea that there was a game of the film was not accepted by the[...]ms, you have been present that kind of challenge. I do the culture, like backgammon, pub[...]involved as producer, director and two kinds of films: what I call essay chess, mahjong, dominoes[...]ked it, writer on almost all of them. I don’t films, which Health, Nashville and wanted a game that represented the although those who did really liked know of any films you have made A Wedding are; and what I call culture and that eventually became it. Most of the public found it tire since “M[...]interior films — Three Women, the end of the culture. The game some and dreary; it would have weren’t involved in the writing . . . Images and, in a way, Quintet. survived longer than the culture. been better to release it and let it build[...]rd to do that by California Split, and on Nashville I[...]llegory. I don’t think there is an discussion of the film . . . screen credit, but a film is so Quintet, McCabe and Mrs Miller American game. It’s too diverse;[...]co llab o rativ e th a t everybody and Popeye would fall in the same there are to[...] |
 | [...]t When you start a film, do you know like Grease and made $200 million, how it’s going to turn out? and yet everybody I ran into said,[...]usual procedure is that I me more. start a film and I have a vague idea The experience I have with most of how it’s going to be. Then we do of my films is that commercially the screenplay and we start and, I they are not very successful, but I think, Go[...]entirely differ can always find a little pocket of ent. So, I make an entirely differ cult people[...]han the one I started with. Then it’s finished and I look at the Does lack of commercial success end results. I realize that t[...]doesn’t even have to go I like all my films and, like to a banker any more; he can do it childre[...]an do anything you please, butJulie Christie and Warren Beatty in McCabe and Mrs Miller Fernando Rey and Vittorio Gassman in Quintet. different and they are all total in I don’t know if I[...]favorite answer, which I am flaws, that is part of their nature. certain amount of struggle in it to Well, I am surviving andand I think adrenalin going. You are fighting[...]as a it’ll probably follow the same for your life all the time, your really the basis of what eventually youngster, I’d go to films as often pattern as McCabe and Mrs Miller. artistic life.[...]es the e sta b lish m e n t. as I could, and I thought those That was also highly unsuccessful[...]pened. I didn’t know when it was first released and now You are playing quite a major role[...]it like it was now as a producer, not only for your out. The exam ples are your know the names of the ones who a great big hit. Even the critics who own films but for other people’s as Australian films that com[...]de by the majors making films? Most of my films seem to do[...]mmon a lot of films, and there are a lot of[...]denominator. The films I make and or write. I would certainly be in an rediscover them, and they seem, filmmakers, a- lot of material I see[...]it’s the artist, and if I can help that ultim ately become the mos[...]ilms. Do you have plans for other films? film? industry; plus, it’s acceptance for my films. Do you watch a lot of films? I am about to do a fi[...]gland in 1915, in a interested in an appreciative and work outside the major studios and[...] |
 | [...]anada. They have good tech broiight in for would have been One of the complaints about armed guard. And there is just a nicians up there and, I think, they about $16 million. We had an[...]th was that there was so much whole world of buskers and street really know a lot about film. enormous amount of people to going on all the time. Thes[...]com plicated soundtracks are clowns and mimes and jugglers and Have you ever considered shooting a The set alone[...]a good cinema, but f ir e - e a te r s , and th e y w ere film in Australia?[...]k e at sea and we had boats; everything sound system or the acoustics advantage of those people? I am not[...]pensive. aren’t very good, and it’ll drive interested in doing a film[...]in A ustralia, but the Going back to “Health” and its[...]rlet. production designer, Wolf Kruger, parodying of American politics, do In a number of your films, who had worked in Australia for a you think of yourself as a political particularly “Nashville”, the music That is one of the most striking long time, felt we were logistically director, or of your films as is more than something[...]— the lack of pretty people in the although I had a big love af[...]certainly have the right It always is. One of the first conventional sense . . . Austra[...]together and deliver the message or[...]emotion or whatever it is, and I[...]consider that most of my creative[...]be remembered for?[...]any of them are important, and I[...]don’t think any of them will mean[...]Do you think that’s the nature of[...]techniques and things that we[...]for different reasons today than[...]they were admired for at the time,[...]and even so that’s a short period of[...]and I am satisfied with this — it’s[...]down to the beach and get a lot of It’s a pity for the Australian film make a film is trying to show my effects and noise. It attacks a friends and you build a sand castle. industry that you didn’t . . . view of a certain subject or genre. I different sense.[...]try to express my view of politics going to do a conventional score[...]like in Quintet, where we had a and Finish it. Then you remember repair shop.[...]symphonic score, I have to decide it, and you re m e m b e r th e structures, the moral attitude of the beforehand what that’s going to be. experiences you had with the people One of the things that hits someone culture that I li[...]film is shot with the idea of the kind real reward or wealth of filmmak expense of making American films. Watching “Quintet” and “Health”, ofof A Perfect Couple and in a country where feature films from the technique a lot of people and Nashville, where we used music are being made for about $1 million associate with you, where you ha[...], Filmography each, that seems an awful lot of large number of overlapping it is part of a plot. It is part of the money. Is there some way of conversations and a soundtrack that behaviour of the characters. It is 1955 The Delinquen[...]1957 The James Dean Story breaking out of that and making is very complex. That doesn’t seem part of what the film is about, and 1968 Countdown good films?[...]case in these two . . . yet it also calls for an additional 1968 That Cold Dav in the P[...]1971 McC'ahe and Mrs Miller unions and in the second place you not Quintet. Quintet[...]e the basic cost. It’s escalating a fairytale and it was very stylized Where did you find the St[...]1973 The Long Goodbye everywhere in the world and it will in its language. All the actors had a for “Health”? 1974[...]hem busking on the 1976 Buffalo Bill and the Indians are going to be; it’s a shame. is Italian, Bibi Andersson is streets of New York. It’s very 1977 Three Wom[...]e somebody that 1978 A Wedding much and most of my.films don’t. I Danish, David Langdon is English, everybody overlooks. Most of the 1979 Quintet[...]9 A Perfect Couple really didn’t have control of the Paul Newman is American. We[...] |
 | ALIENATION AND DE-ALIENATION EISENSTEIN AND BRECHT (Translated by Patricia McClanahan and ical base in common, they each tr[...]Burton) along separate and in some senses divergent These c[...]this would seem to indicate that and the whole staged representation, but the spec Sergei Eisenstein and Bertolt Brecht, born in there is no compromise be[...]d.”6 1898 — Eisenstein in Riga on January 23 and At first glance, we find that wh[...]—were con passion, the other chooses the path of reason; Brecht appeal[...]ience to s u r r e n d e r than to their feelings and calls attention to the become irreconcilably oppo[...]gue about them.”7 To Battleship Potemkin (1926) and T h e T h r e e - rational.[...]achieve this, he proposes a mechanism of aliena P e n n y O p e r a (1928). These marked[...]tion in the relationship between the viewer and ments of immediate resonance because they[...]is com the character, but in the opposite sense of what formed part of the impetuous advance of a pelled to jump from his seat[...]ruc revolution that was to rock the foundations of to collapse where he stands. When h[...]ancing devices, Brecht at bourgeois conceptions of film and theatre. to applaud, to cry out. When his eyes are compelled tempts to estrange, separate and alienate the What mattered to both was the ad[...]to shine with delight, before gushing tears of delight viewers, not from themselves, but from the of an audience armed with reason, so they each[...]of himself.[...]. . .). through their works to the transformation of of a work of pathos consists in whatever ‘sends’ the manki[...]viewer, says Brecht, this objective, they strived for the greatest ef be added to such a formulation, for the symptoms “ Must not be yanked from his world in order to be ficacy in their respective arts and confronted above say exactly this:[...]literally ‘standing transported to the world of art. There is no need to aesthetic problems with a commitment to scien out of oneself which is to say ‘going out of himself abduct him. Rather, he must be inserted into his tific rigor andOf course, this “emotional surrender” (a state[...]an alienation device, could tribute to new means of expression, all that ferent mode of being” , also implies &s e p a r a t i o n be seen as a form of genuine de-alienation, since could be assimilated[...]back into the Meyerhold to Joyce, through Chinese and “different” way of seeing daily reality, then it reality of their own world (with a new perspec Japanese th[...]an a lte r a t i o n or an a lie n a tio n tive) and, ultimately, to return them to Freud and Einstein. f[...]g it “magical” operation. all as a foundation and a guide — was Karl “ ‘To go out of oneself is not to go into nothing. To 6 . Brecht, op. cit., Vol. 1, p. 57. Marx. Both, rooted their search for new go out of oneself inevitably implies a transition to 7. Ibi[...]“ In wishing to get a maximum departure from of transformation of the viewer, a negative mo oneself in the spec[...]ding ‘guide’. Follow own limits; the limits of the spectacle itself. For ing this guide, he will enter into the desired[...]become alienated from themselves, and cease to He proceeds to state, even more precisel[...]r — in the “ the simplest ‘prototype’ of such imitative character — was invested with particular in behaviour will be, of course, that of a.person ec terest inasmuch as it constitutes the premise of a statically following, on the screen, a perso[...]s, a personage who, in one way or desired change. And this change, for Eisenstein, another, ‘goes out of himself. is produced —[...]realm of feelings and emotions. In a state of ec Brecht, on the other hand, declares almost by stasy. way of involuntary reply that, “ We understand a moment of culmination to mean, “This magical operation[...]e we see the an ecstatic state or a clouding of vision.”2 same going out of oneself, moving from one condi It thus becomes evident that in tion, and passing from quality to quality — ec spite of not merely incidental points stasy!”- of contact but an entire philosoph-[...]Theory, translated to a greater understanding of him or herself and by Jay Jeyda, Harcourt, Brace the surrounding social environment and, conse and World, New York, 1949, quently, to effective dominion over self and sur p. 168[...] |
 | [...]Alienation and De-alienation If both artists share the sa[...]e eventually came to took power and initiated one of the most far- points of departure and the same revolutionary reject bit[...]two such diametrical specificity of cinematic language, because he[...]he same problem? To was unaware of the unique devices which film of the midst of the effervescence of the early stages what degree can their respective[...]in film only a technical means to of the revolution, the years of the Prolekult and considered antagonistic and irreconcilable? simplify the reproduction of a work. Thus other “enorm[...], Brecht ran up against narrow limits of expres close attention to all[...]fter finishing the possibilities of an “epic” cinema (in the sense futurism , constructivism , “ kino eye’’, The Old and the New, Eisenstein travelled wide[...]t, is not a dream, a demystification of “art” , the consecration of ican film being the best known and most substitute for reality, but one that mobilizes the[...]ng them.* Earlier, consciousness of the viewer. me[...]n the Soviet Union, would acquire towards the end of 1929, he had been in Berlin In the theatre, the actor’s interpretation of the new physiognomies. where he surely[...]h can best express Marie Seton’s testimony of this point is elo Brecht’s insist[...]d p a r e x c e lle n c e destined for the masses” ). Lenin “Equally curious and even a bit repulsive was the refer in ge[...]being capricious when on a certain occa dry and bloodless energy that one felt in Bertolt Eisenstein understood it, made up of different sion he referred to film as the most important of Brecht, whose cutting lines and satiric pieces bit elements (framing, narr[...]had great impact due to coldly into the heart of social hypocrisy. Sergei Mi- phrase, audiovi[...]e times, their authenticity jailovich thought of Brecht as a tenacious professor based on the manner in which these elements are and revitalizing energy which derived from the a[...]ore structured. away at the rock wall of consciousness that couldn’t[...]h gave them life. be melted by the sheer heat of his passion.”9 However, Eisenst[...]thod, Those same years passed for Brecht in a very[...]is different manner: the failure of the German Aside from their personal idiosyncracies, it is perse his energies in the search for forms. It revolution, inflation, the sharpening of class an important to remember that they expre[...]tagonisms, misery, unemployment — and the themselves through two media — film and as a formalist without bearing in mind the consequent rise of fascism. In 1933, Brecht took theatre — which,[...]ny common historical necessity of such a search — the the route of exile: Vienna, Paris, Denmark, elements, also ha[...]haracteristics. logical consequence of the process of creating a Sweden, Finland and finally the U.S. His works Eisenstein began work[...], ac new language, a new means of expression with were banned and burned by the Nazis. It wasn’t cording to his own account,10 while directing rules and syntax that could only flourish as the until 1948, the year of Eisenstein’s death, that plays, he was already thinking of film. In 1928, result of sustained practical research and atten Brecht returned to Germany,[...]more formal in Berlin (GDR) and dedicated most of his time S i m p l e , he included a short comic[...]entered the scene had already evolved and for It is obvious that, generally speaking, Eisen life, not merely as a means of artistic expression, mally consolidated[...]o focus stein lived during a period of exaltation, of nas but as an object of intense theoretical pursuit as primarily on problems of content, cinema was cent strength, of triumph and affirmation, of well.[...]er hand, was wholly a man Theatre and film make use of multiple expres lived during “sombre times” , full of decadence, of the theatre. If on occasion he approached sive devices — image, word, music — and in defeat, barbarity, rejection and condemnation: film, it cannot be said that he ha[...]lements can be combined in times of rational s e p a r a t i o n which demanded an[...]different manners and measures. Often, one extraordinary lucidity and a solid critical * Que viva Mexico!, produced and subsequently blocked by speaks of “theatrical” films or of “cinematic” perspective. It i[...], “ Eisenstein’s Mexican Tragedy” , Sight and Sound, Vol. 27, No. 6 , pp. 305-308.[...]s u r r e n d e r as a premise for transformation within 9. Marie Seton, Sergei M.[...]as a general tendency, there is one peal and put all his emphasis on reason, d i s t a n c [...]t differentiates film from theatre in g and a critical outlook — concepts which, for with the mise en scene of The Mexican (1920).” Eisens and helps us to understand the contradictory[...]positions assumed by Brecht and Eisenstein: film meaning.12[...]sual language, The followers of each (above all, those of[...]meaning to the concrete determination of the ob fanaticism — for one path or the other in uni[...]sion of ideas, concepts, abstractions outside the of these paths or perceive the points where both[...]realm of concrete objects or images.[...]Images in the immediacy of their cinematic In Eisenstei[...]representation and based on the interplay of line of development that leads him from the[...]suit, can be very primitive “ montage of attractions” 12 derived suggestive and even moving, in that they appeal[...]directly to the senses and register most comfor[...]s to 12. “To criticize the course of a river means, in this case, to[...]communication on a conceptual, abstract and improve it. correct it. Criticism of society is revolution.[...]Thus, all of Eisenstein’s efforts to express con 13. “The basic elements of the theatre arise from the viewer[...]cepts through the clash of images (intellectual himself and from what we might direct to the viewer in a[...]iven sense . . . The attraction (in our diagnosis of the[...]desired goals without the assistance of the word. ment which awakens in[...]ment which might be verified and mathematically wider range of expressive possibilities in film. calculated to produce certain emotional clashes of an ap[...]s Obviously, this theory of the “ montage of attrac[...]tions” . or of “ artistic stimuli” as he called it another[...]ématographique, nous We wmuld go further and say that the hypertrophy of this[...]qui, apres avoir donne son attitude (or of this method) leads to authoritarianism[...] |
 | [...]FILM DIRECTOR What was the state of the Cuban Octavio Cortazar visited Sy[...]In what we call the “pre-history” vez (For the First Time) and Sobre un prim er started with very little money. The of Cuban cinema, our film industry produced one fil[...]combats (On a First Combat), and his first revolutionary government g[...](The Literacy Teacher), to start filming and employing per and capital, and using the Cuban were shown as part o f the[...]was very little money landscape, tourist sights and for wages. folklore. There was a very small T[...]At Channel 7, I used to earn 3000 number of technical personnel then.[...]pesos ($3200), which was a lot of For instance, the make-up man, (his most rec[...]one million money then, especially for a 23- when he was not working on a film, Cu[...]al production assistant — which and seeing the prospects offered by character.[...]was the only chance I had to publicity as a way of breaking into In this interview by Martha[...]ution. York, learning the general manage ment of television. spirit o f militancy fo r which the nation and its[...]strong and Cuba came under big monopoly, as the magnate who[...]by counter-revolutionaries, which Channels 6 and 4, and several radio[...]was a moment of very acute in cinema as a basic form of[...]spontaneity and full co-operation Europe, to Rome especially, bu[...]ectors had passed. It was trip was very expensive and I re a time for definitions. mained in television. From the beginning, however, I rejected its commercial aspects and was very[...]your attitude before, as a lucky to be in charge of the person with a good position and a channel’s cultural program. This[...]I supported the revolution and some cultural significance.[...]sharp discussions with my Within this context of com[...]have as high a degree of political small group of young people[...]When I entered the ICAIC, it and searching for more artistic and was not a time of effervescence but culturally-meaningful paths —[...]of struggle. Luckily, the ICAIC people like Santiago[...]was a small film centre formed by a (founder of the ICAIC’s Latin small group of very political people, American Newsreel), Jorge[...]and the political and cultural at (now head of production) and[...]rature. As well, we spected each other and all[...]Maya Deren and Agnes Varda. I and the ICAIC[...] |
 | [...]the early to have those attacked without mind and I went to the cinemas to though we had some old equip spirit of a place has been lost duringarms, and also to frighten them. study the situation. I the[...]However, the exact opposite had the structures of some of the but very little experience; now we[...]en achieved: nobody in Cuba was Warner Bros films of the later have old equipment, but lots of The spirit is maintained because fr[...]ICAIC was created by a group of to the port to help the victims and — which told a story by sending In the begin[...]inema pick up the remaining armaments. you back and forth between past learning how to make films. I tographic vocation. They were all The whole of Havana became a and present. learned to edit with the newsreels, film artists. Tomas Alea, for blue city as everybody wore their I[...]ont the other night, he The emotional support of the couldn’t really tell what was go off to a certain factory and make felt he really wanted to make common c[...]about it. I would go off another film. Of course he wants to revolution turned into a real one to boxes out of a ship, emphasized by with the cameraman, come ba[...]there; he the extent that we could give our music and tension (I used dode and we would edit the film. is going to[...]go would then include it in another film. And we are all the conscious support was trans a bo[...]formed into an armed support as of rope. The music reaches a climax It was a beautiful time, a great But, of course, I must add that it people realized that what they were and you are sent to another scene process in which w[...]our best to reflect according to a budget and a meant a qualitative jump in the nothing to do with the first scene, the reality of living the political life schedule as when you have a totally consciousness of the people. are playing a strange game of war. of the country — filming on one free han[...]s speech They say, “ I declare war on such hand and doing guard duty with the necessary to work this way. when we buried the victims. He said and such a country.” militia on the other.[...]sly we had said, Up to that moment — and I am For example, I finished work at 5 On a First Co[...]ut from sure because I proved it myself — p.m. and then at 8 p.m. we would[...]hose who were contem Then the credits come down and the work again at 8 a.m. Some nights, Co[...]ggressions towards children keep on playing. The for one reason or another, we especially for a documentary, with Cuba. So, I made the film. music of tension begins again and wouldn’t get any sleep at all. its mixture of newsreel and re lasts until the last movement of the The atmosphere was of great enacted material . . .[...]n which one child says, revolutionary militancy. And this hitting the hand of the other child, reality was reflected in the ci[...]In 1971, the popularity with bomb explodes and I s ta rt The revolution has now gone[...]first films had begun to decline and material I could find. From then its institutiona[...]nto scepticism. Then, thanks on, people sit there and watch the 1975. What effect did this have have lived under different degrees to the newsreel and to The Twelve documentary. They receive a within the ICAIC? of tension. Now, for instance, we Chairs and Death of a Bureaucrat message.[...]aggression against Cuba and regain interest in the Cuban which can be read a[...]s you say, we now have a state Nicaragua. And, in the 1970s, when cinema. Now, of course, Cuban third time to be understood; you organism which has been institution I thought of making the film, we films are very well received[...]were living through a very tense audience, and not just out of a sense information that can be easily be institu[...]have time when it seemed as if the U.S. of solidarity, but because they enjoy assimilated on[...]truction if dramatization will ICAIC has built up and main of imperialism against Cuba — the films, the docum[...]ned its high prestige. explosion of the French arms ship advantage in that it was shown Since 1973, the ICAIC has tried Le Coubre — and what effect this between features. And, during that In Australia, it is usually felt tha[...]e a documentary should consist the economic point of view. This ulation. a cigarette or go to the toilet. For mainly of actuality filming . . . means strict budgeting, not over I interviewed a large group of this reason, the documentary in shooting and keeping to schedule. those who had been wounded in the Cuba had to capture the attention For me a documentary is a These I consider very basic aspects explosion, from dock workers to of the audience from the very weapon of combat, an instrument of production, but for many years the general population[...] |
 | The performance of yours I admire[...]pretation and you want to use wide- film’s texture . . .[...]llows you to get It was a wonderful film to do and[...]part. It was my best film- making experience ever and offered[...]his bring film acting some enormous opportunity for an actor.[...]where nearer to stage acting?, Many people, and all the tech nicians, turned down work waiting[...]Much nearer. for the moment when this would be made — and it was on and off until You are much more in control of the the last moment. They all went to[...]whole performance . . . work with such a will and devotion to Joe, and to the subject.[...]Much more. Looking back on it now — and I think I felt the same at the time —[...]you feel have not given adequate rein part of that film. Really, it was the[...]difficult to accept — unless, of at almost the same time and one course, their point of view is un- wondered if this was the beginning[...]arguably righter than one’s own. of a new British film industry. Of[...]“The Day ofof the English aristocracy be so[...]Fred. He teaches well done. To be less generously and[...]actors, technicians alike. He is the balance of the film. It seemed to[...]sit at HQ, but who is out at least as attractive and interesting[...]past decade, few British actors the soldiers. And, of course, his[...]overall conception of how to do The levels of society were have managed to build and sustain a reputation something, and his demand upon important: Trimingham definitely in film s. Whereas Anthony Hopkins and John you within a short space of time was an aristocrat, and Margaret[...]with very little material to show Leighton’s and Michael Gough’s Hurt have succeeded b[...]ng but extremely exhilarat characters were more of the nouveau riche than of the landed[...]Would you regard Losey and Zinne You played in two other Losey[...]haps the two most films, “The Doll’s House” and Perhaps best known fo r his perfor[...]Bridge Too Far, Edward and M rs Simpson (for Duellists” is a remarkable film ling of actors? television) and the recent The M irror C rack’d. which has ne[...]think highly of him as a director? actors. He allows them[...] |
