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Tuesday
Jul062021

REMEMBERING RICHARD DONNER

One of Hollywood’s most successful filmmakers, Richard Donner has passed away at the age of 91. He leaves behind a body of work that spans both the golden era of television and the ‘birth of the blockbuster’ film period; productions that remain in the hearts and minds of audiences all over the world.

Hollywood is mourning his loss, as Donner was not only a huge creative force but a mentor to a generation of actors and directors. “Being in his circle was akin to hanging out with your favorite coach, smartest professor, fiercest motivator, most endearing friend, staunchest ally and, of course, the greatest Goonie of all,” Steven Spielberg told Variety, referencing their collaboration on 1985’s The Goonies. “He was all kid. All heart. All the time. I can’t believe he’s gone, but his husky, hearty laugh will stay with me always.”

Recalling his finest work is a challenge, as he was so prominent across so many years on so many projects. But below are perhaps the works that will be remembered as, ‘classic Richard Donner’...

‘NIGHTMARE AT 20,000 FEET’ Episode; THE TWILIGHT ZONE (1963)
Donner was a key figure in the burgeoning television sector. Beginning with a 1960 episode of the western Zane Grey Theatre, he would helm everything from The Loretta Young Show and Gilligan’s Island to The Rifleman and Perry Mason. His most famous small-screen effort would become the 1963 Twilight Zone classic, ‘Nightmare at 20,000 Feet’, a taut white-knuckler, written by Rod Serling and Richard Matheson, starring William Shatner as the nervous flyer convinced a monster is trying to bring down his flight.

SARAH T. - PORTRAIT OF A TEENAGE ALCOHOLIC (1975)
Donner’s status in the television sector ensured he was called upon during the TV-movie boom of the 1970s. With hundreds of hours of episodic work and such small but respected films as X-15 (1961), Salt & Pepper (1968) and Lola (1970) to his name, Donner stepped up to direct the issues-based drama, Sarah T. - Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic (1975) with Linda Blair in the title role, for Universal Television.

 

THE OMEN (1976; pictured above, Donner with star Gregory Peck
Producer Alan Ladd Jr. shepherded Donner into the project, convinced the predominantly television work of the director captured the intelligence and empathy needed to elevate the ‘devil child’ narrative into something unique. With veteran DOP Gilbert Taylor, Donner embraced the larger screen format and crafted a horror classic that became the director’s first box office blockbuster.

 

SUPERMAN THE MOVIE (1977; pictured above, Christopher Reeve and Donner on-set)
Richard Donner attacked his new assignment with gusto after producers Ilya and Alexander Salkind secured the director. Donner hacked away at the script he had inherited, excising much of Mario Puzo’s campiness and working with an uncredited Tom Mankiewicz to bolster the scale and iconography of the DC Comics’ figurehead. Also, it was Donner who worked hardest to secure a reluctant Gene Hackman as ‘Lex Luthor’. Under Richard Donner, Superman became the highest-grossing Warner Bros film in the studio’s history.

 

LADYHAWKE (1985; pictured above, Michelle Pfeiffer and Rutger Hauer in Ladyhawke)
Alongside his 1992 drama Radio Flyer, Ladyhawke is perhaps Donner’s most personal, invested work. The fantasy/romance Ladyhawke stumbled out of the gate at the box-office but has become one of his most beloved films. Lensed by the great Vittorio Storaro and boasting a stunning cast in their photogenic prime (Rutger Hauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Matthew Broderick), it was nevertheless a difficult production; Hauer and co-star Leo McKern clashed bitterly, and the remote locations were not suited to a large-scale Hollywood shoot.

THE GOONIES (1985; pictured above, Steven Spielberg, left, on-set with Donner)
Donner shot first-unit footage on this adventure classic; producer Steven Spielberg oversaw second-unit production. The collaboration proved commercial filmmaking gold; The Goonies captured cast lightning in a bottle, hit big with the family audience of the day, and earned generations of fans in its home entertainment afterlife. Upon learning of his passing, Goonies star Sean Astin tweeted, “Richard Donner had the biggest, boomiest voice you could imagine. He commanded attention and he laughed like no man has ever laughed before. Dick was so much fun. What I perceived in him, as a 12 year old kid, is that he cared. I love how much he cared.”

 

LETHAL WEAPON (1987)
In the wake of its goofball sequels, it is largely forgotten that Donner’s original buddy-cop classic beats to a very dark heart; a story centred by a grief-stricken, PTSD sufferer whose dangerous unpredictability and crippling melancholia sees him, in one shocking scene, come within a trigger-finger’s twitch of blowing his own head off. Donner was maturing as a director within the American studio system; with Lethal Weapon, he fearlessly subverted the genre, redefining it for future generations. “I will sorely miss him, with all his mischievous wit and wisdom,” Mel Gibson said, in a press statement, “He was magnanimous of heart and soul, which he liberally gave to all who knew him.”

The SCHULER-DONNER Productions
Alongside his beloved wife Lauren Schuler (already a Hollywood force with hits Mr Mom, Pretty in Pink and St Elmo’s Fire to her name when she paired with her husband professionally), Donner’s integrity and commercial flair came through in his work as producer. Under their Schuler Donner banner, the couple oversaw Three Fugitives (1989), Free Willy (1993) and its sequels; Kevin Kline in Dave (1993); Bulworth (1998), with Warren Beatty; the Tom Hanks/Meg Ryan romancer, You’ve Got Mail (1998); Oliver Stone’s Any Given Sunday (1999); and, the vast X-Men franchise, starting with Bryan Singer’s 2000 original.

Thursday
Jun102021

SIX EARLYBIRD TITLES EARN SYDNEY SCIENCE FICTION FILM FEST PLACEMENT

Australian director Gerald Rascionato’s raptor romp CLAW and American indie voice Ben Tedesco’s lockdown timeloop drama NO TOMORROW are the latest feature films to be confirmed for the 2021 Sydney Science Fiction Film Festival.

The second annual celebration of speculative cinema is to be held November 3-14 at the Actors Centre Australia in Sydney’s inner-