 | [...]vision from the top. and he’s a much younger man — in the class of Zinnemann or Losey.[...]I think Scott is very much hoist on the petard of a style of commer[...]Lord Lew Grade and Bernard audience, rather than perhaps on[...]of the entrepreneur with flair. They Which is anothe[...]ledge of what the public wants, film for 1970 . . .[...]blows just as hard a punch in a much quieter way. And[...]Is there any hope for British films to somehow the punch works for[...]If we can make films inexpen film for Guy Hamilton. You have[...]sively enough and aim to please the said he is a “traditional dir[...]rest of the world outside the U.S. In what ways, as far a[...]and build up that market — if one concerned, would this make itself Geraldine Chaplin andand secure are what you would call action-[...]the U.S., whom I have action-adventure, but it is of a[...]as things are now, where if out, well-planned way of film-[...]you are to succeed you must making and it doesn’t try to pretend[...]eed the influence But Guy is very appreciative of[...]produced within their shores for paper.[...]their market. Is this one of the charms of the[...]hing, really. Economics like “Orient Express” and “Death[...]a fine product, so it is a matter of largely because of the way actors[...]fine product. and do something with it?[...]that the unions don’t ask for lovely souffle for your pudding.[...]enormous overtime wages and who You love it at the time, but you[...]er it that much; you just enjoy it on the moment. And these[...]great difficulties in British film- opportunities for personality[...]The trouble, of course, is that What do you think is the future of[...]unit of 15 or 20 people, while some it has been a very le[...]films require a unit of 250. The[...]over-complement of staff, which is There seems to be little released[...]think actors probably demand too “ C onfessions of a Window[...]case in point, with stories of an little about the industry, but I meet[...]immense sum being paid to at least a lot of people who are intent on Cynthia Harris as Wallis Simpson and Edward Fox as Edward, Prince o f Wales, at their one actor for a very small part. Such making jobs. What it really needs, I wedding in Edward and Mrs. Simpson. am sure, is the entrepreneur[...] |
 | [...]Films examined in terms of the Customs (Cinematograph Films) Regulations and States’ film censorship legislation are listed[...]An explanatory key to reasons for classifying non-“ G” films appears hereunder:[...]P urpose Registered Without Eliminations For General E xhibition (G)[...]m h Conquest of the Earth: Freilich/Lupo/Winter, U.S., 2677.25m,[...]The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (16mm):[...]2231.04m, The House of Dare, S ( f - m - g ) Dirty Ho: Shaw Bros, Hong K[...]i - m - j ) , V ( i - m - g ) Emperor Chien Lung and The Beauty: Shaw Bros.[...]m, and Paulsen, U.S., 74 mins, Focus Video, V ( f - m -[...]members by the National Film Theatre of Australia in Sunn Cla[...]At the Fountainhead (16mm): British Film Institute. Bri Siu Int'l Film Co.[...]tain. 987m, National Film Theatre of Australia The H[...]National Film Theatre of Australia[...]Symphony of Love: D. Randall, Italy, 2649.36m, A.Z. Dist., 0[...]1086m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]1020m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]m, Newhart Diffusion, V ( i - l - j ) The Warrant of Assassination: Feng Huant. Hong members by the National Film Theatre of Australia in[...]Adelaide film festivals and then exported.[...]its 1981 "images of Italian Cinema of the Seventies"[...]Love and Bullets: P. Kohner, Britain, 2788.8m. Hoyts[...]Alexander The Great: T. Angelopoulos and Co., Kong. 2600m, Golden Reel Films. V ( i - l -[...]Greece. 6000m, Melbourne Film Festival For M ature Audiences (M)[...]Theatre of Australia[...]Film Festival Diary of Forbidden Dreams: Carlo Ponti, France/ltaly.[...]Brothers and Sisters: British Film Institute, Britain, Theatre of Australia[...]2.59m. Theatre of Australia Seven Keys Films. O ( a d u l t t h e m[...]members by the National Film Theatre of Australia in My Way H[...]Australian Film Institute, L ( i - l - j ) , O ( e m o t i o n a l s t r e[...]2762m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]7406m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]) 2304m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]) 2688m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]The Falls (16mm): British Film Institute. Britain, 2080m, Soylelin anama aglamasin: M. Kar[...]National Film Theatre of Australia[...]Film Festival The Story of a Refugee: Goldig Films. Hong Kong.[...]2057m. National Film Theatre of Australia[...]Film Festival For Restricted E xhibition (R)[...]2762m. National Film Theatre of Australia For M ature Audiences (M) Caligula (modified version)[...]The Battle of Broken Hill (videotape): Sagittarius Film Corp./F[...]and TV Prods.-Australia, 51 mins, Sagittarius Film and[...]For Restricted E xhibition (R)[...]Hide and Seek: D. Wolman/J. Justin, Israel, 2304m, He or S[...]Reason for deletions: S ( i - h - g )[...]Image Before My Eyes (16mm): Yi'vo Institute for th e m e )[...]ist., V ( i - m - j ) . L ( i - m - j ) The House of 1000 Delights: T. Roter and Assoc.. U.S..[...]Reason for deletions: S ( i - h - g )[...]Land and Sons: J. Hermannsson, Iceland, 2578m, national. U[...]hen A Ton of Action (16mm): Not shown. U.S.. 647.23m.[...]- g ) Reason for deletions: S ( i - h - g ) National Film Theatre of Australia. V ( i - l - j ) , O ( a d u l t[...]King of the Mountain: Polygram Pic, U.S., 2482.03m, 2770m[...]h -g ) The Lathe of Heaven (16mm): WNET-TV, U.S.,[...]Journal of Love (16mm): I. Grozny, U.S.. 638.5m, 14th Lion of the Desert: Falcon Int'l Prod., Britain/Libya,[...]Men and Non-Men: Rai-Radio Tele-visione Italiana, (a) Reg[...]): Bullywood Prods, U.S., Adelaide film festivals and then exported.[...]Theatre of Australia. V ( i - m - j ) , L ( i - m - j )[...]Mafilm, Hungary. 2380m, Sydney Film The Children of N.67: Road Movies Filmproduktion.[...]U.S.. 780m. For General E xhibition (G)[...]: E. Junkersdorf. West Germany. 3080m, Free Voice of Labour: Pacific Street. U.S.. 780m. Mel[...]For Restricted E xhibition (R)[...]m. Mel Legend of the Wild: Taft Int'l. U.S.. 2677.25m. Sunn[...]The Song of Leonard Cohen (16mm): Canaoian[...]ey. The Daughter of Emanuelle: D. Randall. France/ltaly. Melbourne Fi[...]ist.. S ( i - m - g ) . V ( f - m - g ) A Kingdom for a House (16mm): Tilt Films.[...]Space Firebird: Toko Leo, Japan. 3290.78m. House of Harvey Swings[...] |
 | [...]Russel Farrance, Franca Majoor and Garry Patterson. od Bishop looks at a D[...]son relentlessly presents his fractured andR[...]makers Garry Pat fatalistic view of Australian history. His narra new 10-hour, Super 8 terson, Franca Majoor and Russel tion is intercut with a ch[...]eat-up Kombi- interview material and social observations that d o c u m e n t a[...]ded in the neat categories that Australia, and talks to covered 20,000 km and carried only divide the first half of the film.[...]The final section of Some Aspects of Aus one Beaulieu 5008 Super 8 camera. Two years of one of the filmmakers, Garry research and a “shoot and run” approach to tralia is a 55-minute postscript on the logistics of Patterson. their material ha[...]impossible on the “ Banking and the Fiscal Crisis” is the pivotal[...]0-hour docu episode to the first section and the most obvious[...]political statement in the 10 hours. It consists of Aspects of Australia. a 55-min[...]The film is structured in 11 parts, each of 55 “anonymous commentator” who carefully do[...]presented without narration, and deal with five economic order. The thesis is one of totalitarian major subjects: “The Kanakas of North Queens control of banking finance, headed by the land”, “ Land Rights and Self-determination” , Bilderbergers and involving the major inter “ Banking and the Fiscal Crisis” , “ Mining, Utah national financing corporations of Rockefeller, and Ranger” , and “Nimbin (The Politics of Rothschild, Kuhn-Loeb, Morgan and others. F[...]h Some of the stronger sequences from this sec country[...]tion include: racist exploitation of Aboriginal come to terms with its own wealth,[...]culture by the tourist industry and ice cream profit from them.[...]ise; dispossessed Banking conspiracies and international deals[...]another packed with bigoted comprehension of most Australians. Yet, it is[...]who reveal the forgotten history of the Kanakas; of this mammoth film. They are the “underside”[...]old man from an urban skid row drifts into a of Australian history, people seldom, if ever,[...]painful sleep on a park bench to the strains of asked to tell their story in any medium. We m[...]tourist boats negotiate the them at the Utah and Ranger mines, we see the Katherine Gorge; and whites gape at the work of casualties of race (Kanakas) and land (Aborigi[...]l cave painters, whose children die nals), and explore the white middle-class[...]alternative of the New Settlers.[...]ts constitute the “ Narrator Some Aspects of Australia is clearly no series” . This delivers a personal account of sanitized work of “balance” and a proper Australian history, from the arrival of European examination of the content contained in its 10[...]ical tion of Federation in 1900. Throughout this achie[...]series, Garry Patterson plays a parody of the finances and $3000 from the Australian Film[...]velled, un Commission, Patterson, Majoor and Farrance[...]fierce pace, his alternative history of Australia $9000 loan they edited the material o[...]og-eared clipboard. strip original and finally dubbed it onto video for[...]Some Aspects of Australia is essentially a film[...]hether he is striding through the about people and politics. With an instinctive[...]ropical commitment that shows little fear of disturbing[...]g in front the individual political persuasions of its of Uluru or sitting disconsolate audience, the[...]ly in the middle of the outback achievement for the aesthetic and commercial[...]antled Volkswagen engine, Patter- prospects of the Super 8 medium in this country.[...] |
 | [...]is th a t the m akers of video[...]programs, and the people who[...]military, and God knows who else)[...]get their act together and divide the[...]Sony and Sanyo have lost out on[...]their Betacord system and may be[...]picious of the '/2 -inch standard. If[...]MERA + CAS6TTÇ. R&COTO&R. more flexible and probably cheaper "[...]HR' Allow 1 sec actTtis heap + tail of the[...]mining, figure it is pretty good value for trapped. graphical feature[...]“How Willingly You Queensland and Kakadu, Pine Gap[...]e ex Sing” . In 1976 you and so on. That roughly mapped What film stock did you use? perience of making a 10-hour film shared a prize at the Australian out the trip for us. People passed us on 8mm? Film Institute Awards. Why have on from one active group to Kodachrome 40 for outdoors, you now chosen to work on 8mm and another. Franca’s brother, Bart, and 7244 for interviews — that is That the inf[...]the land and stayed with us until the down to $100 worth of silent film 2000 executives who run th[...]know what is going on there, and onto bigger and better things, which Kimberleys and Wittenoom and the[...]I worked on half a West Coast, but ran out of money You didn’t use Ektachrome 160?[...]ion is the possibility that tele dozen scripts, and submitted three in Darwin. We wrote to the[...]vision determines language and, ul or four to various funding bodies. from Charters Towers, andof film we had already too soft.[...]has one way or the other. shot for their $3000. Murray Brown[...]circus You shot the film on single system film for the Australian Film Com mission and they called me a liar and, as most Super 8 filmmakers[...]EDITING and a plagiarist. of the 18-frame delay. Yet you[...]FiUftW OFINFORMATION REtLs) long list of sour grapes. I enjoy track mix on various parts of the !b j'(FO[...]t else was available to me. the head and tail of the shot. The[...]-hour film? sette recorder and a good micro[...]ent onto the cassettes longer it got. The history of and the sync sound went onto the Australia was pretty fat, and we stripe. There was no slating of underestimated how keen people shots. Non-sync ma[...]dia by invita I worked with original film, and tion and there is a lot of frustration edited on a $150 S8 editor with a because of this. We generally talked little sound reader. I originally to them for an hour or so, then screened the films and mixed the asked: “What’s your name, what’s music live. But this stretched the your job and what d’ya reckon?’’ tape splices and they wouldn’t go People spoke directly at the t[...] camera. Their information is not spliced them, and worked on video sieved through an interviewer.[...]it certain ferring from track 1 to track 2. parts of Australia . .. I have finally m[...]trol knobs on the back of the Elmo.[...] |
 | [...]enthusiasm. Some Aspects of Australia.[...]A film by Garry Patterson, Franca M ajoor and Russel Farrance. Edited by Garry[...]Patterson. Production assistants: Ed Batt and Gail Hannah. Filmed in Super 8mm[...](Kodachrom e 40 and 7244SM). Post-production: Media Vision (Australia[...]U-matic and other form ats. In 11 parts, each of 55 mins. Total running time: 605 mins.[...]Part One: Nimbin and the Politics of Food. banking houses, parasitic organiza[...]Part Two: Kanakas and East Coast Racism.[...]n boom is hap Part Three:Banking and the New International Economic Order. tions which[...]assettes. Even Ox Part Four: Mining and Utah. capitalism of post-feudal France ford University Press is looking at Part Five: Aboriginal Struggle. Self Determination and Land Rights. and emerging America. “publishi[...]ore Cook-1791). “ Farming: Mel “ By 1900 and following World is little chance that ne[...]Gladstone” . in the bowels of the banks Satellite television. Wh[...]n, Rothschild, Kuhn-Loeb, own all this? And for what reason? Part Wine: Narrator 4 (18[...]g international shipping, who work in film and video support Part Ten: Narrator 5 (1854-1901). “ The Centre: Stuart Memorial to commerce and politics. They still community television[...]Part Eleven: Postscript: The Logistics of Information. “The conspiracy was, and has $650; a one-hour video, anything remained, the propagation of the from $80 to $175. But it is essential myth that global progress and to diversify, especially as the human[...]opment in the Australian film with capital growth and material industry is one of increasing central expansion. This has been pushed control. That may mean a lot of (with international media networks work for a lot of people, but it may coming under the same control) to mean the complete emasculation of the exclusion of any alternative cinema so that filmmakers, like measurement of collective happi entertainers, become[...]nt, 1977 Confest Bredbo, with Down to Earth and not limited to a particular Movem[...]. How certain symbols, Preston Institute of Technology, 60 visual symbols, are continually re[...]1981 Some Aspects of Australia, with Franca Majoor and Russel Farrance, Will you continue to work on 8mm[...]St, Diamond Creek, Vic., 3089. (03) work on 16mm and 35mm formats? 438 2054. *
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 | [...]The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith[...]The Winter of Our Dreams[...]SPECIALISING IN THE NEEDS OF FEATURE FILM[...] |
 | [...]ing and Television Act. The changes[...]are a revised version of controversial[...]munications Minister responsible for ABC Inquiry[...]hearings were dropped, and a clause After an 18-month inquiry which in[...]licence application refusal by the Aus and 5500 pages of testimony, the[...]Changes approved include strict the operations of the Australian Broad guidelines for determ ining public casting C om m ission has re[...]and television interests no longer Among the recommendations of the[...]allowed to go ahead, and a company Alex Dix were:[...]owed to hold 10 per cent in a • Reconstruction of the ABC into a[...]per cent. • A governing board of directors of[...]Sinclair had also proposed that seven members and a 20-man con[...], but this was also deleted. The • Integration of ABC music and con[...]he Administrative Appeals Tri • Introduction of modern business[...]now continue on the basis of the old “ The ABC has become slow- Helen Morse and Bryan Brown in A laws. moving, overgrown, complacent and Town Like Alice. After lengthy hearings in M el uncertain of the direction in which it[...]ned to mid-August. “ Despite the efforts of many Shimoda, the scripts of Rosemary While a lot of media coverage has talented and dedicated people work Sisson and Tom Hegarty, the direction concerned Murdoch’s assertions that ing for i t . . . it [the ABC] has not only of David Stevens and production of he has little or no control personally slipped from the forefront of change Henry Crawford. over the programming of his television but threatens to be eclipsed b[...]10 licence, but it could mean selves publicly and give cogent contract from Channel 0[...]Melbourne coverage for the station’s trouble for the Nine Network when its reasons why their t[...]licence comes up for renewal in March ties should continue.”[...]an turned next year. In the light of Razor Gang cuts to Sensing the danger, TCN-9 and ABC funding of three per cent, along documentary fi[...]GTV-9 applied to be included as with abolition of the usual inflation ad[...]parties to the proceedings before the justment of 10 per cent, an effective 13 De Montignie was last heard of trek[...]creation of the first scientific crossing Bruce Gyngell, former head of the The Dix Report said the ABC would[...]ABT, supports Murdoch’s ownership of have to seek finance elsewhere as the of the desert in 1939.[...]10 because he believes in strong p o s s ib ility of th e G o v e rn m e n t[...]the Madigan Line, will follow a team of sur veyors, scientists and botanists as they tion and thus to the benefit of the immediate future was small.[...]public. He told the annual meeting of One suggested means of raising make the crossing by came[...]as backed the pro the Public Relations Institute in Can money was corporate underwriting of[...]rams — but not paid adver gram and De Montignie is confident of[...]is DNM Produc “The fine nitpicking of ownership tising — a recommendation which has[...]indeed begged the question of its brought howls of conservative protest tions recently s[...]Europe, the [television’s] marvellous and enor from within and outside the ABC.[...]e Report also recommended a U.S. and New Zealand.[...]and exchange thoughts between long-term plan to merge[...]people.” news and public affairs departments to TVW Take[...]ernment, while notifying the improve co-operation and cut down AAT of its amendments to the Broad overlapping. Total cost of the recom casting and Television Act, has also mendations — the majority of it spent Sir Robert Holmes a’Cou[...]control of TVW Enterprises in Perth, given the ABT its favorable view of net over a five-year period — would be[...]SAS-10 Adelaide, City The increasing cost of drama and Communications Minister, Mr Sin[...]s promised to put the Dix Theatres and Entertainment Centre[...]such as Cop Shop and Prisoner cost Report .before parliament in the au[...]the Bell group of companies, takes over production of such shows requires as chairman of TVW from Sir James strong commitment f[...]Cruthers, who has been with TVW-7 for one source, something networking can[...]262, 263 of this issue.) joint production between the BBC, th[...]7 Goesfor 1984 Olympics Commission and the Victorian Film[...]Olympics, are There are no prizes for guessing Filmed in Australia, Malaysia and negotiating for rights to cover the 1984 what prompted the rash of game and London, the six-hour dramatization of Los Angeles Olympics. quiz shows tempting viewers and con Nevil Shute’s novel was recently seen[...]er the Nine testants. The continued success of Sale by about 15 million people in Britain. Network in gaining rights to the Winter of the Century — which in one recent Local reac[...]rogram rated an incredible 50 points enthusiastic for the work of the cast, 1984. Final negotiations for rights to the — has inspired others. Helen Mo[...]om Sale, Reg Grundy Pro Ja ckso n , Anne H addy and Yuki this year. ductions is responsible for The New[...] |
 | [...]ightly higher inside the room so no neg, its on for good. landing on the neg. dust can blow in. And that means a poorer result Our new Telecine Clean Room We even ionically filter the for you. Come and see for yourself: sees to that.[...]om. magnetic attraction of dust onto the VIDEOLAB[...]ilm surface. A division of the Colorfilm group of companies.[...] |
 | [...]s is pleased to announce that the 1981/82 edition of the Australian Motion Picture Yearbook can now b[...]ures, including: • Comprehensive filmographies of feature film scriptwriters, directors of photography, composers, designers, editors and sound recordists • Monographs on the work o f director Bruce Beresford, producer Matt Carroll and scriptwriter D avid Williamson A round-up of films in production in 1981 Actors, technicians and casting agencies A n expanded list o f services and facilities, including equipment suppliers and marketing services[...]1980 and 1981 Organizations[...]Services and Facilities Med[...]tock, Equipment Bookshops and Record Shops. Industry Round-up[...]Bruce Beresford, Matt Carroll and Rental, Actors and Actresses’ PART 7:[...]Studios and Sound Stages, Editing and Film and Television Awards Production; Distribution and PART 4: Feature Rim[...]Film Festivals Exhibition; Government and the Film Personnel Theatres, Recording and Mixing Legislation I[...]Studios, Animation, Titles and Tax, Copyright, Export Incentives, Awards and Competitions; Visitors;[...]Directors of Photography, Editors, Production and Re-dimension, Overseas Production Designers and Art Publicists, Marketing Services,[...]Bibliography Introduction; Sales and Releases; Directors, Composers, Sound Caterers, Insurance, Customs and Feature Film Checklist:[...]Shipping Agents, Car and Truck Rental, 1980 Festivals, Awards and[...]Distributors and Exhibitors[...]Please send me................copies of the1981/82 M o tio n P ic tu re[...]Note: Bank drafts only for overseas orders. Please allow up to 4 weeks for[...] |
 | [...]E Take advantage o f our special offer and catch up on yo u r m issing issues. M u ltip le c[...]Nicholas Roeg. Between The True Story of Eskimo Index: Volume 1 Cars That[...]Dankworth. The Getting Holden. In Search of Chinese Cinema. of Jimmie Blacksmith. Sri to Mouth. Film Per[...]wler. Pierre B o rg . A la in T a n n e r. of W isd o m . J o u rn e y Anna.[...]R e s o u rc e s . K o s ta s . Last of the Knucklemen. Palm Beach. Brazilian[...]e rs . Cinema. Jerzy Toeplitz. Touch and Go. Film and C in e m a . S p o n s o re d Night the Prowler[...]. Box-Office Grosses. tralian Film and Tele Japanese Cinema. My C[...]missing issues, and fill out the form below. If you would like The Films of Peter Weir. The New Zealand Film multiple copies of any one issue, indicate the number you require[...]The Films of Bruce Beres- Nationalism in Australian Pete[...]ford. Stir. Melbourne and D e b a te . U ri W in d t. Cinema. The Li[...]9 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 31 32 No. of copies ordered ...............at $ .[...]d $ .............. (Note: numbers 4, 6, 7, and 8 are out of print) Please make your cheq[...] |
 | [...]price Please enter a subscription for 6 issues D 12 issues[...]ption to Cinema Papersa gift, cross the box below and we will send a card on your behalf with the first issue□ Gift subscription, from (name of sender)[...]Office use only Enclosed is a cheque/money order for $ ...................................... made out[...]alia. The above offers applies to Australia only. For overseas rates, see below. This offer expires on[...]Please send me CDcopies of Volume 3 and 6 (21-24) are still available.[...]CDcopies of Volume 4 H[...]CDcopies of Volume 5 w[...]□ copies of Volume 6 Vo[...]□ copies of Volume 7 lavishly-illustrated pages of • Exclusi[...], actors and technicians.[...]Please send me □ copies of Cinema •[...]on • Film and book reviews.[...]• Production surveys and reports from the sets of local and international production.[...].......... • Box-office reports and guides to film producers and Investors.[...]For overseas rates, see below. L I[...]Pl.F.ASF. N O T E : Volume I (num bers I-4) and Volume 2 new binder will[...]J Please allow up to four weeks for processing. Overseas Rates[...]Ezibinders (to the price of each Zone[...]e Is available to Britain, Germany, Greece, Italy and North America. Subscriptions: 6 issues - $[...] |
 | [...]In November the Film and Television Pro[...]duction Association of Australia and the New[...]film financing, marketing, and distribution of[...]involved in the film and television industry.[...]Tape recordings made of the proceedings[...]have been transcribed and edited by Cinema[...]Papers, and published as the Film Expo ’80[...]for $25 each.[...]and Legal Aspects[...]tes Executive V ice-P resident, and provide a lively and entertaining critique. Illustrated with[...]M ark Damon invaluable record for all those interested in the[...]Television Production and[...]Financing of Theatrical Films: Senior V[...]Financing of Theatrical Films: (U.S.)[...]Presale of Rights Indepen[...]M ulti-N ational and Other Co- President, Janus Film Und Connolly), Comedy (Geoff Mayer), Horror and Suspense (Brian[...]Fernsehen (Germany) McFarlane), Action and Adventure (Susan Dermody), Fantasy[...]V ice-P resident, Television Sales, Relationships and Sexuality (Meaghan Morris), Loneliness and[...]ctures C orporation (U.S.) Alienation (Rod Bishop and Fiona Mackie), Children’s Films[...]Please send me........copies of Film Expo ’So[...]President and C hief Operating[...]Please send me ........copies of The New Australian Cinema @ Aust.Si4 .9 5 .[...]C hairm an and C hief Executive,[...]EMI Film and Theatre Name[...]Goodwin, Berkowitz and Selvin .....[...]Note: Bank drafts only for overseas orders. Please allow up to 4 weeks for processing.
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 | [...]dcasting Services Board, Superquiz (Nine Network) and Wheel[...]air says which oversees administration of multi of Fortune (Seven Network).[...]bandwagon, but not through director for Channel 10 Sydney, has Meanwhile,[...]Sinclair, also announced that Mel lack of interest. It is still looking for a been a p p o in te d v ic e -p re s id e n t,[...]p u b licity, advertising and public Boldrewood’s book.[...]oard has been increased network third behind Nine and Seven. Grundy’s productions includ[...]Its newest programs — Michael Parkin of the Century, The Restless Years, appointments for terms of up to three[...]Tribunal has extended its terms of years. cops and robbers show Bellamy (an Right, Bellamy and Ford Superquiz.[...]continues as reference in the Cable and Subscrip unashamed take-off of Britain's The[...]Sklovsky, chairman of the SBS since[...]elevision Services inquiry. It will S w e e n e y and s ta r rin g a m o re[...]u th e rfo rd , c h ie f deserving John Stanton) and Craw sideration of radiated subscription ser executive of the 2SM broadcasting ford Productions’ Holiday[...]iry into Television vices and pay television. group, Tony Bonnici, vice-chairman of have all failed to attract better than[...]the Ethnic Communities Council of Vic satisfactory ratings.[...]The change in terms of reference has[...]toria, James Saimón, chairman of the[...]delayed start of the inquiry until mid- Ten’s comedy show, R[...]Ethnic Communities Council of NSW, duced by Hal McElroy and John East The Senate Standing Com[...]education and the arts has called for a Persons or organizations who have way and starring Rod Quantock, Mary[...]s can lodge social worker from Brisbane, and Frank Kenneally, Joanne Samuels, John[...]Galbally, chairman of the Institute of sa[...]tandards in supplementary submissions, and new Derum and others, is also in danger of[...]the Broadcasting and Television Act[...]were “obsolete, difficult to follow and date is August 28, 1981. Network in -[...]membership of which has yet to be[...]Before the revised term s were responsible for Melbourne’s Channel[...]which comprises produced show, though the wisdom of form guidelines aimed at reducing tele[...]representatives of the Victorian and vi[...]sortium of Christian businessmen, NSW Ethnic Bro[...]shown the existence of a relationship Committees and the National Ethnic between violence on television and in sporting bodies, and newly-formed Ten’s problems are no doubt com[...]d by the ongoing appeal by Mur society, and that an inquiry should be Announcement of the new SBS[...]mining and television interests. board has drawn protest from some decision to block the takeover of ATV- standards.[...]form of subscription television best- Association, Australia’s largest Italian didn’t work together and that he had contained in a review table[...]ment of a 1978 report on the impact of suited to Australia would be radiated or acted “very slowly and with some shy-[...]h e s e [th e television on the development and to 400,000 Italians in Melbourne and learning behaviour of children, which a scrambled signal is b[...]traditional methods and decoded by a Sydney. The only Italian on[...]flat fee for receiving programs or a fee has an Italian population of 20,000 —[...]and doesn’t receive Channel 0/28. Hector Crawford R[...]has been shocked by the withdrawal of A recent visitor to Australia, Rober[...]Block (president of the U.S. firm casters are critical of the new board. Hector Crawford has retired as[...]The Public Broadcasting Association of managing director of Crawford Pro ship of 50 programs. Telease),[...]iled to in ductions. He will remain as chairman of Procter and Gamble, American tele clude anyone with experience of public the Crawfords’ business interests.[...]or home computer, and can deliver five broadcasting. Hector’s nephew, Ian Crawford, has the basis of detailed standards which[...]SBS has already agreed to assumed responsibility for running assess the socially-redeeming[...]vision picture and in stereo. screen test television transmissions for Crawford Productions. of a show — whether it is likely to[...]public broadcasters for eight hours encourage anti-social behaviour and[...]w h e th e r, sex and v io le n c e are Future of Children’s Television ever, legi[...]casters has not yet been passed and C[...]s. of shows it thought most offensive. future of the Australian Children’s Tele Brian Walsh, spokesman for the PBA Details of the boycott were not avail vision Foundation were expected to and chairman of Melbourne’s Open able at the time of writing. take place in July, b[...]torian Minister for the Arts, Mr Lacy, bourne Age,[...]and Home Affairs Minister, Mr Wilson. dec[...]encourage production of children’s be rig h t to say w e[...]ment of an international distributor for[...]tions, heralding the Committee on Education and the Arts[...]start of a new era for the Corporation.[...]ister, Mr Sinclair, says a decision Steven Grives and Chantal Contouri in SAFC director, John Morris, follow support for the ACTF. has yet to be[...]estival in Dr Patricia Edgar, director of a task lishment of the Independent Multi Cannes, believes there is plenty of force setting up the foundation, said[...]scope for expansion in the SAFC’s tele could no[...]n statutory body. With the expansion of New Crawfords Series vi[...]in June its tions in Britain, the U.S. and Europe New FACTS Codefor most ambitiou[...]ing future SAFC productions. the ill-fated Arcade of 1979 — Holiday Among future projects[...], set in the South Aus The Federation of Australian Com at Ten’s Melbourne studios, the series tralian opal fields at Coober Pedy and mercial Television Stations (FACTS)[...]rmer Victorian Film Cor cost more than $300,000 for the sets Andamooka. Production is expected to has implemented a new code for poration chief executive, has star[...]n Ten’s backlot. adapted for television by Adelaide From August, advertising will be cut destined for screening in the U.S. on Heading the cast are[...]minutes an hour. pay-television. known for his roles in the ABC’s series The SAF[...]unced plans The scheme will operate for a two- The series, The Alcheringa Stone, is Dynasty, Space 1999 and his Austra for a major new series, based on the year trial period and was introduced as an adventure about a cattle baron and lian Film Institute award-winning per Rolf Boldrewood book Robbery Under a result of pressure on FACTS over the a mining magnat[...]volume and effects of advertising on by the VFC, the Queensland Film and British actor Steven Grives, who The[...]Corporation, private investors and the starred in Yorkshire Television’s The 1888, relates the adventures of bush The code re stricts the type of t e l e v i s i o n s u b s i d i a r y of The Flambards.[...]ed products advertised, the repetition of Washington Post. Grives came to A ustr[...]er Dick Marston while wait commercials and has guidelines for American actor Robert Vaughn, holid[...]. best known for his role in The Man tralian Film Corporation's mi[...]From U.N.C.L.E., has been imported to Sara Dane, and has stayed on in Mel Michael Jenkins[...]star. Former In Melbourne Tonight bourne for Holiday Island. Some filming[...]alized. Former Lord Mayor of Sydney, Sir being shot on location at Mt Isa in episodes), Patricia Kennedy and Frank Ironically, the chairman of the SAFC, N ic h o la s S h e h a d ie , h[...]olved in the 1957 appointed chairman of the expanded Robb is Damien Par[...] |
 | [...]nant commercial broadcasting interests. It now for direct political intervention. T he argument for regulation of broad seems that the Government is prepare[...]n the powers previously held scarce and public resource they Broadcasting Tribu[...]an effective system Eric Robinson, then Minister for Posts and best accords with the public interest. It is a of regulation in the public interest.[...]gitimacy in the Con Britain, the U.S. and Canada, the countries “The principle of a broadcasting system not stitution, which is the basis of broadcasting upon which Australia has of[...]subject to political interference is one of the legislation and which successive governments, broadcasting system, have long had independent basic aims of the changes proposed . . . The Royal Commissions and inquiries have statutory authorities vested with the respon major element of the changes aimed at reiterated. sibility of regulating broadcasting in the public depoli[...]r purpose has been to protect the transfer of the licensing power from the assumed to accord w[...]public-spirited it might be. There tion and political interference. Tri[...]ABT the power to that the structural priorities of the broadcasting really had an equivalent to these bodies, the Aus grant, renew, suspend, revoke and approve system reflect this concept.[...]unal. Its precursor, the changes in the ownership of licences as well as to Commercial broadcaster[...]ralian Broadcasting Control Board, had an monitor and maintain program standards.' It for self-regulation, have often seemed to present[...]ry regulation as relating primarily to questions of renew, suspend and approve changes in owner powers to act in the public interest outside of a program standards and local content. They are ship and control rested with the Minister. Even literal interpretation of the Act. At the time, important issues, ones which many public in the areas of program standards and the however, nobody seems to have been aware of interest groups have focused on to the exclusion allocation of frequencies the ABCB was subject just how wide the Tribunal’s discretionary of any other. However, regulation has to be seen[...]were. as going beyond this to include the issues of During the Labor Government’s term of The first public inquiry of the ABT examined ownership and control, as well as the intro office, the idea of establishing an equivalent to the question of self-regulation for broadcasters. duction of new technologies. the British Independent Broadcasting Auth The result of that inquiry was a reiteration of the It is only in recent years that ownership and ority, charged with regulating commercial concept of public regulation. The Tribunal control has becom[...]broadcasting, was floated a number of times. stated: Previously, it was assumed that the structure of However, no effort was made to reduce the d[...]g was more or less cretionary power of the Minister. Despite the collective or[...]le there were occasional misgivings, sound and fury, and the change of name to regularly and directly confronted with the publicly (particular[...]ter, Labor did nothing to change views of those whom it serves. The Tribunal ment), about the concentration of media the regulatory system.[...]bolished the Media licence applications and renewals will achieve government could prevent major changes in the Ministry and established a departmental inquiry this aim. The philosophy of direct public status quo. However, the shakeup of com into the structure of broadcasting — the Green accountability is the basis of our approach to mercial broadcasting, occasioned[...]ecommended that, among the regulation of broadcasting.” activities of Rupert Murdoch, have put that other th[...]Tribunal should replace the ABCB and be upon which the ABT approached the sub The result of that testing seems to be the invested with all the powers of the Minister. sequent public hearings into licence renewals demonstration by the present Government of a They recommended that the licensing process and share transactions. lack of resolve in regard to broadcasting should be a public one and that, as much as The licence renewal[...]ble, the public should be able to confront Sydney and Melbourne failed to demonstrate through the autumn session of parliament by the broadcasters on their performance. Public how wide the powers of the ABT were. In fact, Minister for Communication, Mr Sinclair, interest groups were obviously eager for a more to many it seemed that the ABT was' being[...]bled before it had really begun to move. The part of the Government to challenge the domi[...] |
 | [...]Broadcasting and Regulation mined to give the ABT a run for its money. It whether direct or indirect, of the company which it gives to the Tribunal[...]holding the licence as, in the opinion of with these matters, we infer that it is t[...]ribunal, best accord with the public pose of the Act to ensure that commercial strongholds of their power. It was also that the inte[...]broadcasting is conducted in the interests of industry had seen demonstrated in Adelaide that The movement of shares that had resulted in the public.[...]its regulatory role seriously. the change of ownership of ATV-10 did involve a By the end of 1980, the ABT, with the support of rather complicated series of transactions the High Court, had esta[...]between companies, the result of which was that the body charged with the regulation of broad D espite the ABT’s intentio[...]the applicant before the ABT was a subsidiary of casting in Australia. The only way that this open and informal hearings, the News Corporation, Control Investments. could be changed was for parliament to re-write Sydney hearings quickly bogged Counsel for Control urged that the authority of the Act. down in legal argum[...]the procedure to be vention by Control and not to any other person doing after the la[...]the Government would inquire than the performance of the applicants for approval, the AFP, argued that scope of the in into some of the issues surrounding the ATV-10 renewal. At th[...]no lawyers quiry was much wider than that and that they case as they related to the Act. The inquiry was among its members and appeared to rely too wished to pursue the question of whether contra conducted by officers of the department and, heavily upon the rather conservative inter[...]theoretically open to submissions from pretation of the Act by the Attorney-General’s taken[...]idence that there was little opportunity for public com assault by the applicants’ heavyw[...]but argued that the ABT ment or scrutiny of proposed changes. turned the ABT’s procedure away from open should allow them by means of cross-examina The foreshadowed ame[...]type situation. The tion to explore a range of matters relevant to the known as the “ Murd[...]evidence” it would not be allowed to so call and prove. Certainly, Mr Sinclair made it known power of the broadcasters. cro[...]did not consider the ex The chaotic nature of the ABT’s performance withdrew, went to the High Court and obtained istence of three major metropolitan networks as at these he[...]dered the that he wanted the discretion of determining Council into the procedures to be adopted by the ABT to re-open and reconstitute the inquiry. It what was in t[...]also widely rumored that the to the appointment of lawyers as members of the discretionary powers to examine all aspects of Government would include some kind of retro ABT — in particular, to appoint David[...]were not party to the application for approval. It trative Appeals Tribunal, hearing the ATV-10 Ownership and control became public issues said that t[...]y ABT decision. It is clear now that some of the Australian media interests. Of the major media irrespective of whether a contravention was be proposals[...]t said, interests were deleted as a result of pressure not have substantial interests in Sydney and was not a court of law, was not bound by the from Fiberal[...]television stations. Murdoch had rules of evidence and could inform itself on any however, successful in protecting the power of long wanted a Sydney station. He had been the[...]the ABT. unsuccessful applicant for TEN-10 in 1964. He The importance of this ruling is that it gave The amendment[...]support to the view that the function of the ABT cretionary power of the ABT to decide what is in with ambitions to s[...]ach was not to act as the impartial arbiter of disputes the public interest. Instead of the ABT being Sydney. For a time also he had significant in broug[...]ed able to decide, as it sees fit, what is and what is terests in TCN-9, until “Sir Frank Pac[...]guidelines: have realized that with the approach of satellite regulate broadcasting in the public interest. 1. Whether the applicant is fit and proper to broadcasting he could be left out in the cold. For The reconvened inquiry, after hearing hold a licence; not only would ownership of stations in Sydney evidence that a contravention of the Act had 2. Whether the applicant will provide ade and Melbourne mean control of the third com taken place, did not re[...]l on these quate program services and encourage mercial network, they would also be the base for grounds. Instead it relied upon its discret[...]power “ . . . to maintain such ownership and con 3. The commercial, financial, technical and When Murdoch gained control of ATV-10, trol, whether direct or indirect, of the company management capabilities of the applicant; through buying into Ansett, it se[...]licence as . . . best accord with the and dent that he and his advisers were confident of public interest” . What they felt to be not in the 4. The degree of concentration of ownership subsequent ABT approval. They had told[...]est was the control over the third and control, but only outside of the six ma ABT of their intentions and were presenting commercial network th[...]The amendments also make the process of jected to the previous acquisition of TEN-10 and agreements in themselves were not in the public takeovers and share market raids much Murdoch was going to divest himself of such interest. What they felt not to be in the public in smoother, by allowing for unconditional take television interests that wo[...]he manner in which one or two sta overs and for approval of a transaction to be the limits of prescribed interest. What was more, tions c[...]amendments do nothing to prevent the use of bring more competition into the Australian tele dards of the entire network. fri[...]means of getting around the ownership and con Despite the confidence of Murdoch and his[...]elied the amendments “ . . . give a gorilla ofof circumventing the action. The Act therefore oblig[...]grant previously refused approval of the Mr Sinclair has also pointed out that Mur approval. However, the terms of reference of the purchase of Radio 2HD, Newcastle, by doch can still get ATV-10, despite the absence of inquiry and the procedures undertaken by the NBN-3[...]ions, by the simple expedient ABT became an issue for debate when the in public interest for one group to own a monopoly of selling the shares to a nominee company and quiry first opened. In this debate, the key section of broadcasting in one city. That case had gone making a fresh application under the new rules. of the Act was 92F(4A) which obliged the ABT to the High Court too, where the decision of the Once that occurs, competition in broadc[...]ating: will be between three large and dominant “(a) is ofof the tion by the person concerned . . .; or tion and suspension of licences, the limitation future development of Australian broadcasting, (b) considers it necessary to do so in order to on ownership of shares, the determination of not the ABT or the public. Parliament has thus maintain such ownership and control, program standards and the extensive role moved to pro[...] |
 | TheLiberation of[...]b etw een this sh o rt season and[...]Sydney, b o o k ed th e com pany for[...]a w eek and film ed an adaptation[...]for television.[...]on the production of this harrow[...]ing story of the psychological[...]damage of war on a child’s mind.[...]for drama for the experimental programs on the[...]theatrical productions of note to Australia. The[...]object was to consider “deals” for rights to[...]televise such productions for A ustralian[...]Anthony Steel, artistic director of the Cladan[...]Cultural Exchange Institute of Australia[...]Theatre’s (Yugoslavian) production of The[...]Liberation of Skopje, which CLADAN intended[...]me a resume and review of the play, which made Rade Serbedzija as Georg[...]able to talk after being tortured. The Liberation of Yugoslavian playwright Dusan Jovanovic (left), television producer Eric Fullilove and artistic Skopje.[...] |
 | [...]t the old Darlingluirst Gaol. munities in Sydney and Melbourne (served by Channel 0/28). As New Zealand had opted out of their change the text would be the sam[...]complications in the plan proposed importation of the play, we were given one of Shakespeare’s works. ning and execution of the production. One of the the chance to buy the Australian rights to[...]8 not allow cer attractions of the play for me was that the cast televise the production, and have the services of tain words (“ fuck” and “cunt” were among inc[...]wo white horses, a dog the Zagreb Theatre Company for one week, them) to appear on the sub-titles, they would not and two dozen pigeons. Our agreement with between oth[...]only permit ecutives Bruce Gyngell, Ron Fowell and John original languages.[...]aily with the children Martin approved the deal, and agreement was Dusan Jovanovic and Ljubisa Ristic finally- and not later than 10 p.m. (“curtains” for the reached with CLADAN. agreed to a compromise (“crotch” for “cunt” , play) at night.[...]Actors Equity then opposed the whole for example), when I pointed out that, if we did[...]rain. We quickly used our wet-weather cover and Serbo-Croatian, Hungarian, German and the final result was satisfactory f[...]rced to shoot some scenes in rain. After Romany!) and protracted negotiations failed to of view, although I was forced to have a Serbo-[...]me, we were reach a solution. It is to the credit of Channel Croatian speaker on set with me during[...]r a 0/28 that they agreed to underwrite the costs of shooting. two-camera O/B for the last day/night’s shoot. the Zagreb Theatre Company for that week, I appointed a talented vi[...]rect the play. The stage play was and finished at 4 a.m. the next day. (Uusually Eve[...]set in two separate locations in the old gaol, and these sorts of hours are only worked on 30- arrangement with CLADAN and, with about the audience was moved by[...]commercials!) two weeks notice before the arrival of the the areas. But after Fitzwater and I had seen the At one stage of the shooting, two of the three Zagreb Theatre Company, Ferryman Televi[...]nt pre-production this static situation for television, so we adapted problems caused by rain — and I admired the processes. the play for television and eventually recorded way that Fi[...]ns. situation, the bane of video directors. 2. Pre-production and[...]knew the play well, of course, but they were also[...]and performed for the cameras with great skill.[...]h or photographing a stage play in two locations, and 4. Post-production Serbo-Croatian version of the play until the not recording in so many different locales, in Company arrived and I then rushed the play for cluding interiors, Fitzwater and I planned the translation into English. I found that the text production tightly to make the best use of the was littered with four-letter words. We subse O/B facilities arranged for the production. We Vide[...]done at NBN-3 New quently discovered that many of the actors were had booked (from the excellent NBN-3 New castle. Because of the many shifts in location, also ad-libbing more[...]les, castle station) an O/B van with four cameras for and inserts tapes contained in so many rolls of during dramatic moments of the play. It should two days/nights and one camera (for pick-ups) tape, editing took 40 hours instead of the be pointed out that swear words are in common for one day/night. As the teleplay contained day[...]f use in family life among the working class in and night scenes, we made our crew calls be[...]much as we had hoped. Audio sweeten Yugoslavia and that swearing is permitted dur tween midday and 10 p.m. each day. ing. which took place in the audio suite of Chan ing adult programs on television there.[...]nel 0/28, also took many long hours because of As we were then adapting the play for tele cameras on many scenes so we “leap-frogg[...]the end, our mix vision, I approached the author of the play (who the other two cameras to other locations, and the was more like one on a feat[...]“sweetening” . Australia), and the stage director from Zagreb, NBN-3 set up their van in the centre of the old The teleplav was then screened on Channel with a request for changes. They refused and gaol complex so that the cables could radiate out 0/28 in April. The audience and critical reaction Channel 0/28 ignored my appeals[...]o was very positive, and the channel is planning to could be screen[...] |
 | [...]Nagra I I I professional sound recording unit for sale -[...]er 416 microphone (cage, pistol grip, shock mount and windsock) M ajor suppliers to the Australia[...]ical Industries • full set of Cannon, DIN extension leads[...]The unit is in excellent condition and would be ideal for ah types of[...]location work, given Nagra’s reputation for reliability. renowned manufacturers:[...]ilable: Lowell-Omni 50 min, 250w portable battery and[...]lighthead. Price: $850 AMERICAN DATA Studio and O.B. Production Video Switchers, Master Control Switchers and Automation Systems Telephone John[...]Discassette Frame Store Recorder/ Reproducer for PAL Colour AUDIO KINETICS Q-LOCK 21 0, 2 or 3 m[...]PRODUCTION and Ciapper Board Character Generators CEI Broadcast Colour Cameras for EFP and Studio Applications CMX Computer Assisted Video[...]OFFICE Generators and Readers CONRAC An excellent range of Monochrome and Colour Picture Space Av[...]DATATEK TV Transmitter Colour Phase Equalisers and ALBERT PARK V[...]re. Generators DOLBY Audio Noise Reduction for Single and Multi-Track Contact Tim Lewis, Recorders, VTR, Cassette Production and FM DOLBY Motion Picture Sound Noise Reduction E[...]quipment ELECTRONIC VISUALS Television Waveform and Vector Monitors ENGINEERING DESIGNS AND SUPPLIES TV Caption Scanning equipment on camera and portable prompting systems HARRIS VIDEO SYSTEMS[...]tal Time Base Correctors JERROLD Complete range of Cable equipment and planning service LINK ELECTRONICS Specialised Colour TV Test Equipment, Monochrome and Colour Cameras and OB Vans MTA (AUST.) Television and Radio Traffic, Scheduling and Accounting Computer System MAGNA-TECH ELEC[...]W hy are most Recorders, Dubbers and Post Synchronising Equipment MICROWAVE ASSOCIATES Television Mobile, ENG and STL Microwave Equipment[...]od films MOSELEY Digital Remote Control Systems for AM, FM and TV Transmitters RCA Broadcast Television C[...]soles custom-built or standard ‘S’ range for all applications W.R. ROYLE Excellent Colour Camera Grey Scale and[...]Registration Charts. Special Transparencies and Colour Monitor Grey Scale Reference Units[...]TV Lens manufacturers TELEMATION A large range of Television Colour Studio Equipment including Delegation Switchers and the Compositor Graphics Generator TT! Switched Access Transmission Testing and Digital Transmission Test Sets V.G. ELECTRONICS Teletext and Viewdata equipment and For further|information on the largest systems[...]range of lighting filters in the world,[...]contact the sole Australian agents for Rosco. For further information and enquiries contact:— M A G N A - T E C[...] |
 | [...]T he U n iv e rs ity of S yd n e y Based on a novel by ......... Osmar W[...]Synopsis. T he film a b o u t th e m y th of Prod, accountant ................ Connie Dellios Gauge ....... 16mm and 2 inch videotape[...]e re u se d in the c e re m o n ie s lo n g a g o and[...]every shade of the human condition. The[...]tricks, the traumas. A continuing and ever-[...]FATTY AND GEORGE[...]changing stream of plots and personalities[...]the s to ry of P u k a m a n i.[...].. Tasmanian Film that ebbs and flows with the Pacific.[...]c a m p u s of La T ro b e U n iv e rs ity a nd the Make-up ...[...]P re s to n In s titu te of T e c h n o lo g y in M a rc h[...]b y ................................ Eddie Moses and Set construction ................... Barry Hughe[...]THE LIBERATION OF SKOPJE[...]...........$1.8 million 1st asst director and[...]p h y .................... J o a n n e A n se ll of the attackers. With the assistance of[...]. S te ve S h a w across some of Australia’s harshest land Studios......... Ta[...]... Videotape highlights from some of the great musicals G a u g e[...]............................ In release of the century.[...]a ). Ing e A p e it (L e n c e ). R ade In charge of production ......... David Lee,[...]. Ron McLean, Synopsis: Fatty and George's father, P[...]S y n o p s is : A tru e re c re a tio n of a m a n 's s u r S y n[...]Ron McLean they rescue the time crystal from Phil and Photogra[...]ind Nancy, the villains. Slasher and his gang of Sound recordist ..........[...]................ 26 x 30 mins THE GODDESS AND THE MOON[...]Luis Bayonas Synopsis: A group of country children ac P r[...]..........Brad Ross campsite for city children. P[...]No of s h o t s ................................[...] |
 | [...]On the other hand, if all or most of the editing is to Part 4a: Film Post[...]videotape format can be chosen for the transfer, production on Videotape[...]depending on the end use of the program master tape.[...]If the program is being produced for on-air television[...]formats, designated B and C. a film program on videotape. A typical filmma[...]number of different types of helical scan recorders are camera footage would then be cut and spliced (Fig. 1)[...]in everyday operation in industry, commerce and to match the edited workprint, and a print made from[...]to any of these formats, but interchange among Edited camera originals could also be — and often are[...]corded in a continuous originals. telecine and then electronically editing the transfers track along one edge of the tape. Space must also be The relative merits of assembling programs on (Fig. 2) to produce a master program tape. provided on the tape for control and cue tracks. videotape by film editing, or by electronic editing, Many variations of these two basic approaches are When a videotape recorder is being set up for a film should also be carefully considered. A[...]being used in film post-production with elements of transfer, a test tape is used to optimize[...]er to transfer film footage to tape film editing and electronic editing being combined in a system. A short section of color bars — electronically- and then assemble the program by electronic editing, number of ways to give producers a great choice of generated vertical color bands — is then recorded at the availability of adequate editing facilities, including program as[...]atives. the head end of the tape on which the film transfer is at least three videotape recorders and a video Making a transfer from film to videot[...]cedure. A reel containing the film to be of optimizing the videotape machine used to play back capital cost of all this equipment (dictating a high transferred[...]hat the pic hourly usage fee), tied up for long periods while scanner. Video and audio cables carry the telecine tures at[...]nt alteration or degrada mind. blank tape and set up ready for recording. On cue, tion at the output of the playback machine. Off-line editing equipment and methods, devised to both machines are started and the signals are recorded Television pract[...]that any changes ease the difficulties of gaining access to broadcast- in the form of magnetic traces or tracks on the tape. need[...]or balance must quality recording equipment for television program The 2-inch quadruplex vide[...]n on videotape, allow an editor to make years ago for professional television program produc th[...]tively small video area, away from the stress and strain — and noise — lays down video tracks directly across the width of the adjustments should be needed, since the film timer has of the main videotape recording and playback centre. tape. High-quality helical scan[...]already compensated in the printing process for scene- But for these gains, a penalty must be paid: off-line use[...]formats. These machines to-scene density and color variations in the camera editing fo[...]rotating drum originals. But in the transfer of original color reversal representing real scenes and production elements. As with one or more heads tr[...]slanted films or color negatives, sudden and sometimes quite the video pictures are bei[...]monitor, tracks on the tape. With both quadruplex and helical large variations may be encountered, calling for cor each frame is identified by a coded n[...]time code [Fig. 3] in hours, minutes, seconds, and * Compiled bv the Motion Pictures Division of Kodak film is running.[...]There are now facilities which make the task of the edit list (Fig. 4) is prepared using these numbers and[...]film back and forth over a scene; these corrections are floppy disc for auto assembly of the program. then stored in a computer memory and applied In contrast, the film[...]automatically at the start of each scene as the film is tual pictures and sound as programs are being built,[...]product of the editing process, including effects, can[...]be seen only by making and projecting a print. And[...]purpose of the transfer and the way in which the[...]tion. If, for example, one plans to assemble the[...]ogram by electronic editing, it is best (at least for now) to use a 2-inch quadruplex machine for the transfer. Editing capabilities for this format are par ticularly extensive and versatile. Besides, with a Fig. 1. Editor matche[...]of re-recording. 268 — Cinema Papers, July-August
|
 | [...]Film and Television Interface[...]film. Gunther Bevier of the Steenbeck Company[...]paper in the August 1975, SM PTE Journal. And[...]K. H. Trissl of IRT (Institut fur Rundfunktechnik[...]GmbH) shows how this type of editing table can be[...]used mainly in multicamera productions for syn[...]chronization of film cameras with the sound recorder[...]sequence on simple and relatively inexpensive equip[...]more easily working directly with film pictures and[...]To be able to take advantage of the most favorable[...]features of film and electronic editing methods —[...]not unusual for flms to be prepared for transfer by[...]Him editor to prepare the film footage for transfer in[...]camera originals into A&B rolls, for example, a suc[...]eotape, adding effects such as fades, dissolves, and superimposed lettering electronically. At the sa[...]ify picture appearance in any desired manner. If for any reason the transfer from film is found to be unacceptable, the tape can be erased and a new transfer made, with the desired changes in[...]A frequently stated objective in the development of the highly-sophisticated off-line videotape edit[...]g. 5. Sony 2860A off-line video cassette recorder for Fig. 6a. A&B roll editing: simultaneous sound and facilities now available is to give editors and program post-production editing.[...]on flat-bed editing console. producers a degree of flexibility comparable with film editing. The 3/[...]in off-line editing (Fig. 5) have the capability of that is recorded in the camera (in the soundtrack[...]manner similar to a film editing table. But tions for the time-code are given in EBU recommen the re[...]be A&B roll editing (Figs 6a and 6b) has been a most ages in film frames can be s[...]th such a time-coding system as an acces useful and frequently employed method in 16mm flm luminated panel in the editing table, and the equip sory. Jean-Pierre Beauviala has been actively engaged printing operations for many years. With this method, ment needed to recreate picture movement consists of for several years in developing time coding on film as effects such as fades, dissolves, and superimposed a very simple mechanical apparatus and a light an economic reality, and the Aaton No. 7LTR titles and credits can be added by printing, first the A so[...]a shown at BKSTS-sponsored “ Film 79” in roll and then the B roll, from common start marks, desire[...]ntained by the Film Producing a video picture for viewing is a much 16mm magnetic stock printer and a Pilotone- perforations. In modern film laborato[...]s. First, the video signals must compatible coder for '/4-inch sound recorders. The controlled by a pun[...]tem developed at Aaton sor that counts the number of perforations (hence the moving magnetic head. The[...]PTE OPAQUE use of coded frame identification that enables any[...]SCENE 3 scene in a large roll of recordings to be located[...]ROLL the camera originals into individual scenes and hang SMPTE OPAQUE[...]OPAQUE ing these short lengths of film on pegs in an editing LEADER[...]ork has been done to develop a time-coding system for film, but, so far, most of this effort has Fig. 6b. A&B roll editing: scene-to-scene cuts (scenes I and 2); fade or dissolve (scenes 3 and 4). been confined to Europe. The European[...] |
 | [...]“And Now For Som ething Completely Different”[...]“Monty Python And The Holy Grail” Good edge numbering can save y[...]“Monty Python’s Life Of Brian” fast edge numbering process equal to th[...]For further inform ation[...]FOR SALE ATTENTION - FILM[...]( 08 ) 42 2251 One of Australia’s most aggressive video tape[...]t, cassette marketing organizations is looking for KENT TOWN S.A.5067 additional films to consider for promotion or sale on video tape cassette both in Australia and overseas. We will consider films of any type (e.g. adult, general entertainment,[...]Australia’s most versatile and experienced stunt organization[...]Capable of all forms of stunts. Outstanding in:[...]Also agents for Water Gel 338 QUEEN ST[...] |
 | [...]Film and Television Interface frames). It would be adv[...]or in a subsequent viewing session, editing notes and a these same methods in making videotape transf[...]d in film production. The prepared in A&B rolls for transfer to tape could also[...]ow the time-code address be used to make prints for direct screen projection. for each scene. The start of scene 23, for example, What is needed here is an interface th[...]opens door and yells”, and the time-code address as telecine film transport, the video levels and color[...]e 16th frame in the 18th se balance controls, and the television switcher/mixer[...]hen the time comes to locate this scene in a roll of Videotape is basically a single-system sound[...]in a keyboard on the control panel of the playback same tape as the video signals. There is a great deal of[...]play button, the interest in devising a method of double-system sound[...]machine will automatically search for that address; video-recording to gain the advan[...]and after it has been located, cue up that particular[...]number of frames ahead of the first frame, to allow stripe in the soundtr[...]for machine run-up time. camera originals. This met[...]The control function of the SMPTE time and con the production of 16mm films (particularly for news[...]trol code is an invaluable aid in editing and assemb gathering and low-budget documentaries). But most[...]and ingoing frame addresses for the splice point sound on 1/4-inch magnetic aud[...]automatically on these frames. Of course, the the sound, enable a full-coat perfo[...]machines used for editing must be equipped with the copy to be ma[...]necessary search and control facilities for use of the sound film can then be run in lip sync with[...]codes recorded in the cue tracks of the tapes. film using interlocked film transpor[...]tive advantages over any other recording method and enables the film editor to turn out a finished[...]r tic le , to b e p r i n t e d n e x t product of unparalleled quality.[...]the reel of recordings. After this scene has been p[...]lm the A machine) and the outgoing edit point in the first e f f e[...]scene (on the B machine) must be selected and iden d o u b l e - s y s t e m a lt e r[...]made with a felt-tip pen on the back of the tapes, but Electronic editing avoids any cutting and splicing of more often the cues consist of beep tones recorded in the original videotape recordings or transfers from the cue tracks of the videotape. film. Portions of recordings can be dubbed (recorded) Aga[...]ct. end of the first scene previously recorded. At the cue,[...]or film transfers is placed on one machine (A), and beep tones in the cue track. When the swi[...]machine (B). The A machine ing video and audio tracks after the outgoing edit plays back the original recordings while the B point of the first scene and new video and audio from machine records the scenes being dubb[...]to the end of the second scene. This procedure is At the beginning of a program assembly operation, repeated, sc[...]been the first scene must be located in the roll of recordings assembled. on the A machine. The B[...]nly” edit. This tape. A search is then started for the second scene in is the basic electronic[...]an edit in less time, but the task of searching for wanted scenes in the reel of recordings (often several[...]reels in some programs) and locating the in and out[...]be made, usually takes more time and effort.[...]To simplify and speed up the process of program[...]been developed. One of the most important videotape[...]SMPTE time and control code (Fig. 9).[...]All videotape recording formats allow space for a[...]edge of the tape. Beep tones or pulses recorded on this[...]cue track can provide for semi-automatic machine[...]The SMPTE time and control code consists of a stream of pulses recorded in the cue track. Each[...]of a series of coded pulses. The code can be recorded[...]on the tape in elapsed time from the start of a recording or in time of day from a clock. Coded infor[...]be displayed in the form of the corresponding[...]It is customary to record the time and control code Fig. 9. SMPTE time cod[...] |
 | [...]al production has provided the basis o f training and livelihood for most o f the Aus tralian feature film industry technicians and artists. It is also a source o f innovative and complex tech nology to service the need for startling images that communicate quickly and with impact Ian Baker is a Melbourne director-cameraman noted for his feature work as director ofphotography on “The Devil's Playground” and “The Chant of[...]eft), Ian Baker, Jean-Marie Lavalou, Clive Duncan and Jimmie Blacksmith ”, and for a number o f award[...]time. How did you arrange it so quickly crane for the first time in Australia, in the production for this production?[...]moved along a rail and you could[...]lance it instantly. That’s what o f commercials for the launch o f the Datsun Bluebird.[...]cost the money, freighting tons of lead[...]out here, plus the man and his[...]French co-designer of the Louma, Jean- accommodation, expenses and salary[...]Marie Lavalou, and arranged to have him for two weeks.[...]at a fraction of the cost.” But happily[...]Mega-bucks! Out of respect for the when everyone saw the equipment in use[...]and operator alone cost more than the strappin[...], when everyone loved the idea, we total budget of the usual 30-second com and letting it loose. It is such an amazing Louma for the commercials? were[...]ercial. We offered the crane to a few piece of equipment that, in itself, that of equipment. Then there was a time production companies for a share of the becomes a problem. One has to use it in[...]s, but had no takers. a restrained way and not for the effect the agency. I was tap-dancing as I[...]we got together with AAV. what came with it and we didn’t have time *Fred Harden is a film and television producer fo r[...]imminent arrival of the Louma for some because they were so well designe[...] |
 | [...]New Products and Processes Adjusting the balance weights.[...]Ikegami video camera. movements to fit the mood of the com Does it come with a standard[...]. Its own dolly is like a grander light a car and do such a movement. some adaption or improvement[...]wn much lower from its fulcrum. We side of the car then the other. So, using developing the crane and seem to and to any camera with a video split. The used it on and off its mounting. Tony the crane meant w[...]n either a p p r e c i a t e t he f e e d b a c k and video feed is needed because the Sprague at AAV has the complete set side of the lady in the back, both on rheo suggestions.[...]operator isn’t out there. He has his of its operating sta tistics but, for stats. When we moved from one side to[...]ot we used the other, we would fade one up and the Customs. It took a day to uncrate it and screen and the wheels of a standard a prism and went from a 2 inch (5 cm) other down, with the lady throwing a for Samuelsons to set it up. Jean-Marie geared[...]s height up to a possible 17 ft (5.2 m). piece of black velvet over the light that then spent a day with the grips. There weights and put tension on it, so it feels The biggest move we did was an arc of was in shot. We had people walking were thr[...]hind the camera putting masks over push the dolly and one to crane it. In fact, camera to whatever de[...]rown (4 m) lens height. That shot lasts for one of the shafts of light, it would often after moving at one point, we had so around and should be able to do a better about 30 seconds and that is quite grand cast a shadow of the crane onto the much inertia to stabilize.[...]a crane. when you are on a false floor and trying bounce board which you could see in[...]to work up through a tight row of elec car. So, we had people lying on th[...]tronics. Also, we were on a stage and you with black cutters shuttering the light[...]know how hard it is to light a car and shaft as the crane was about to cross it[...]make it look good. and someone uncovering another one to Client: Niss[...]headlights up and down as we moved to Agency art director: Glen[...]Sure. For lighting we had holes in the the front. It i[...]ppreciate the Production company: Fresh Flicks and The Production Group[...]th mini-brutes underneath technical nature of what the machine did Director/lighting cameram[...]projecting onto a huge overhead bounce for us and what its use required- The total Lighting and lighting effects were a team effort of Geoff Collins, Paul Dickinson from board suspended from the roof about 2 ft staging of the shoot took about two TELSCO, John Leonard who wrote the computer program for the lights (0.6 m) from the top of the car. So, in fact, weeks and we shot seven spots in six sequencer, the AAV technical staff and others we were dollying through shafts of light. days, most of which were pullouts from Staging: Warren Kelly of W.A.Z. Effects[...]couldn’t see the shafts of light. on videotape? Production manager of The Production Group: Tony Sprague Many people might criticize my use of[...] |
 | [...]• Includes set of pipe couplers[...]• Extremely smooth and silent running[...]• Detachable side boards for 76.2cm doors[...]AND IS CONVENIENTLY STORED IN For sales and hire in Australia and New Zealand contact:[...].T U L I P AND EXCITIN G ATSAMUELSONS[...]of severe testing, the Tulip is now registered and certified to be[...]Made from lightweight modern alloys and computer designed[...]portability and versatility for the ultimate in location and studio[...]y is required), combined with the ability to fold for storage and the versatility to work with a complete family of[...]standard for the Film and Video industries.[...]Features: Certified and registered mechanically saf<[...]Lothian Street, North Melbourne, Tilt and Seat Turret Drag Controls. Unlimited portabil[...]Victoria 3051 Australia and versatility. Total Accessory Package. Fast set up[...]and strike time. Pneumatic Wheels; Rotation Track[...]p t y . l t d . AUSTRALIAN MANAGING ASSOCIATES FOR —P A N A V I S I O[...] |
 | [...]New Products and Processes T he L o u m a in o peration .[...]ut what we were really getting. I couldn’t wait for the following day to find the guy didn’t shutte[...]and it is beautifully made. You would[...]wonderful machine. Jean- How is the pan and tilt head tensioned?[...]Marie just got on to the wheels and made[...]idn’t want to see do a feature, the first piece of equipment buttons on top of the control box. The literal[...]I think it is the sort of machine that fast as you turn, you don’t have the same producer. The amount of production[...]needed to slow it down at the end of a[...]geared head. There is no value you would get out of the use of the[...]start out with the idea and then realize it weight relationship at all. Moodie was at the front end of the arm crane, plus the saving in time in being[...]The strain of concentrating that Clive guiding it and he was dancing like a[...]invaluable where danger is involved. For Duncan, the operator, went through must ballerina as he dodged in and out of or from interior to exterior or on exterior[...]nately, by the bounce boards and lights.[...]re is going time we finished the commercial and he The great thing about Jean-Marie as a[...]had the knack of it, the Louma had to What is the function of the semi-circular[...]could have it right down in front of the go back. It would take a while for an white gears at the post and on the head? to do, you would put the problem to[...]car. Okay, if it gets hit it is an expensive and, even if they went away for six[...]t you certainly don’t have an weight of the camera against him or his They are linked with a rod that goes months and totally redesigned the thing, operator, focus puller and director out eye to the viewfinder. through the-centre of the tube and act he would make sure you could do the[...]How long did it take to unpack and set the arm is raised or low[...]t set it up at Samuelsons, done for him and he only tilts relative to[...]there was Jean-Marie, myself and a that.[...]couple of the young guys from Sammies,[...]and it took us an hour. That was with[...]goes there.” None of us had a clue which[...]camera cables, including the zoom and[...]of the shots, plus the leads of the lights[...]it in half an hour. It would be for headsets to plug into the end so that[...]e video split. the crane operator and the two dolly[...]The length of the arm makes a operato[...]difference to the speed of set up because headset and Ian had a spare set that[...]they could all hear the music and word[...]ropes to and there is a handle that Wha[...]Is there some motorized extension of the duty doily like a Rolls run[...]No, the boom is fixed. It is made up of but you can go to a 5 ft (1.5 m)[...]sections and if you want to change the are[...]pport it. Did Jean-Marie do any of the operating?[...]unscrew the end section and insert No, but he was[...]and are on a cam so that they slide easily and a jib arm. But he was able to say, “ In[...]yet lock into place with the flick of a lever. stead of doing that, why not set the tracks[...]this way?” He saved us a lot of time. ★[...] |
 | [...]mposers listed here are available to the film, TV and advertising industries. Their diverse talents co[...]wide variety of performers as Acker Bilk to the where he is regarded with the highest esteem for Kevin Peak Pedlars. He returned to Australia in 1978 and his work in the field of composing/arranging for[...]rds received international acclaim TV, films and documentaries.[...]with Nat Kipner, Too Much His talent for producing some of the most Too Little Too Late for Johnny Mathis and Denise recognizable signature tunes and incidental music[...]Williams (No. 1 world-wide with millions of may be heard in the following list of credits: ■[...]Kidnapped; The Last of the Mohicans;[...]and is specifically working with Russell Dunlop The Long Chase; The Ascent of Man; and Bruce Brown in composing music for record The Brothers; Madame Bovar[...]release and advertising purposes.[...]Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm; Target;[...]nse & Sensibility (1980); Hamlet; The his musical studies at the Royal Academy of Winter's Tale. Music and Trinity College of Music. He became A new score for Marguerite & Armand one of the most sought-after session guitarists in[...](Liszt) for the Covent Garden Orchestra. Europe with such nam[...](Kipling) and on the film Flame from the Bassey and Mel Torme.[...]Countless episodes of Dr. Who classical solo guitarist on the concert p[...]Countless episodes of Blake's Seven of late he has turned more and more to (18,000 singles of orch. playing the main composition. Some of his film and TV work[...]d to date). includes Animal Olympics (BBC); Tales of the Unexpected (Anglia), (sold in 45 countries); and Ron Goodwin, with more than 70 film[...]to his credit, is an undisputed master of his craft. Chris Neal[...]m jazz to classical treatments. As a member of the famous "Sky" group he He is a perfectionist with an enormous sense of Chris Neal has a background of classical has also composed and arranged many of their study of piano, general music (included in arts[...]tun, which has earned him the deep regard of his most successful hits.[...]degree course at Sydney University) and[...]ss. He Kevin is now intending to spend much of his[...]broadcasts, records, composes film music and time in Australia with his family.[...]However, music won out with this talented and As a result of touring Australia and New[...]composer and songwriter, record producer, special relationship and fondness for the industry[...]sound engineer and expert in the field of here and the Antipodean landscape.[...]The following are just a few of his[...]music for Wall to Wall (Feature), A Load of Old 1958-60 Village of the Damned, I'm All Right Rubbish (short feature) and his second solo[...]1960 Trials of Oscar Wilde (Warwick Films) A partial list of film, TV and audio visual 1962 Day of the Triffids soundtrac[...]Composition and Production — 1964 Of Human Bondage[...]Magnificent Men in Their Age of Consent; Wilderness; Metropolis[...]Watnut River. family. In 1 965, at the age of 15, he became a 1969 Battle of Britain Features (Synthesiser Work) — professional bass player and had his first chart 1972 Frenzy[...]Lost Island; Is Anybody There?; Dot and success the same year with the Melbourne band[...]Norman "Kinetics". He toured Australia with rock and roll 1974 The Happy Prince (Cartoon featu[...]n; Little Boy Lost. bands until 1971 when he left for the U.K. to join 1977 Candleshoe (Disney)[...]Partial Discography — Steve Kipner and Steve Groves in the band "Tin 1978 Fo[...]"Man-Child" 1972 (Cast LP) LP; "Winds of Tin" under the management of Robert Stigwood.[...]Hudson) LP; "Rak Off Normie" Tin's" single Toast and Marmalade for Tea reached the top of the American charts.[...]in the U.K. Dudley Simpson was born and educated in Carlton) LP; "Picnic[...]Rock" 1976 writing in partnership with Nat Kipner for such a Melbourne. He is currently living in the U.K. (Nolan/Buddle Quartet) Single. For further details of dates, times and availability of the above artists please do[...] |
 | [...]Synopsis: A film following the events of a Sound recordists ...........[...]AND[...]P R O D U C T IO N DOT AND SAN TA CLAU S Dire[...]............ JohnEngeler (Further Adventures of Dot and the Scriptwriters . .*......[...]Mepham To ensure the accuracy of your[...]........VivMephamentry, please contact the editor of this Prod, company ...................Yoram Gros[...]column and ask for copies of our Pro[...]details of your production can be[...]................ Kerry Byrne u p p e r and low er case. Scriptwriters....................[...]their names and character names. The[...]astmoncolor length of the synopsis should not Photography.........Bob[...]ntries made separately should be Sound recordist for 1st Asst[...]typed, in u p p e r and low er case, Character design ............... Ra[...]bachelor, and Patricia Curnow, a 30 year-[...]Synopsis: The film charts the fortunes of Prod, manager ...................Virginia Kelly[...]children, as he embarks on his search for Margaret L[...].................. Graham Rutherford For details on Billy West see previous issue. Produce[...]Steve Hunter, No. of sho ts..................................... Linda[...]Stuart Johnson. Checkers and cleaners .. .Animation Aids, Catering............[...]BillGrimmond Synopsis: The continuing adventures of Dot patrick, Lex Marinos, John Clayton, Guy Gaffe[...]Margaret Thomas Main unit second and her search for the missing joey. Dot Doleman, Paul Chubb.[...]olorfilm town, the hobo becomes Santa Claus, ask for — a beautiful masochist with an Art director...[...]liaison.............................Bill Gooley and takes Dot on a wonderful adventure Electra comple[...]hristmas ceremonies great pre-destined adventure, and, if it Costume designer[...]ended like Bonnie and Clyde, so be it. It was for Ms Parkins .................. Prue Acton[...]died for.[...]len (Cur Synopsis: After the Nazis smash shops and Based on the novel by ... D. H. Lawrence[...]...Wendy Dickson Publicity............Taking Care Of Business[...]Derek Wyness semblance of Viennese cafe society in the 1st asst director ..[...]Synopsis: The story of an English couple Gauge .........................[...]who travel to Australia with the intention of Shooting stock..................... Eastmancolor[...].Helen Garner Prod, company ........ Associated R and R possibly settling here. They form a close Sched[...]Films friendship with an Australian couple, and Cast: Barbara Parkins, Rod Mullinar.[...]e Beresford through them meet the leader of a Synopsis: The romance that develops[...]ation made up between a successful dress designer and a[...]................ Hilary Heath largely of returned servicemen from World photographer. Set against the backdrop of Guy Norris, Composer ...Bruce Smeaton (and others) Photography........................Ross N[...]rismatic romantic Paris, it traces the resolution of[...]garoo, aims to estab their conflicts and their final union. Acrobat[...]romantic love; Synopsis: A country school teacher and her Kangaroo is attracted[...]ing from urging the fascist cause. After a series of[...]ey grip. against those who have violated the es and leaves Australia.[...].................. Dean Bryan - tablished pattern of their lives.[...]Fowler and O.B. Productions[...] |
 | [...].......35mm Synopsis: The year is 1995, and the world is Photography.......................[...]s Cast: David Atkins (Squizzy Taylor), Jackie out of line, you are labelled a ‘‘Turkey’’. E[...]Pender), Robert Hughes (Harvey), Steve candidate for the "Turkey Shoot” . Composer.................[...]daMason Synopsis: A film based on the life of the Prod, accountant ........ Howard Wheatley notorious Melbourne gangster of the 1920s, Prod, company ..[...].................... Liz Michie Synopsis: Melanie and Tom have been the[...].......................... Jenny Miles best of friends since pre-school. Thirty Prod designer ..[...]........ Vicki Ambrose Prod company.......McElroy and McElroy Loc[...]..................... DavidBrostoff A mother and her two sons survive In a dis Hairdresser......[...]...RayBrown ments coming together form the basis of Wardrobe supervisor..........Antony Jones[...]THE BEST OF FRIENDS[...].............. Patti Scott Rigger and aerialist............................ TimColdwell[...]Cutting rooms and Lighting cameraman ............. Dan Burstall[...]. Liz Michie Synopsis: A film covering the events of Best boy ..........[...]............... David White survives on his dream of a world where he Catering........................[...].....AAV, and David Lawrence Mixed at .........................[...]Internationa] and Port Melbourne Studios[...]and turns his dream into reality.[...] |
 | [...]............Bill Gooley THE K ILLING OF ANGEL STREET Director ...........................[...]ector................................ JessTapper and the fears of the incredibly young doc Unit manager..........[...]y ......................... Christine Lipari tors and nurses. But, in this adaptation of Financial controller............ Jim Cranfield[...]......Gary Hansen the oft-told story, the doctors and nurses Lo[...]Synopsis: A tale not just of corruption, but Prod, manager .......Christopher[...]............... IanJonesof courage, determination and self- Prod, secretary............Wendy Chapman[...]Boom operator ...................... Ray Phillips of achieving — a woman who sets an Continuity ...[...]example to the rest of us in taking on Casting........................M[...](animation) Synopsis: A story of the hardship faced by[...]the courage, vitality and humor of early Still photography..................... Suzy[...]Feidman cattlemen and Aboriginal stockmen in a Best boy ...............[...]by .................................Kathy Lette and Still photography..............................[...]ia Blanche counter sinister baddies, a kidnapping and[...]Robyn Moase, a mystery of manipulation and double Casting................................A[...]mera operator ..............Don McAlpine mystery and non-stop action and roll-in-[...]..................... David Burr the-aisle comedy for children.[...]b y ..........Maurice Murphy man-of-the-world husband, Peter, a Clapper/loader ......[...]e daunting, sensuous young man and Peter's Key g rip ........................Merv Mc[...]Checkers and cleaners .. .Animation Aids,[...]Character voices: Joan Bruce (mother and Gaffer.....................[...]...... Stuart Beatty Synopsis: The poignant story of a young Costum[...]Skipper, child, orphaned by war, and her struggle to Make-up ......[...]Duncan Macarthur survive. It is representative of the plight of Hairdresser..............[...]...... Carmen Hugo children in war-torn countries and acts as Wardrobe .................Robyn Schuurman[...]............. Phillip Cross the voice of all children against the suffering[...]tant .........Peter Van Santen and hardships imposed’ by all wars.[...]................. Peter Kershaw WE OF THE NEVER NEVER[...] |
 | [...]meraman ............. Tom Cowan an attractive man and has always got by on[...]...... Nixon Binney his looks and charm. He lives in Frances’[...].........................WarrenMearnsof patience, and Dorian’s looks are[...]Synopsis: Intimate observations of arboreal[...]animals including feeding, grooming and[...]........ Betje Wiffers caring for their young, with emphasis on[...]triggered by the coming together of two Laboratory ..................................[...](Jack), John Dick (Mike), Les Dayman THE ACTRESS AND THE FEM INIST Gaffer............................[...]strike a fortune, and it becomes the catalyst Scriptwriter.............[...].......CM Film Productions for arousing old differences between them.[...]s They wrestle with feelings of greed, fear and[...]Gaytana Adorna film which explores the impact of feminism Sound editor ............... William An[...]Gaytana Adorna on the actress and filmmaker.[...]..........Mardi Kennedy, old grouch and the youthful enthusiasm of a Laboratory ...................[...]Richard Hobbs group of children. Will the Transport Com[...]Synopsis: A film about the the festival of Editing assistant ............Gaytana Adorna Lab[...]Perth. It looks at the actors and people in Mixer ...............................[...]..............Lesley Tucker volved and their motivation for par Title designer...................... John C[...]Synopsis: The Basking Shark of the west[...]ary, 1982 coasts of Scotland and Ireland is the se[...]gentle and abundant. The documentary[...]them, and interviews the people who de Dist. company ....[...]pend on them for their livelihood.[...].. Ross Gillespie Albert's change of attitude after he finds his Scriptwriters........[...]A CHRONICLE OF CHANGE:[...].Caroline Stanton THE SHEEP FARMER AND THE Prod, c[...]producer ......................John Honey London and inspired by their dreams of Gaffer......[...]making films in Australia fall in love and Boom operator .................[...]......................... IanBerwick THE WINTER OF OUR DREAMS P ro[...]............ 47 mins between the shearer and the sheep farmer. M[...] |
 | [...]Synopsis: An introduction to the role and[...]............. Keith Watson function of the production studios within a K[...].......... .......... Tony Mandl Teychenne (Lady of the Manor), Alyce Platt Shooting[...]Cast: The parents, staff and students of Progress .....................[...]............ ... Peter Thompson dramatic changes of lifestyle and environ Ferntree Gully Primary[...]ntry town Synopsis: A documentary for teachers the preparation and transmission of a Sound recordist ....[...].................... .................. 1 0 mins of Lilydale in the last century.[...]philosophy of education for a multi-cultural[...]on the experience of Ferntree Gully Primary[...]Bob Forster A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A U STR ALIA[...]Australian Film and Television School.[...]cusses the “ Golden Age of Radio".[...]Lyne Helms AND TELEV ISIO N[...]Craig Watkins, THE ROLE OF C O NTINUITY IN[...]avid Olney Prod, company ........ Australian Film and Vision Switcher..........[...].............. SteveNewman Synopsis: Part nine of the “ Lessons in Sound recordists ............[...]Synopsis: Videocrit, looking at the history of Camera operator ..............Steve Newman E dit[...]............................ RexPolletti PICTURES AND WORDS Gauge[...]............. Peter Levy Synopsis: An explanation of the importance Dist. company ....................[...]e Sound recordist ................ Paul Schneller of continuity in film.[...]iewicz all over Australia to capture the country and[...]hy........................Jenny Osche the people for a photographic book to be[...]Synopsis:Laugh and learn about animation. Gauge ....................[...]tion of stage plays to the television screen,[...]............. Dennis Gentle relationship of narration to visuals, and the[...].........%" videotape techniques of writing documentary narra[...]Peter Callas Synopsis: A three-part investigation of[...]................Peter Callas design in the studio and on location.[...]er......................... Richard Dibbs history of music A short animated film about the Sti[...]from the beginning of time Publicity.......Berry's Creative Partnershi[...]Nicholson to punk rock. Made for secondary school Mixed at ......................[...]children and general audience release. Laboratory ...[...]: A film explaining techniques of[...]eith Watson post-synching and dialogue replacement in Technical director.......[...]iter........................John Edwards harvest of opium in the Golden Triangle. Ga[...].. %" videotape RADIO — THE LAW AND THE[...]Synopsis: A documentary on hardware and E ditor.......................... John Mandelberg[...]and techniques of Electronic News Gather Producer/director.................Eric Halliday techniques of editing Super 8 films.[...]Length ............. 24 mins and 5 x 10 mins Director............................[...]Maddie Whitworth Synopsis: A review of activities throughout Length ...................[...]..........Tom Cowan, defamation, the Broadcasting and Televi[...]Bill Constable, sion Act and the Trade Practices Act, as Technical director...[...]............... Martin Williams Synopsis: A study of the aid effort in battle- Camera ass[...]ducer............. Chris Nicholson of adding music and narration to Super 8 Asst producer ..............[...]Development Centre HISTORY OF AU STR ALIAN[...]OF CHARLES CHAUVEL[...]... Ian Bone Synopsis: A film on the prolongation of the Scriptwriters.......... ........ Chris Warner[...]Synopsis: Music and effects — their use to Prod, manager . . . . ..[...]ryanne Smrchek Synopsis: A study of the work of this[...] |
 | [...]| A tlab for my laboratory because they[...] |
 | [...]Gauge ..........................16mm and 35mm Asst producer .............[...].... 16mm Gauge .................... 16mm and videotape Synopsis: A film promoting an Austral[...]1 Gauge ..........................16mm and 35mm Progress .............[...]Synopsis: The story of Ronald Sharpe and Progress ..........................Post-productio[...]...................July. 1981 of crime detection, for the Victoria Police. Synopsis[...]Australia needs a Navy and the Royal[...]THE STATE OF THE ARTS[...]Synopsis: A short film on the teaching of Length ...............[...]drama techniques. Produced for the Educa Gauge ....[...]Scheduled release.........November, 1981 and lead-up to the 1982 Commonwealth Synopsis: A training film for trade union[...]ABO UT v toria. Made for the Ministry for the Arts. Brisbane in September, 1982.[...]Corporation and STREET KIDS E[...]......... BrucePetty Synopsis: A film for prospective sponsors,[...]........ Rod Simmons tation and defining the ideal relationship Prod, manager ...[...]Mark Piper Prod, company ............. Dept of Industry[...]and Commerce Scheduled release ...................Jul[...]Synopsis: Afeature documentary of the Gauge .....................................[...]s: A film about migrant children urban streetlife of homeless children. Progress ...................[...].................. KeithGowdaries. The beginnings of the development TH[...]...................... KeithGow of a multicultural society breaking down of M ELBOURNE AIR RACE[...]graphy......................... Kerry Brown tion and the voting procedures entailed In First released.[...]prejudices through language. Made for the the election of Members of Parliament and Synopsis: A short series primarily designed[...].... Macek Rubetski Department of Immigration and Ethnic Af Prod, company ................... Vic[...]study of the media. It traces the history of Gauge ...........................................[...]media and communication,, in a light Shooting stock......[...]hearted way, from the beginning of time to Progress ................................[...]Corporation and Progress .................................. Production Prod, companies.........Film Australia and[...]xon air race produced for Victoria’s coming Producer....................[...]John Dixon filmed in London and Australia. Made for Scriptwriter................... Gillian Armstron[...].. Keith Wagstaff. the Department of the Premier. Photography........................[...]Film Australia STOW AGE, CARE AND USE OF[...]..... Harry Booth AND SAFETY Prod, m[...]Productions for Film Australia Laboratory .......................[...]and the ABC Gauge ..................................[...]Gauge ..........................16mm and 35mm[...].......... 3 x 30 mins made a film called Smokes and Lollies — Progress ........................ Awa[...]........................... 16mm about the lives of three 14 year-old South[...]Synopsis: A montage of Australia and its Length ....................................2 x 5 mins Melbourne for international release. Made[...]ncolor Australian girls. This film revisits them and reviews their present lifestyles and the lifestyle, using the words of Henry Lawson Gauge ............................................ 16mm for the Melbourne Tourism Authority and Progress.................[...]ity. Synopsis: A series of three documentaries changes in their attitudes and aspirations.[...]on the effects of industrialization on a new[...]Film Corporation and the Australian Broad[...]casting Commission for the Department o f Prod, company ...............[...]Prod, company ............ Dept of Science[...]and Technology[...]and The Film House Gauge ...........................[...]Synopsis: A series of animated films about[...]music for educational use. Made for the Sound[...]. . Ian Wilson Synopsis: A recruiting film for the Royal[...]deafness. The Impact of this film is made[...]Corporation THE LITTLE W ORLD OF DIETM AR stronger by the lack of dialogue.[...]Corporation and Sound mixer[...]......................... Stan Dalby of alcohol abuse. Produced for the Health Exec, producer ................. Kent[...].............Murray Ware fishing resources of Victoria's rivers and the Gauge .......................................[...]..............VFL need to conserve them. Produced for the Shooting stock......................Eastmanco[...]...................Ray Strong Ministry for Conservation (Fisheries and[...].................. 17 mins S ynop sis: The w orld and w ork of Length ......[...]%” color tape and Vincent O'Donnell Shooting stock.................[...]Corporation for the past four years, for his exceptional Synopsis: A videotape for the Com Photography................................Alan Cole care for mentally-handicapped children, set Dist. company[...]ighly-specialized field. The monwealth Department of Education[...]designed technique combines the challenging use of non-English speaking secondary school to encourage the use of a kit for Sound recordist ..........................Ian Ryan Melbourne. Made for the Health Commis[...]. ................... Peter Green camera and microscope simultaneously.[...]16mm A MAN AND AN ORGAN[...]Prod, company ...................Kingcroft and Scheduled release ............[...]and AAV Australia Scheduled release . . . . September[...]Film Australia Synopsis: The Duke of Edinburgh Award Producer.........................[...]Synopsis: An animated film on the pitfalls of Producer........................... Peter Johnson[...]...... Film Australia Scheme. Made for the Department of Youth D irector..................................[...]erPurvis the marketplace. Made for the Department D irector.........................[...]........... PeterJohnson Sport and Recreation.[...]................................... JeremyPress of Consumer Affairs.[...] |
 | [...]e are not the largest, but we are proud to be one of the major international completion guaranto[...]s associated companies, has guaranteed completion of more than 200 films since 1970, including feature length movies with total budgets in excess of $35,000,000. Our policy is to assist the producer in every possible way with counsel and expertise. We conceive our job as helping the Pro[...]Frequently producers have told us that we were of material help in spotting difficulties early and assisting in their solution. We are able to offer bonding for the largest-budget films as well as smaller[...]ll be pleased to consider bonding your next movie and invite enquiries by telex or telephone (col[...]KEM now introduces versatility and[...]in Australia and Asia can supply a full range of KEM tables, and[...]for S8,16mm S16 and 35mm picture and sound editing as you need them.[...]ducers for a free demonstration and[...]KEM & FILMWEST, the state of the[...]For information and appointments contact:[...]We are agents for AATON in Australia, Singapore and New Zealand.
|
 | [...]ting, Gallipoli and their “joining up”, Archy in the Archy Hamilton (Mark Lee) and Frank[...]lane The two halves of the film fit[...]camel in the desert, the old The opening image of the film is that hurried, unemphatic way and which man hasn’t heard of the war (he has of a boy doing loosening and breathing gain in cogency through being pursued[...]ieux. I mean ideas like knew a German), and Archy tries un an old man. At dawn, in an empty competitiveness and mateship and successfully to explain to hi[...]ian landscape in May,. sporting spirit as aspects of our war is about. 1915, the boy[...]ance: uncle times him. of the film reinforces the idea ofof from world affairs (and underlines this springs”. “How fast can you run?” the world and the second half by the very nature of the terrain), mud “Like a leopard”. “How fast are you dramatizes the enforced surrender of dled patriotism to an undefined cause going to run?” “Like a leopard”. The that sense of isolation. (and this notion gets its supreme ex boy has his ans[...]he old Archy’s being a sprinter is a way of pression at Gallipoli itself), andof the Australian character; its quarrels. There is further an element of as he climbs out of the trench at solitariness is created in Russell Boyd’s preposterousness in the very notion of, Gallipoli, stepping over the dead and glowing images of the austere this discussion taking place in a vast wounded, to run madly into the line of blankness of the landscape. Stronger stretch of desert. the Turkish artillery. And the film’s last than the competitive urge, thou[...]zen frame holds the boy in the heroic the feeling for mateship: the friendship recruited and then separated until, posture of the runner, now streaked between rural Archy and urban, know months later, they mee[...]— an exercise in which Between the opening and closing im has beaten Frank. Light Horse and Infantry get rid of ages, Peter Weir has considerably ex Th[...]osity by acting as tended his range, thematically and long sequence in the first half of the enemy to each other. An officer b[...]n his earlier feature film, in which the two head forof the mundane, with rational are told there will be[...]ir running man confronted by matters in which his for the next Perth train, “unless you’re pr[...]s challenge they set off across want to be part of the action; in time metaphysical and more sociological, the lake’s dry bed, the Abor[...]heir chance, with inevitable less an illustration of a pre-determined railway worker warning them, “ If the results. thesis and more an exploration of at snakes don’t get ya, the blackfellas If narrative were merely a matter of titudes. In spite of its title, the film is will”, and two incongruous figures set plot, the film would be thin and not a war epic; in fact, it deliberately off in a dry, empty landscape of shim episodic enough. It would be a more or refuses invitations to be so. Its first and mering heat. less interesting, even touching, account last shots are of an individual and this This landscape will have a visual of a friendship casually begun and ar proves to be more than mere artistic echo in the desolate crags of Gallipoli, bitrarily ended. However, the[...]uggest. much as a film about war; about the Burke and Wills pre-figures another Gallipoli is not a polemical film: it is kinds of attitudes Australians and par doomed enterprise — the Gallipoli[...]has also passed into resists the label of “anti-war film”. I 1915; about, in a broader[...]brates war or felt like to be Australian then — and During their trek to Perth, Archy that it approves of World War I and perhaps still does feel like. The second and Frank achieve a friendship that sur Australia’s participation in it, but, half of the film’s length is taken up with mounts their[...]rather, that its interest is in the way scenes of war (in Egypt and later at war. “It’s not our bloody war — it’s an people react to and in war. This kind of Gallipoli). The earlier half has to do English war,” Frank claims, and Archy interest leads Weir to admire the[...]oody that grows between Archy and Frank, career as a sprinter, his meeting with cow[...]Archy’s patriotism is a between Frank and his former failway- Frank Dunne (Mel Gibson), who[...]n old ganger mates, between Archy and his[...] |
 | [...]an original idea by Peter Weir. Director of photo who turns up briefly in the Gallipoli for another poster to proclaim, “ The[...], should involve tion between Archy and Frank is first Barton is command[...]allace), Robin themselves in Britain’s military and established by their reading of news Colonel (John Morris) to[...]roduction company: Associated political problems, and what happens to paper accounts of the war: Archy’s to advance[...]pt, but no bullets, in spite of the Turks hav min. Australia. 1981. to t[...]o o k o f ing dug in. They are cut to pieces and with individuals in war is affirmed by S[...]aper at the railway camp in the and dying. Gre[...]k battle between the In “ baptism of fire on the rocky slopes of next order will send them to death, and fantry and the Light Horse, there are Gallipoli”[...]e not sure medals, watches, rings and other Geoff Mayer some stunning long shots of serried where those slopes are.[...]mementos are left in the Australian ranks, and it occurred to me that this In the marvellously-lit scene of night trench when they climb out into “ the was the last of the CinemaScope wars, farewell as the troopship leaves Perth, valley of the shadow ofof “ For 23rd Psalm is read on the soundtrack. its final form in the first half of the lies.) England, home and beauty” as well as For a change, a freeze-frame ending Eighth Century and it described, in its In his exploration of why these “ Australia will be ther[...]t one leaves us with a clear sense of lives cut Hrothgar of the Danes who built a that the competitive urge (races, bets on of them is clearly the drum of empire. short in utter futility.[...]Hall, as a meeting races — on anything) is part of the This is not to say that Weir and David Near the start of this review, I place for all his subjects. However, the Australian conscio[...]ized by Grendel, more to be resisted than the sex and are taking a nostalgic or reactionary tending his range and changing direc a monstrous representation of the booze the soldiers are warned about in[...]d Egypt. for going to this war were mixed — and his most successful film to date, and populated by creatures who are not the The first half of the film is full of peo muddled.[...]id W illia m s o n ’ s “ children of men” . Grendel, a man- ple challenging each other and of others In Egypt, men from the youngest screenplay has been a major asset and eating monster bearing the mark of betting on the outcome. The challenge c[...]influence. Williamson is not the kind of Cain, is eventually confronted by of a war, however dimly its causes are football at the base of the pyramids and writer likely to embrace the sorts of Beowulf, the hero from the land of the understood, takes its place in a context the camera offers a close-up of the concepts Weir explored in[...]Geats in Sweden, who kills the monster. of competition. Archy's first reference Sphi[...]ining up is cut short by his uncle’s play of colonial com petitiveness. ha[...]tidy in his structures Grendel’s mother andand The until his death in a fight with a dragon, counters this by talking of his uncle’s claims that he’s not inte[...]A m erican m edieval sch olar and youthful escapades, com petition, h[...]tter two, less determinedly first part of the epic for his 1971 novel wider opportunity for their display. seen in the Australians[...]n d e l . This, in turn, forms the basis Also, for all Frank’s cynicism about Egyptian tou[...]knows where it is going, without being ofand directed of empire are still there, strongly, if not them[...]g where they are wholly at the service of manages to be a humane and moving Stitt, of the Christian Television domestic episode, Uncle[...]reconstruction of times past without Association commercials and the Archy’s younger brothers and sisters The anti-British feeling g[...]stalgia; those who ubiquitous Norm of the Life. Be In It and, while the Australian wind whistles the A[...]ith wish to may see in it a critique of subse campaign. round their isolated far[...]ent in world Gardner’s reworking of the Beowulf children listen rapt — to Kipling.[...]not be crucial to a epic consists largely of writing the point is unobtrusively made that Kip Frank and his mates are dismissed by reading of the film. events from Grendel’s point of view. ling is as much part of this scene as the British officers as “ u[...]Thus, instead of a parable about the kerosene lamp. When a soldier with a And, at Gallipoli itself, it is clear that role of kingship, political respon[...]round on a they are to draw the Turks out of the Patricia Lovell. Executive producer: Francis sibility and the evolution of a culture, wooden horse, bearing the legend “ Join way so as to protect the British. Of O’Brien. Screenplay: David Williamson. Based on there is a contemporary, ironic view of[...]the stupidity of mankind, the illogical[...]superstitious development of religion[...]and the ego-building role assigned to[...]“ He spoke of how God had been kind[...]bleary-eyed and fat, nodding their[...]approval of God. He spoke of God’s[...]God and Hrothgar, and Hrothgar[...]smiled, bits of food in his beard.”[...]One can easily see the appeal of such[...]a story for the film’s producer, Phillip[...]remains faithful to the sardonic tone of[...]good deal more humor, some of it quite[...]ality for the selection of Hrothgar’s[...]idiotic Viking warriors and assemb[...]lage, and then provides them with an[...]Left: Frank and Archy in Perth, before going[...] |
 | [...]Harold is a classic example of British[...]of luck and a lot of thuggery, has made[...]good. He is depicted as crass and un[...]of this, he has the appropriate beliefs in[...]individual effort and empire loyalty.[...]stereotype of the British underworld[...]of the film lies in its development of a[...]The film opens with a shot of an[...]cuts to another scene of a man arriving[...]at an airport with a suitcase and getting[...]tom of the case, revealing a hoard of[...]British currency, and helps himself to[...]some of it. Then he hands the case to[...]arrangement is made and the younger[...]men go outside while he pays for the[...]grabbed, bundled into a car, shot and[...]instead of a deer. A p le a f o r u n d ersta n d in g a n d[...]regarding the function of a monster in arrives for the three men, but before a n d e r S titt’s Gr[...]worry about, so, in front Overall, Stitt and his small produc point by another group of unknown of everybody at Mead-Hall, he bites tion tea[...]975, deserve recog This series of short scenes builds con Bourne, Ric Stone and Ed Rosser. being that he didn’t take the soldier’s nition for a rather remarkable siderab[...]sion. There are Keith Michell provides the voice of helmet off as he had damaged a tooth.[...]no clues as to the meanings of these Shaper, the balladeer, Arthur Dignam Powerl[...]events. This technique narrows the dis for the Dragon and Peter Ustinov for to destroy Grendel, as Unferth, his[...]tance between the narrative and the Grendel. re[...]ams, Alexander Stitt. audience. The importance of such a The film begins on Tuesday 515 AD, humi[...]arold with Julie McKenna singing a rather instead of a battle between a godlike John Gard[...]ruce Smeaton. Designer: becomes the centre of a new sequence[...]Frank haunting theme song which establishes hero and a vicious monster, as in the Hellard. Principal animators: David Atkinson, of mysterious incidents. It makes the the fact that Grendel’s mother loves her original epic poem, Gardner and Stitt’s Gus McLaren, Ralph Peverill. Voices: Peter confusions of the characters, like 12 ft 4 in (3.75 m) spotty[...]chell. Arthur Dignam, Ed Harold, those of the viewer as well, in[...]larly since he provides her figure who leaps upon and destroys a Production company: Animation Australia. Dis this way, the meaning of events is cir dietary staples of humans and frogs. vulnerable Grendel.[...]1981. cumscribed by Harold’s own attempts For the rest of the Film, Grendel is a Grendel, Grendel, Gre[...]The next series of incidents begins watch the foibles, brutality and deceit plea for understanding and tolerance, with the explosion of a bomb in of mankind, although he occasionally although it may[...]hes into Mead-Hall to fulfil his audience. Except for the sporadic[...]Then the person function by biting off the heads of a few attem pts by Ralph- B aksh i, the[...]und in Sh ap er’ s ballads concerning the field of children’s entertainment. The The Long Good Friday begins as an one of Harold’s casinos. By a stroke of achievements of the community and the reasons for this are complex, although action thriller and ends as a study of a luck the wires have come loose and it developing communal spirit. This cul the importance placed on considera man incapable of adapting to a new set fails to explode. minates in Grendel’s plaintive cry for tions such as realism and verisimili of historical circumstances. The central[...]y meticulous sociological portrait ofand his situation. another bomb explodes in one of knowing dragon and this sequence, as ations by generating an understanding Things have been good for Harold in Harold’s restaurants. His Mafia plans in Gardner’s novel, crystallizes the of the animated film as a legitimate th[...]He has emerged are on the verge of being ruined. dominant motif running throughout the form of adult entertainment. from a series of gang wars, a decade Harold has[...]ce in the returns to the tried-and-true methods of remarkably similar to Saussure’ s consideration[...]e con what got Harold to the top and they are that is, concepts are defined negatively and as a development of that form of troller of the local grog, gambling and his resort in this time of crisis. The “ex by their relations with other terms of animation pioneered by U PA in the p[...]es. As an “honorable ecutives” of his corporation are given the system . T h eir m[...]ne scene they are not. Thus, the dragon explains, for style which had dominated commercial a range of smaller crime bosses who collect[...]”. London in an amusing parody of a something evil, for everything positive Perhaps Phillip Adams’[...]ilm was ill-advised. His attempt to fruits of this arrangment. He has his himsel[...]horror film are a penthouse apartment and cars, and his Jaguar, but on arrival it is fists, knives and religion to explain his existence. logical expression of a culture’s dark or religious ‘mum’ can be chauffeured to and guns that are going to get him the Thereafter, Grendel watches humans repressed side, and his speculations church in a Rolls, p[...]attempt to deal with his regarding the motivation of such for Harold’s sins. He has a range of The central analysis of the film con existence and he begins to realize that monsters (e.g., Dracula viewed as the other trappings of the successful crime cerns the impotence of Harold’s they are an inferior species driven by an manifestation of a “ blood-sucking boss — city councillors and police methods in confrontation[...]. Yet these superintendents in his pay and a set of circumstances. An interesting sacrifices. He even[...]ts add little to an under number of establishment business con contrast is drawn between Harold and complaining that they used to do it standing of the film, as such senti tacts thr[...]his profits. group of essentially middle-class[...] |
 | [...]ore at home in a with no legitimate reasons for struggle.[...]what he was doing technically.” world of boardrooms and corporate Importantly, for the structure of the Roadgames This is as true of Franklin as it was of deals. They are smooth, unflappable film[...]Hitchcock, and it is what makes him and the youngest is a product of the chology disrupts the pace of narrative Brian McFarla[...]ol. This serves to developments. Instead of continuing[...]orking-class with greater intricacies of plot, Harold A heroine called “Hitch” for most of do. origins and his inability to deal with a and his mental anguish become the Roadgames is just one of the jokes in a It was already clear in[...]s in a number film full of them. It points, of course, to — and too long ago) that Franklin’s He naively believes that the old ways of superfluous scenes that do little but the source and kind of joke that makes was a talent to reckon wit[...]s prove him wrong. let Hoskins parade some of his un Richard Fr[...]hilarating fun. amuse and shock by drawing on the ments of a good action thriller. The examples are[...]e’s “signifi early sequences are engrossing and ship”. when the man stabbed at the[...]cance” in his films (that is, Patrick and Hoskins gives a skilful portrayal of pool turns out to be his best friend, and Franklin’s obvious (and stated) Roadgames), it is in what h[...]fter Harold veneration for the master has helped to identified: his capacity for securing our dilemma of purpose for itself, between has killed someone.[...]ral involvement while developing the complexities ofand focusing more narrowly In the last analysis, the casting of equals and uses it to manipulate his The significance of the film is not an on a deeper psychological portrait of Hoskins creates problems for the film. audience between laugh and scream imported one. By that I mean he is not this central character. The film opts for He is so suited to the part that the film[...]to turn into Stanley Kramer, or the latter course of action. fails to develop either n[...]tackling Serious Unfortunately, this narrowing of or his interactions with other[...]erious about Patrick focus away from the dynamics of events characters, which may have allowed a and the camera cuts to a ferocious and the considerably more accomp towards the psychology of Harold en more complex picture of Harold and cleaver falling — on to a hunk of meat lished Roadgames is that they are films tails a number of sacrifices. Other his situation to emerg[...]girl's mouth opens for a final scream, films alone can achieve. H[...]equence remain undeveloped. strategy of focusing on Harold pays[...]ural cut replaces the instinctive grasp of the way film makes Harold’s mistress is initial[...]ng sound with the din of clattering rubbish its own meanings, for the way it alters a person of considerable intelligence scenes, but by t[...]rather than merely represents reality. and strength, and not the standard sup sacrificed along the[...]to a director with a In the literal-mindedness and, indeed, port for the male ego. Harold, in fact,[...]distinctive grasp of narrative tech high-mindedness of a good deal of Aus relies on her to help negotiate some of nique. And this technique is at the tralian cinema[...]service of a vision that sees life as a concern for narrative technique and of what to do with such a character, not T h e L[...]what it can do to our perception of by developing her complexities but by M c[...]Roadgames is more tightly plotted and vulnerable. M o n k[...]reness when, than Patrick. An admirer of the latter, Another problem is that the film t[...]oskins (Har ol d) . Helen talking of his indebtedness to Hitch I would never[...]narrative sloppiness and some Harold’s plight. There are elements of a Davies (To ny) . Derek Th o m p s o n (Jeff[...]unabsorbed incredibilities. In romanticization of this character. As a M ar s ha ll (Harris),[...]al en d ar technical things together and turn a criterion of credibility they will be force on the streets is[...]o an emotional experience found wanting (for example, when all political organization, the fil[...]ng cast turns up in Perth at depict it as a bunch of fanatical killers[...]heightened, by one being aware of a crucial moment). The point is that the[...]react with concern for literal realism.[...]presence of an accountant’s florid wife,[...]gonist’s growing sense of bewilderment[...]and harassment. In Patrick there were[...]some loose ends and some strainings of[...]Franklin’s control and confidence have[...]strained, it is meant to be, and one can[...]see why. And there are no loose ends —[...]and no fat.[...]The pre-credits sequence, for[...]opens on a line-up of garbage cans,[...]neon sign and down to the truck[...]truck head-on and cuts to Pat Quid[...]Quid’s fatigue, his taste for clowning[...]razor) and his literary leanings are[...]quickly established, and so is his[...]green panel van draws up and, as it[...]sleeping compartment of the truck and[...]to the naked back of a girl in a motel[...] |
 | [...]wire in hand linked visually with the guitar wire and the girl’s thin metal neckband; and as her mouth opens in a scream, the film cuts to the morning noise of garbage bins being rattled, and Boswell sniffing among the green garbage bags as Quid sees a hand and face appear around the edge of a motel- window curtain. This is all fast, dense and resonant. Everything in it — garbage, Boswell, truck, news broadcast, panel van, wire and, above all, Quid’s weary, playful voyeurism — assumes an unobtrusive narrative significance. Visual and aural signifiers make their points about plot and character — and directorial inten tion — with wit and economy. The cross-Nullarbor journey (its beauty and emptiness stunningly evoked by Vincent Monton’s camera work), as Quid transports a trailer-load of refrigerated carcasses to Perth, is the setting for the long central section of a teasing thriller. Its events are given a more than episodic shape by Quid’s gradual surrendering ofand others as he goes, the tone is casually comic as he plays his favorite road game of inventing little dramas about the other travelle[...] culation, he confides these to the dog/dingo and the film teeters on the brink of whimsy. Teeters, but doesn’t quite topple, because he shortly and a new strand of sexual banter is screenplay to sustain the comparisons. Pat Quid (Stacy Keach), Boswell and Hitch acquires a talking companion. She is[...]the pretty girl he is about to pass Stacy Keach and Jamie Lee Curtis tion is the happiest in Australian films. Franklin's Roadgames. for the third time before he breaks recall a[...]Together, they judge very accurately regulations and picks her up. And the Robert Donat and Madeleine Carroll, how far we need to be symp[...]pany at this stage through James Stewart and Grace involved with the protagonists, how wants of his cameraman, and in even more than he does. Kelly, to Bruce Dern and Barbara much they need to be individualized Monton he has one of Australia’s The film gathers a new tension[...]ally-rebel- ablest. The sparse beauty of the Hitch joins Quid in his determination to and grace in their performances and lious daughter with an interest in the Nullarbor, with terrifying cliffs catch the driver of the green panel van enough wit in Everett d[...]d’s eclectic reading providing a moment of high tension; or[...]Y o r k e r , and G ru n t , all glimpsed in one sandy waste offering a reflective lull for brief shot), and how to keep the Quid and Hitch before a sudden[...]way. or the mesmerizing effect of the long[...]scarcely need the jokey straight road and the red tail-lights that[...]n Careful, etc. — eyes: an account of the film’s visual[...]but they are written and directed for the style is an account of the director’s[...]same sort of enigmatic fun and tension concerns and how he has realized these.[...]fingers and gourmet cooks. These the oddly[...]which they are thoroughly worked for the panel van and where the juke box is[...]toilet) or for laughter (in the roadside difficult, or the brilliant montage of wreck of a motor boat), and they all feet, hands, speedometer and so on that[...]assemble at the Finale of the chase in the gets Quid’s truck movi[...]narrow back-streets of Perth. temptation to resist.[...]It is in the overall rhythm of the film Roadgames is a film to se e b[...]that Franklin and De Roche really is more exciting[...]how to build to a climax — and then 1 know. And, above all, it is a pleasure[...]and finds instead . . .). They[...]understand, too, the superiority of ducer: Ri ch a rd Fran klin . E xe[...]rather than reliance on moments of E dward M c Q u e e n M as o n .[...]sharpen the edge of the suspense rather (Hitch). M[...] |
 | [...]Condensed versions of the top Hollywood productions are available for you to show in[...]vis, documentaries, travelogues, historical films and[...]ecialising in steam trains etc. Also a good range of older films Including:[...]Adventures of Robin Hood: 42nd Street; Gold Diggers of 1933: Captain Blood; Sea Hawk;[...]Full length features available. Hundreds of films kept In stock. Prompt service. All prices h[...]Please forward your listing of tities. prices and specials etc.[...]1) Free catalogue with a huge selection of tapes and[...]Free newsletter on Channel 0 /2 8 in Sydney and Melbourne, Watch for these[...]to r For further information just fill in the coupon below and Les E nfants d u e Darad is[...] |
 | [...]seemingly been one of the least-[...]in place of the self-indulgence, the tor[...]tured self-anguish, and the preten[...]tiousness of those earlier films, James M. Cain was once de[...]Rafelson (and Mamet) have crafted a the “20 minute egg of the hard-boiled[...]kept to the essentials. By means of novel, T he P o stm a n A lw a y s R in g s[...]appears to Since then there have been six (three of[...]be halfway through and then conclude ficial) films drawing on the basic[...]consistent with Cain’s habit of needling version, directed by Bob Rafelson,[...]a story at the least hint of breakdown finally captures much of the delirious[...]— always striving for what he called the fatalism that characterizes Ca[...]“rising coefficient of intensity”. work.[...]Certainly the lengthy murder/acci- Two of the most significant[...]of the film bears this out. The actual most successf[...]make it appear like a car acci “love-rack” and the “wish-come-true”.[...]becomes aroused and, in a scene which leaning over the edge of a cliff for a bet[...]it must have ter look at the “wish” (a woman and[...]ers in 1934, Frank makes sometimes money as well) and when he[...]the body of her husband. But the se precipice, clutching bo[...]quence continues as Frank, attempting lure of the forbidden, always invokes[...]becomes trapped inside and suffers panies desire.[...]multiple injuries as Cora screams for Cain’s original title for the novel was[...]The overwhelming passion of Frank Chambers (Jack Nicholson) and Cora (Jessica Lange). Nicholson, receding hair and bags B ar-B -Q , but he changed it to The[...]vous The hideous innocence of the heart of the film, and it points to the body and the expressions and move ness while waiting to hear from a relationship between Frank and Cora, only major weakness in Rafelson[...]hole world is towards Cora’s body at the end of the said that his local postman would[...]ck, Cora-Nick), shattered when one of the lovers is film — convey beautifully the loser and always ring twice, Cain pointed out that generates alternating repulsion and killed, but to leave it like that ig[...]dopester” all rolled into it was an ideal title for his novel as he sympathy for each character who, at the conventions of a melodrama which one. And Jessica Lange, after emoting (viz. fate) rang twice for the hero of the different times throughout the f[...]Chambers. On the second victim of the relationship. For example, ing to the audience.[...]Nick, the feudal patriarch of the cafe, Rafelson and Mamet have gone to ject Cora as an object of desire, a vic Rafelson, and his scriptwriter David unintention[...]great pains to underline the tim, andof the story Similarly, the exteriors, the lighting in sense of fatalism from the outset with he[...]ghout the film — particularly in the cafe and its decor match Nicholson the film’s opening sh[...]s Greek words. Cora, on the aftermath of the courtroom scene and Lange in conveying an appropriate day (in the novel) for night, the film the other hand,[...]reen as the exploits Frank and suggests murder as full of hyperactive reporters and court the middle of the American depression. audience picks out the figure of a man the only viable form of action. officials — yet they d[...]on’s film is totally con propriate ending for such a melodrama. road.[...]sistent with Cain’s view of the world as Certainly they may have reje[...]s: Charles Mulverhill, Bob In the early hours of the morning the a place inhabited by small, selfish peo ending in the novel (and MGM’s 1946 Rafelson. Executive producer[...]erg. Associate producer: Michael Barlow. Screen and Frank Chambers (Jack Nicholson)[...]ence certainly an appropriate conclusion for play: David Mamet. Based on a novel by James[...]Cain. Director of photography: Sven Nykvist. hides in the toilet as the driver eats and lawyer Katz and the insurance rep, to two people who u[...]roduction designer: George Jenkins. Costumes: out and tells the Greek proprietor, Nick of the guilt or innocence of Frank and for each other. Rafelson’s ending denies Dorothy[...]ed Frank’s man-under-th e-sen tence-of- (Cora), John Colicos (Nick), Michael Lerner his money and cons a meal off him. world t[...]ries to con Frank strength of the relationship between to substitute an alternative form of (Madge), William Traylor (Sackett), Tom Hill into taking a job and, as Frank refuses, Frank and Cora, and thus Cain and the[...]ble to manipulate audience Because of his track-record (Five U.S. 1981. ★ bend[...]the kitchen. When he sympathy for an otherwise illicit Easy Pieces, Head, The King of Marvin learns that the woman is married to the[...]A lw a y s R in g s T w ice was in back. A point-of-view shot of the cafe is the examination of the lovers after the W a n t e d ,&[...]P o s it io n s V a c a n t followed by a shot of Frank pounding a murder. Predict[...]rly attempts to im car chase film and being perfectionists and award cafe door and, through equal parts of plicate Frank in the murder. La[...]both (producer + director) wish to leave no pain and sex, establishes a bond no[...]in on stone unturned in our search for anything and anyone between himself and Cora that quickly their notorie[...]the road house, Cora gives useful and FA N T A STIC (e.g.: props, wardrobe, etc; Th[...]pull his weight or ° consultants and/or suppliers o f weapons, warfare, cars, death ap[...]but Cora sit beneath a tree and paint the garden wants financial security as well[...]animal or other; etc. etc. Cora. His need for her even overcomes tions. A bri[...]you have anything to contribute, or if the guilt of Nick’s obvious, albeit animal trainer fails to weaken Frank’s patronizing, affection for him — need for Cora and he accepts her desire you know o[...]ly conveyed in a scene not in the for the trappings of a middle-class ex (longhand O[...]t. between Frank and Cora which is at the[...] |
 | [...]A frame from fhe R.AC.'s Marine[...]duced by Herring B&C for Ogilvy PRODUCTION[...]ed for some dramatic shots of a[...]Graham Varney and smashing into a reef. It had to[...]no room for error, that's why they[...]TELEX: A A93374 MEMBER OFTHE FILM AND TELEVISION PRODUCTION ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA[...]treet For excellent tracks and guaranteed service Perth[...]SOUND TRANSFERS • Tripods and Spreaders • Platform Dollies • Location Truck[...]mmunication System ® Grips and Runners Phone:[...]For further details, contact D aryl Binning.[...] |
 | [...]• Box-office grosses of individual films have been supplied to C in e m a[...]This figure represents the total box-office gross of all foreign films shown during the period in the[...]alian Film Corporation; MCA — Music Corporation of America; S — Sharmill Films; OTH — Other, (2)[...]Figures are drawn from capital city and inner suburban first release hardtops only[...] |
 | [...]here. O liv ier’s great trio of Theatre and Cinema Shakespeare[...]Hamlet, and Richard III — are ripe for Robert Daniels[...]1980 Sisters and The Dance of Death, is Errol Flynn: valuable as a record of a notable stage[...]trash like Lady Caroline Lamb, and Granada, Britain, 1980[...]and The Betsy, are, I hope, helping “to Brian McFarlane pay for three children in school, for a family, and their future”. There is cer[...]tainly not much else to be said for them. Not much sense of the actor’s life Laurence Olivier may wel[...]arried three fine actresses — film star he is of considerably less the incisive and under-rated Jill Es significance, and- Robert Daniels’ mond, Vivien Leigh, and Joan sycophantic collection of adoring Plowright — and made films with them reviews and his own comments does not all, and he has worked with all the great persuade one otherwise. actors of his day. A good many of them The book’s sub-title is “Theatre and are quoted in this book, but none of The films are, in the end, the least of Cinema”, which suggests an equal divi[...]Higham’s concerns. He is more in sion of interest between theatre and habits, and this is a pity since the work terested i[...]has all been better Hermann Erben, and his indefatigable photographs on the cover are[...]ere. Margaret Morley’s not pursuit of sexual gratification. In the his film roles, in[...]printing errors than a clear case for Flynn’s fascist sym VVuthering Heights. (Though the latter I’ve seen for some time. As well, there pathies. m[...]ght echo James Agate who biography of Olivier by John Cottrell, sorts of people have been ready to attest found Geraldine Fitzgerald’s the “one and D a n ie ls’ in d isc rim in a te to his voracity and the chilling egoism it remarkable bit of playing” in the film.) bibliography list[...]involved. Higham thanks the three The rest of the book bears out this which tell us alm[...]about the great acting peer’s life and abused Nora Eddington, who seems to devoted to Olivier’s films, for each of work. have been quite out of her league, and which is given cast and chief credits, a[...]elegant, generous Patrice Wymore — synopsis of the film’s plot, and a selec What is to be said for Charles for their assistance. None of them tion from the reviews.' The latter are Higham’s version of the Life and seems to have had any real idea of the heavily dominated by The N e w Y o rk Disgusting Times of Errol Flynn? That darker side of the Flynn character — T im e s where the egre[...]pressed infor the trips over the border for Mexican Crowther held sway for what seems an mation that Flynn, Warner Bros’ war boysvthe treasons worked with and for eternity. On Pride and Prejudice, for in winning womanizer, was really a[...]izing an “the most deliciously pert comedy of agent; that Tyrone Power and he were Eskimo invasion of the U.S. or that he old manners, the most crisp and lovers (insofar as Flynn was able to love was intimate with Nanook of the crackling satire in costume that we in[...]a Overall, it is a repellent story and it is ing seen on the screen . . . Laurence strong taste for voyeurism and ex hard to see why Higham thought[...]— the arrogant, sardonic Darcy drunk for much of his acting career; seem to know what he thinks of Flynn. whose pride went before a most that he was outrageously dishonest and, On p. 363, he speaks of Flynn as “play felicitous fall.”[...]uch cial dealings: if this is the kind of dirty natural charm and open-hearted good definitive critical sources[...]the next page he writes, T im e, N e w s w e e k and Judith Crist. The then this is the book for you. “Like many evil men, Errol was drawn overall effect of numbing adulation If you are interested in the pheno to kindness and goodness only as tem makes one yearn for a viperish thrust menon of Flynn’s star career or in the porary peaceful refuge from the misery from John Simon. And, more seriously, phenomenon of stardom at large, of being himself.” The latter statement these glu[...]luminating. It is hard to see how this of “evil” and “open-hearted good book, then they deserve a more physically glamorous figure, of such nature” seem to be immiscible.[...]tical approach than they dubious morality and with about as As actor and man he seems to have get here.[...]ors — William Wyler filmgoers for well over a decade. But he M y W ic k e d[...]thering Heights, Sister Carrie), d id and it would be instructive to be lies as[...]ecca), Joseph shown how, in the face of his happens, seems merely red[...]g limitations, he managed (Bunny Lake is Missing) and Stanley it. Kubrick (Spartacus) — and it would be What is particularly ir[...]e Mervyn Binns one whose training was essentially for past, written perceptively on the Golden the stage. Not for a moment does this Age (as they say) of Hollywood, in book offer any such insights. Films by books like The C e llu lo id M u se and cinema The column lists books which deal with the[...]or related topics and released in Australia directors like these are gi[...]w o o d in th e F o rties (both with between May and June 1981. All titles are on sale weight as those of more or less compe Joel Greenburg). H[...]nn films, but there is listed The publishers and the local distributors are or worse, like Herbert[...]precious little sense of how they worked the book is imported (Imp.)[...]ds creating a star persona. How prices listed are for paperbacks, unless otherwise seems were most reviewers. important, for instance, were the con indicated, and are subject to variations between The format adopted here is similar to tributions of Michael Curtiz and Raoul bookshops and states.[...]The list was compiled by Mervyn R. Binns of the Citadel’s The F ilm s o f . . . series and I Walsh, or the rigors ofand General Interest ing. Anyone really intere[...] |
 | [...]Laurence Olivier: Theatre and Cinema Movies on TV Weidenfeld and Nicolson/Hodder and Stoughton, All categories of the Academy Awards examined Robert L. D[...]524.95 (HC) in depth, with black and white and color photo Barnes/Oak Tree, $25 (HC)[...]sworld. $4.95 Story of the first lady of the musical comedy stage graphs.[...]ith more than 10.000 fiims listed in London and New York. Cathedrals o f the Movies reviews, synopses and observations of each of alphabetically.[...]l about me" Dr Donald Reed and Patrick Pattison Barnes/Oak Tree. S25 (HC) An entertaining and scholarly book which re Coronet/Hodd[...]The author looks at 32 talented composers and evaluates a hitherto neglected part of the architec An autobiography of the leading British actor. Complete record of science-fiction award winners lyricists whose songs brightened some of Holly tural heritage.[...]Sir Henry at Rawlins on End and Other Spots Joy Kuhn[...]Outspoken memoirs of an earthy and unusually Signet/Methuen Aust., $5.95[...]ie. 512.60 A behind-the-scenes look at the making of the film. intelligent actress.[...]Eccentric saga, successful on radio, stage and Fifty Famous Faces in Transition[...]tanley Green Photographs that chronicle the faces of person Granger discusses his private life and presents a[...]vivid insider’s view of filmmaking: told with humor Focal/Butterwort[...]and honesty. An elementary introduction to the principles and Film-star Portraits o f the '50s[...]practice of professional filmmaking. Novels and Other Film Tie-Ins John Kobal[...]The Blue Lagoon 163 glamor photographs of 1950s film stars. M. Joseph/Nelson, $2[...]The veteran actress tells the story of her life: from Cinema Enterprises, $14.35[...]s, $25.50 (HC) years of spectacular stardom and several mar Film Tricks[...]Harold Schechter and David Everitt Futura/Tudor. 5[...]Harlin Quist/Tudor, $14.35 mark a period of transition — the 1960s. D irect[...]e-scenes book dealing with Brian de Palma and Campbell Black Forgotten Films to Remember[...]O f Mice and Magic Citadel/Davis, S32.95 (HC)[...]The Final Conflict Five decades of films are recaptured, with[...]A remarkable survey of what film critics have been Plume/Methuen Aust., $14.95 hundreds of rare stills from private collections. writing about American directors and their work[...]First comprehensive history of American animated Great Animals o f the Movies since the hey-day of the 1960s. cartoons. An[...]Puppets and People M anor[...]S. S. Wilson The world of the great animal stars of film and Barnes/Oak Tree, $14.50 (HC)[...]The focus is on Billy Wilder and Leo McCarey and The book deals with large-scale animation[...]Arthur Bvron Cover ■ The Great Sci-fi, Fantasy and Horror Movie their work is examined i[...]cinema, explaining techniques of special effects Nel/W. Collins. 52.95 Memor[...]ation Dick Clement and lan La Frenais Wizard Promotions, $20.30[...]e Silva Volume one, with nine separate categories of col[...]Croom Helm/Cambridge University Press, $28.50[...]The author tells how animation is done and traces Hop-Scotch The Great Show Business A[...]The book deals with the period 1924-1945, and its historical beginnings. The book al[...]provides in-depth studies and an introduction on sources for equipment and materials, and has a Pan/W . Collins, 53.95 Barnes/Oak Tree, $24.95 (HC) the problems of the type of documentation helpful glossary of terms. The Howling A behind-the-scenes introduction to most of the appropriate to the study of film history.[...]Television and Media[...]Three classics that have changed the course of tele Sphere/Nelson. 53.50 Sphere/Nelson, $4.5[...]vision: Where the Difference Begins; A Climate of Little Lord Fauntleroy[...]aries” , Sorlin shows how film- Fear; and The Birth of a Private Man. Frances Hodgson B[...]makers' attitudes to events in the past and present[...]Charlotte Brunsdon and David Morlev Love in a Cold Cl[...]Four Arguments for the Elimination o f Television Penguin/Pengu[...]Faber/Oxford University Press, $21.30 (HC)[...]on serial. with filmographies, critical judgments and rare A collection of reviews and critical articles on films Jerry Mander photographs. and filmmakers, entertaining and penetrating. Harvester/Cambridge University Press, $29.50 Minder Hollywood Trivia[...]The book questions assumptions about the role of Nel/W . Collins, $2.75 David P. Strauss and Fred L. Worth Neil Sinvard and Adrian Turner Warner/Gordon and Gotch, $3.95 television and the media in society. Story tak[...]BCW, $25.50 (HC) The book comprises anecdotes and achievements First full-length critical study of Billy Wilder’s Hazell: The Making o f a T[...]The Mirror Crack'd from the lives of many favorite stars.[...]Manuel Alvarado and Edward Buscombe Agatha Christi[...]May '68 and Film Culture For students, teachers or anyone interested in tele[...]M y Music The “ new” story of Popeye taken from the film,[...]BFI, $10.65 with color photographs and text. A comprehensive guide to developments in film Television and History Penguin/Penguin, 53.95 Science Fiction Studies in Film studies.[...]From the radio and television series. Frederik Phol and F. Pohl IV[...]between historiography, television and ideology. Granada/Gordon and Gotch. 54.95 Soon to be a Major Motion Picture[...]The Indian filmmaker looks at various aspects of Media and Education Texts Holt Rinehart and W inston/H olt Saunders, India's film[...]Broadcasting and Accountability Thom Racina[...]Caroline Heller The anatomy of an all-star, big budget, multi H istory[...]d Seeker and Warburg/W . Heinemann. $75 (HC)[...]The story of Hollywood and its people from 1925- Delta. $8.95 Dutto[...]The author discusses the role of advertising and the Raging Bull Fifty years of pictures and stories by one of Holly 1965. The book has more than 1500 illus[...]and rare Technicolor frame enlargements.[...]Oscars Anthony Slide and Edward Wagenknecht[...]the media's vast resources, simply and effectively. Focus on the actors and their films which didn't Paramount Pictures and the People who made[...]nd Most? The Blackglama 1. G. Edmonds and Reiko Mimura[...]The author confronts the worst threats of media The Stuntman Peter Rogers An intimate and informative history of one of the[...]media functions and the alternatives. Futura/Tudor, $4.50 Photographs of famous stars in black fur coats. era.[...]ttle World o f Don Camillo Biographies, M em oirs and Experiences in Reference[...]Giovanni Guareschi Film m aking and Film ographies Film Facts[...]Brian Garfield Coronet/Hodder and Stoughton, $4.95 Information on the stars, the studios, the awards The life story of the successful actress and model.[...]5.95 The real Errol Flynn story, told objectively and and the festivals — a wealth of entertaining and This Fabulous Century[...]levision production starring Sam with the benefit of extensive new interviews.[...]n, with more than 1000 illustrations. Willie and Phil Larry Leno[...]Avon/Tudor, 52.95 Informal and informative biography of Kim The films of the year and the festival awards. Fame Novak.[...]ow Press, $16.95 Portraits of celebrated people make up this stun Corgi/[...]$21.95 (HC) Unique blend of reference and criticism, trade ning collection. Some of the titles in this list were published in The book captures the enigmatic essence of film news and succinct writing about the latest releases[...] |
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 | [...]Tax and the Film Industry ible for an investor to take part of his deduction making a trailer, and producer’s marketing The New Tax Concessions under Division 10BA and the other part under expenses.[...]Division 10B. The depreciation provisions of the An unfortunate effect of Section 124ZAO will C o n tin u e d f r o m p . 2[...]enough to rely on Division 10BA practice of authorising producers to invest Another provision enabling the Commis faces the prospect of some of his capital outlay surplus moneys from time to time held in the sioner to reduce the amount qualifying for a being entirely non-deductible notwithstanding production account, and applying the interest Division 10BA deduction is[...]within a few years, after the earning life of a film budget. Such earnings are assessable, bu[...]end. under Section 26AG; so for tax purposes the amount taken to have been expend[...]cannot be offset investor in producing, or by way of contribution attaches to the obtaining of the Division 10BA against them. to the cost of producing a film, if at any time the deduction[...]ssigns or agrees to assign the case may be, for the purpose of producing rely on Division 10BA is the loss of the benefit of investor’s interest in the film copyright. The assessable income from the exhibition of the Sections 23(q) and 23(r) in relation to foreign explanatory memorand[...]film to the public in cinemas or by way of tele source income derived from the film. t[...]m distribution agreement be treated as a way of television broadcasting; or tax[...]ce income which is subject to partial assignment of copyright? The section “the taxpayer derived assessable income tax in the country of source, wi.ll only apply to so seems calculated to deter producers and under an agreement entered into before the much of the foreign source income as, in the investors f[...]came into existence under which the opinion of the Commissioner, is attributable to agreements prior to completion of the film. If so, taxpayer agreed, upon the copyright coming the exhibition of the film in the country of the effect will be to retard the commercial[...]sly this is a severe limitation in a development of the industry. person t[...]be borne in mind cinemas or by way of television broad foreign country i[...]n appears to assume that the since much of the income under such a contract ing for a Division 10BA deduction to amounts in investors, as owners of the copyright, deal would be attributable to the exhibition of the respect of which the investor is at risk of loss directly with exhibitors and broadcasters. film in other countries[...](or producers on tion on the application of Section 23(r), which memorandum says in relation[...]e normally exempts the foreign source income of 124ZAM, that income arising from a pre-sale[...]resident investors. reduce the taxpayer’s risk of loss, but that the film, not under an agreement granting Instead of the exemptions enjoyed by other comment seems quite misleading in the light of exhibition rights. Will income from a dis taxpayers under Section 23(q) and 23(r) the Section 124ZAL. Moreover, as is typical of the tribution agreement satisfy the condition? taxpayer who has relied on Division 10BA and new legislation, the actual wording of Section It is worth noting that in the n[...]t referred to 26AG, which introduces a code for the assess investment is to receive un[...]asurer’s memorandum. ment of receipts from the use or disposal of film only a credit against his Australian tax for the Section 124ZAM provides that the investor[...]the taxpayer whose capital amount of tax actually paid on the foreign (the taxpayer)[...]sk, by expenditure on the film has qualified for any source income in the country of source. virtue of his investment, in respect of “ an equal deduction under Division 10BA, suc[...]ms that this treatment is regarded by the amount of the loss that, in the opinion of the are described without any of the narrow Government as a quid pro quo for the promised Commissioner, would be suffered by[...]evant income exemption (up to an amount of 50% of the payer by reason of the expenditure . . . if the under Section 1[...]investment that qualified for a Division 10BA relevant taxpayer were not to de[...]mitations on Division 10BA deduction) of the income derived by the investor other than ex[...]from the taxpayer’s interest in the copyright of The investor must be an Australian residen[...]ing with the one hand it is taking the film” . For this purpose, income is “excepted at the tim[...]re expended on the away a substantial and possibly more valuable income” if it is derive[...]e new tax con payer “ or another person” , and if the production account, the time[...]oner is satisfied that the agreement time of contribution or the time of outlay from investors or whether the Government will be was entered into for the purpose, or for purposes the account.[...]obbying from desperate that included the purpose, of enabling the The Commissioner must[...]that the producers seeking clear, honest and commer moneys to be expended by the taxpayer i[...]ntives to ensure the flourish ducing, or by way of contribution to the cost of owner or one of the first owners of the film copy ing of a successful Australian film industry. ★ produc[...]t owners in accordance with the provisions of the appear to him (as at the time of the investor’s ex Copyright Act, and not technically assignees penditure) to be likely[...]Where a taxpayer incurs a loss by reason of is H ooking fo r p ro p e rtie s . extent to which the investor is at risk. For the allowance of a deduction under Division I f you h[...]in relation to The cumulative deterrent effect of the pro revenue expenses associated with[...]be appreciated ment which has qualified for a deduction under ALAN SIMPSO[...]GPO BOX 1411M under Division 10BA for any part of the intended to apply simply to rev[...]MELBOURNE cannot write off under any other part of the Act investor to finance his investment, however it VIC 3001 such part of his capital expenditure in relation to appears to apply also to revenue-type expenses the production of the film as does not qualify for that are included in a normal film budget, suc[...]t is not poss as publicity costs, the cost of stills, the cost of[...] |
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 | [...]little world: getting a plot of land concentration and will turn on friends of Dick M ason’s, and John Duigan and so on. su stain ed p erform an ces over people like Tom Cowan and Lloyd C o n tin u e d f r o m p . 2 2 9[...]n their off-screen reverses as their regularly for years. While the rates[...]on-screen lines — which is great for of pay we offered were, of course, no real understanding of what they the way things were going. More[...]union minimum, they were are, but the song some of them are and more, you hear people talking thin[...]the inevit professionalism. Judy, for example, most other productions this year. her, although to the demonstrators ability of a nuclear conflict. That is also moved into the Cross and spent The decision of crew members to it is a song about writing and symptomatic not so much of a a good deal of time going around work on Winter was an expression change, and to hard-nosed intellec cynicism as a feeli[...]the area talking to prostitutes and of commitment to the project and, I tuals, perhaps, it is expressing some activities and actions of the 1960s heroin users.[...]m o r p h o u s were rather naive in the face of the The other main actress is Cath[...]message” . enormity of the problems, and the Downes who plays Gretel. I tested crew and the cast was terribly good But the little group of demon- machinery that is up there. fairly exhaustively for this part and on this film; it was the best I have ■strators a r e trying and, however, There are many references to th[...]rienced. I hope to have the cynical one might be of their likely sort of thing scattered within the She is known for her portrait of opportunity of working with a lot of effects, the attem pt itse lf is film.[...]Kathryn Mansfield in the play of them again. Most of the crew will important. For Lou, there is a sense[...]he wrote be doing one production after of personal loss — of Lisa and Rob As these references remain the and performed. She is a really another for the rest of this year. But — but equally, there is the loss of background, is there a danger of effective contrast to Judy.[...]emonstration the day scene-setting details and not of[...]y, there are important she committed suicide — and which major relevance?[...]up the creative reasons for doing a film Rob has recognized in his final[...]like this with a small crew. It takes scene. As for what will happen to They are just an at[...]a little of the pressure away from Lou, it is very much on t[...]here is something their appropriate amount of time Did you have a producer invo[...]ich the positive in seeing her with the and focus in the film. The thrust of when you were writing the[...]screenplay? Winter of our Dreams, which[...]m a n ces, this is v ita lly she is there as part of the group. towards the end of last year, I had important. Throughout the s[...]just finished the script and decided for a resolution on a personal[...]ach the producer. I talked How did the size of crew compare relationship level. So, while findin[...]with those you have worked with her joining of the group positive, in a[...]extra person in the art department, to Rob and Gretel, operates on a[...]unit runner, a second assistant very spontaneous and emotionally-[...]liked the script. and a clapper-loader. We had to vulnerable level. She[...]the shoot fairly quickly, as it was a mercy of a rationally-operating[...]very quickly. He has a very tight schedule for six weeks. But, w orld w hich is in c rea sin g l[...]strong artistic commitment and again, that was a bonus for me, as I reducing the mercy it shows for[...]as his role as an overall Dimboola in five and The Tres game.[...]etailed coverage than I So, despite the movements of the[...]had before. 1960s and 1970s, you think it is[...]ou started filming getting increasingly difficult for[...]production early for a number of whether it would have been worth West is[...]reasons. One was the availability of spending an extra $25,000 to do it level, it[...]How do you feel now? the right, with the election of people[...]udy in particular. lik e M a rg a ret T h atch er and Also, there was the availability of It would have meant an extra Ronald Reagan.[...]crew. We were sensitive to this $25,000 and that was a hell of a lot an unforgiving mood, and a really sudden rush of production, and if of money as far as that budget aggressively self-cen[...]th a budget like this by those who have the power and and the securities o f his present. Winter o f stru[...]pete with the [$362,000] the difference of $25,000 those who are in work.[...]offers that some of the larger or whatever is fairly small.[...]that this increasing Why did you cast Judy Davis and able to make to members of our Mouth would have benefited from sel[...]the additional kind of grain we got unwillingness to compromise for I wanted Judy for Lou after When making a low-[...]difficult is it to get together a spend a lot of money on Saturday Bridge and My Brilliant Career, good crew and cast? Night Fever to get the same look. Yes. One of the things that although Winter of our Dreams is For a film like Winter of our happened in the 1960s was the very ver[...]itory. She has a People like Judy and Bryan Dreams, 35mm is much more strong[...]to do a project appropriate. The centre part of the contributing to social change compelling to watch and she is they liked and accept the level of film is in Rob and Gretel’s home, through group activities. In the[...]ecame increasingly involved with a number of good that is the sort of people they are. Birchgrove, overlooking the Har preoccupied by personal issues, films, and I had for some time been The crew was probably[...]bour. The shooting style here is such as health and individual wanting to work with him. the project for a number of reasons. quite different to that used in Lou’s sexuality, and the exploration of Judy and Bryan have very Some were at[...]ong tracking- esoteric religions. It was the time of different approaches to acting, but and were perhaps keen to work with shots. It needs the sharp, clean look going off and making your own both have marvellous levels of the leading cast, others[...] |
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 | [...]Alienation and De-alienation A lienation and D e-alienation citing part of our work: th e p r o b l e m o f p o r t r a y with grimaces and grotesque goblins which in the[...]ered, of exciting entertainment for those bourgeois “With what methods and what means must the prepared to search outside themselves for power from the montage of psychic stimuli, influenced[...]ful emotions. by the reflexology of Pavlov — to his theory of it simultaneously shows no[...]he fact is, In the midst of this barely controlled poetic “ intellectual montage” in which he proposes to and the character’s attitude towards it, but also h o w outbreak, once his goal as an artist and a realize a “ rational” cinema, one that reaches the the author related to it, and how the author wishes revol[...]the spectator to receive, sense, and react to the himself theoretically and scientifically, to dis intellectually, that goe[...]reaffirmed his rejection of “those spectators who It is significant tha[...]2 on “composition” , conceived of as “a law for the leave their reason in the checkroom along with years of age and without having yet produced construction of a portrayal” . As his point of their overcoats” .22 He began to speak then of an anything of importance in the artistic realm,[...]inevitably arouse the complex of those very feelings[...]perience” an event through the exacerbation of not only deceptive, but constituted a real threat Thus, in the case of a portrayal where the conflictive elements. to the progress and development of society.[...]parent meaning of the portrayed act — that is,[...]theatre. But Brecht had the virtue of taking his form of social organization, Eisenstein found his[...]ideas the furthest, not only on the level of own concerns echoed among the members of the generated in the author[...]theoretical systematization, but also in terms of Leftist Art Front (LEF) who nourished an “ac[...]artistic achievement. tive hatred of art” . However, as the young artist[...]ter seeing the opera R i s e a n d F a ll matured and gained a better grasp of effective critical perspectiv[...]line showing how the values of dramatic theatre than destroy that kind of art completely, it was In[...]had been displaced by those of epic theatre. This more practical to utilize it: the motor of transformation within the viewer. little summary of his views on theatre es “The dethroned que[...]“This outline does not show us absolute points of But why not scrub floors for a while?[...], after all, a cer before it the task of “ restoring emotional[...]ven either to what arises through the emotions And if the young proletariat State was to fulfil all[...]Brecht does not, therefore, exclude the path of influence over hearts and minds.”14 laid out[...]ecific other words, a series of images provokes an ef[...]provide knowledge and lead them — by way of he later proposed that the new cinema should awakens a series of ideas (reason). Intellectual[...]himself prompted we see that Eisenstein, in spite of perhaps over the traditional s[...]him to formulate the need for a new kind of emphasizing the dominant role of the director, sion the forging of “ accurate intellectual con viewer, one capable of understanding the events began, little by little,[...]cepts from the dynamic clash of opposing pas deve[...]led to examine their own tradictions in the mind of the viewer” .'6 It is Ei[...]is not, vicarious pleasure of living through another’s ex conflicts, one who could be moved and then, so surprising. Of course, one must also[...]he developed this concept of intellectual montage is emotions play in the work of art, he rejects audience. This was based (quite c[...]first steps towards the for evoking them. He dedicates himself, sumption that it was an act of inevitable synthesis of art and science to which he always therefore, to the task of rationally expressing the ideological repercussio[...]legitimate than the constant improvement of kind of perception” within the viewer — the of film in such a way that one day, through his human relations (in the sense of social progress, same goal that Brecht pursued th[...]in the bosom of the bourgeoisie, his first work[...]out to reach the proletariat first of all. Speaking an essay, “The Structure of the Film” , in which traditio[...]rationally, he attempted to teach he posed “one of the most difficult problems in output is marked by flashes of lyricism, anarchy, constructing works of art, touching the most ex[...]them dialectics, and elevate their consciousness.[...]irony, scepticism and nihilism. In this way, he[...]struck out violently against the values of a didactic plays,[...]ssaulting it, vexing it of rigor and asceticism which markedly reduced in a given[...]r mates or simply to go to sleep, the process of artistic communication, one which might 20. “ The decisive factors of the compositional structure are be[...]taken by the author from the basis of his relation to Brecht then began to grasp the complexity of irritating moments we speak of can act to spur the phenomena. This dictates structure and characteristics, viewer into finding his own answer and consequently into through which the port[...]lity; that is, as long as a paralyzing none ofand emotional 23. Brecht,[...] |
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 | [...]Alienation and De-alienation Mahagonny and especially The Three-Penny himself on a level of immediacy which not only framework of the relationship between the spec Opera (1928),[...]cation but also true tacle and the viewer. Like a wish-fulfilling same resonance[...]emotional comprehension on the part of the dream, the erotic ecs[...]pture (1938). With this work, he attained a level of viewer.[...]or pathos provoked by the work of art can also maturity, complexity and efficacy which he was We have seen that Eisenstein also argued for a constitute productive moments i[...]works, those same works synthesis of art and science, and repeatedly had between human beings and the world around that made him the most important playwright of to defend himself against those w[...]cal moved “from image to feeling and from feeling mature human bei[...] elements into his plays with a masterful sense of to idea” , Brecht went a step further and crete, objective interes[...]enjoy a spectacle in the same the most important and noble function of theatre latter, in turn, purifies o[...]This is to “entertain” , to provide pleasure and diver Paradoxically, the more-impassioned Eisen state of “separation” or “ inebriation” can not sion, and that this function is its own justifica[...]ve work towards the only comfort and restore energy, but can actual tion, he developed in all its complexity his con logic of emotions, while Brecht, apparently ly generate it as well. cept of pleasure as a concrete, - historically- colder and in any case the more rigorous of the Every normal, mature pe[...]two, was won over by the emotion of logic. It suffers its consequences and enjoys it. Their lives type of pleasure determined by the circum[...]ased on reality; however, when they begin stances of our times — which he called the distancing devices and Eisenstein under pathos to gr[...]draw the two tendencies closer together and verging on a pathological state. These cases re tion of conflict, plot and even character iden which permit a bridging of the two. quire spe[...]t himself be carried away. our zeal for integration based on the common of spectator to performance: on the one hand, Instead, he would make use of them for his own principles which support[...]ontradiction ing, awareness of reality, de-alienation. Move he had outlined in[...]isted on the need to transcend the and has been seen. It is possible to find objective various times in the space of a single perfor “antinomy between reason and emotion” :27 causes for it in the disparate social contexts from[...]s movement which transports the “The separation of reason and feeling must be which each artist derived and in the different viewers from[...]ical extreme to another attributed to the effects of conventional theatre medium through[...]himself. It is not simply a matter of the different them from everyday r[...]is emphasis that one placed on reason and the theatre or vice versa[...]idealist “emotional understanding” of the spectacle. audience wi[...]acts embody a timeless truth, And, above all, there are certain mutually ex[...]exercise Brecht placed human beings historically and clusive points, particular aspects of each theory in alienation and de-alienation. m aterialistically defined who, w[...]the concrete rejected the state of ecstasy in the viewer, while the[...]the viewers are so moved that they confuse eating and drinking, housing, clothing and The divergence between the[...]revolutionary contribution to the theatre and, by 27. Brecht, Diario de trabajo, Nueva Vision,[...]nian pathos and Brechtian distanciation are but extension, to all kinds of spectacles that provide 1977, Vol. 1, March 4[...]us with an image or an illusion of reality. 28. Brecht, Escritos sabre teatro, p. 13[...]each The systematization of distancing devices per 29. Brecht, Diario de trabajo, Vol. 1, October 17, 1940, p. man isolated and emphasized a different phase. mits us to opt for a spectacle which acts, not as a 192.[...]In the broadest sense, both concepts are part of 30. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, La ideologia alemana,[...]substitute for reality, but as an illuminating, Pueblos Unid[...]ected the same approach to film or theatre and, conse penetrating instrument of that reality through Works, Vol. V, Internati[...]ontradictory that when one speaks of film or fiction, one and in opposition to each other. Neither concept speaks of illusion — not necessarily in the sense[...]to achieve fully the proposed of an error or deception, but as play. It can —[...]only brought about as the and it should — be an illusion that we are aware[...]result of a process in which both elements in of such from the beginning.[...]teract. Emotion, character identification and ec For an illusion to provide not only aesthetic[...]stasy, as well as reason, critical perspective and pleasure but also instruction and stimulus, it[...]dilute the position of one artist into the other, they portray: the life of man in society” .32[...]but to explain their reason and their passions Within the framework of the process, which and, in the last analysis, the consequences of takes place in those who mome[...]te poles in a dialec the role of viewer to reintegrate themselves sub[...]they also form part of each other. Their most between Brechtian and Eisensteinian points of[...]view helps us understand the process of the spec-,[...]tent with the present historical period and the tacle phase: that is, the[...]chosen medium of expression. The new rules of the game which give rise to[...]n this relationship not only allow for the spiritual[...]film, it is possible to make room for both posi enrichment of the viewer and a greater[...]d as different mo knowledge of reality through a (lived) aesthetic ments of the process in which they are inscribed: experience, but also favor the development of a dialectics of reason and passion within the critica[...]31. “To accuse me of tearing the emotional from the in r[...]I wrote: ‘Dualism in the sphere of feelings and rationale reality; they will confront it no[...]must be completely overcome by this new form of art. It a process of evolution — an evolution to which[...]n stein 's Battleship Potemkin. fire and passion, to dunk the abstract thinking process[...]into the boiling material of reality.’ ” M. Seton, op. cit.,[...] |
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 | Government and the Film Industry[...]with Conrad Veidt in a dual role; and the two dividual master works tend to co[...]charming and long forgotten comedies he made uniform[...]with Marsha Hunt, also star of Fred Zinnemann’s one film would catch a[...]Glove Killer (1941). These even the best of the batch, but one with unex heading a cast that includes Clark Gable and films, Affairs of Martha (1942) and Letter for pected qualities: Office Wife, Gentleman’s Fate, Jean Harlow, and has many of the qualities of Evie (1945), have considerable appeal and are a John Adolphi’s Central Park (1932)[...]aspect. The early sound period was one of the (1933), Le Roy’s Hi Nellie! (1933)[...]1932), Roy Stalin in May Day. As in Blessed Event and The were such devices as mixing, play-back and post Del Ruth’s Taxi (1932), with James Cagney, Nuisance, Tracy is seen to advantage and the synchronization developed, this[...]with film shows a surprisingly shrewd observation of optical printer, and with it the wipe dissolve, ap Edward G. Robinson or Lothar Mendes ’ Pay the interface of terrorism and the media. Hill’s peared, along with back projection and the short ment Deferred (1932), with Laugh[...]Also, unlike many 16mm copies of color and the American cinema for another 20 years. Experimenta[...]the films wide screen films, these black and white, stan Equally interesting is the early work of W.S. particularly fascinating, but it a[...]rately represent (Woody) Van Dyke, once associate of D.W. quality which makes them se[...]rom a couple made from Griffith, William Flaherty and Frederick Mur- programmers and viewers, by comparison with originals in an early color process and a handful nau. Van Dyke’s Trader Horn (1930) is[...]the post-1935 titles realized in the style of the so- cropped in reduction from the original sound- uniquely evocative and savage contrast to the called Hollywo[...]on-disc picture negatives. Some of the copies are usual Hollywood jungle saga. Even[...]also have their own curious virtually mint and appear never to have been on known is his 1933 Eskimo, virtually a return to set of taboos — no nudity, bad language or[...]h its inset titles translating violence — and yet they freely dealt with sub We ran that collection for months and came the speech of the authentic Eskimo actors. Joe jects[...]n, dope, nowhere near touching bottom, and yet the Sauers/Sawer also gives the performance of his communism. This, too, comes as a surprise to the pleasure of this was undermined by the career as the mountie.[...]edge that these were films without an photography and studio inserts, the film has a Indeed, one film records the process of decay audience. The same factors which meant that complex point of view and achieves several which overtook the filmmaking of the day — many had little televisi[...]’s Laughing Boy with Novarro. Made of the local screening situations. The National E[...]in 1934, it is set among the Navajo Indians and Film Theatre did do seasons of a half dozen of Prizefighter And The Lady of the same year also shot in tribal lands using more genuine Indians the films of each studio, but appears unequipped manages surpr[...]id any other major Hollywood film. for anything more ambitious. striking performances fr[...]The Weekend Australian ran an interview Huston and Otto Kruger, with boxer Max Baer by Novarro in an awful wig and Lupe Velez, and with Neil MacDonald and reported that, as a handling the lead.[...]material is broken by unconvincing result of their intervention, the copies had been MGM was not the studio for this macho stuff studio shooting. There is a glimpse of the old saved. I wish I shared their optimism. and Van Dyke found himself guiding Nelson Van Dyke in the rough lovemaking of Velez and The Australian Film Institute has reacted Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in operettas and William Davidson, but more character[...]apid beside Novarro’s song in front of the back projection to mount a touring exhibition of the material his earlier work, these are the film[...]star and Van Dyke’s own style vanished into a the use of titles which .are not immediately ap The collection, of course, continues to the studio gloss indistinguishable from the work of a proachable. This would fit with the plans to cir 1950s and, along with more familiar items, it has d[...]. culate a display of their vintage cinema equip oddities like the bulk of Jules Dassin’s career as Watching th[...]e (1942), largely re-shot in a a charm and a conviction which is lost in theG overnm ent and Film[...]fully than it has done in the past? and further Tariff Board Enquiry in 1977 as[...]should be budgeted to earn 60 per cent of for the international market have on the Board’s re[...]gs from international sales. development of an identifiable, national years — it should con[...]The report gives relatively assess the viability of the industry and the within the AFC to give it greater independence scant consideration to this aspect of the impact of its recommendations. As with its more and a greater semblance of a commercial opera film industry. con[...]the The Federal Government’s offering of a was shelved. authority to approve projects of $250,000 generous tax incentive to stimulate priv[...]rt in without ministerial intervention and involved the investment in the film industry will no doubt 1979 was commissioned in lieu of the second removal of AFC employees from the Common ensure an abundance of productions — at least Tariff Board Enquiry.5 P[...]wealth Public Service Act, the appointment of a until the new perks are withdrawn. Otherwise investigate the effectiveness of the Australian general manager and the abolition of full-time the Government has demonstrated little effort to Film Commission’s policies and operations, to commissioners. Unlike[...]ustry’s problems — inquire on various aspects of the industry and to Board Report, PMM’s recommendations were even the cost of the tax incentives does not explore the options for industry development, adopted by fede[...]The impact of these measures (if any) has they were promised. The problems of foreign- 1. tax amendments;[...]y the tax incentives saga, dominated distribution and exhibition, high 2. the state film corporati[...]iff Board Enquiry, have 3. alternative methods of development; and number of questions: been ign[...]the Federal Govern the particular funding needs of an industry that justified. ment’s gesture of holding this inquiry if it is part art and part commerce, and have been PMM concluded that “the Australian ma[...]ducted glossed over by the PMM report. The result of does not have the capacity to absorb the current under the auspices of the AFC rather than the flurry of film activity will reveal whether the output and cover its costs.” an independent board? maligned and heralded tax incentives kill the[...]2. How far will restructuring of the AFC go industry with kindness or besto[...] |
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 | [...]finds difficult and tends to think is Continued from p. 251 of knowledge. You have to[...]TO ADVERTISE IN remember that Grierson and others used to say: “ You can use a docu ment[...]conditions of the nation meant that the sons of the immigrants didn’t speak as their fathers did. And the lang[...]Ip m m m hammer. of national integrity. It became a[...]where there is a very It is a beautiful film, and particular way of speaking, and[...]a important precisely because it factor of national identity. reveals to me an Australia whi[...]Peggy Nicholls: Melbourne 830 1097 has an ethic, and real cultural young and facing enorm ous[...]through its danger. We have, in front of us, the people. It also shows the way most aggressive imperialism of this foreign penetration has become mod[...]Reason for deletions: O inserted into the life and culture of inhabitants to our 10 million. At[...]From Europe With Love: P. (a) PreviouslyReason for deletions: S (i-h -g )[...]shown on October 1980 list. of isolated people where selfishness be, but if[...]Trials of Alger Hiss (16mm): History on Film Com prevails[...]l Film s Refused Registration values of which it is not very aware.^ It could happen[...]Beast of Pleasure (Bete a plaisir): Makifilms, France,[...]ne: Crown Int’l, U.S., 2593.6m, [white] culture and population has population, which could be u[...](16mm): Not shown, U.S., 593.4m, a short history and is in formation. the power of this invading country, Films Registered With Elim[...]deal For R estricted E xhibition (R)[...]shown, U.S., 660.1m, 14th Man with the problems of national values. Only this way can it[...]ty. the imposition of another culture. Deletions: 56.3m (2 mins 3 secs)[...]i-h -g ) Newsfront is also a very well- And, after 10 or 20 years, we will be Reason for deletions: S (i-h -g )[...]Sensual Encounters of Every Kind (second directed film, and I really like the able to liberate ourselves[...]ich the film passes Vietnamese people did — and still A’sian Dist., S (f -m -g )[...]" with cuts (September 1976 list). ★ from black and white to color, from retain our national ide[...]ulation which hadn’t had a chance ments of the “pseudo” republic. “reality” .[...]e population that nationality still in formation, and a The Literacy Teacher is nothing conscious of their own values. But they really have heroic peo[...]which is about 100 years but a chronicle of an epoch in which with the revolution, they have seen among them, courageous and old. It is important to recognize our a whole section of the population their possibilities as a Cuban wit[...]which left behind its comforts to .^people, and regained the patriotic their real- national values. It is a cracies and history, its language. go to the countrysid[...]table conditions, without first American invasion and all the rain forth on a very young nation in special way of speaking Spanish. pay, and teach that part of the pop subsequent neo-colonialist govern dan[...]because identified as the epitome of English Last year, you played in Eliot’s[...]n stage. Continued from p. 253 and again. constraint on your choice of roles? Did you enjoy the change?[...]ly bound fond of and had done with the same notion of getting an industry going, days of MGM or even London to a degree by one’s nature. In a director and a lot of the same at least on a smallish scale . . . Films. .. way, Trim ingham and King compan[...]structure, and Lord Warburton in important play, actually, but I Joe Levine [producer of A Bridge I think it is all a bit defused. The the BBC’s Portrait of a Lady is think it is too difficult for most Too Far] did argue that those general purpos[...]ore. the plays of Ibsen, say The Master percentage of the film, which he[...]screen or television? a very high salary because of the system really had more going for it ironing out anything that suggested sim ple, g[...]e Inquisitor as sense of the practice of one’s craft, office and, therefore, be worth it.[...]re such a thing as a regularly really an overtone of aristocracy.[...]kets or what I don’t think there is now, of constraint on the sort of parts you ever, and taking a fair-sized profit because the Twickenham[...]very night — no matter how you if there is one. And it is a perfectly by a “pop” group, I think. No, one’s range know it anyway, and feel — and sustain it for two hours. fair way of seeing things. But it there is no mogul.[...] |
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Reproduced with permission of one of the founding editors, Philippe Mora |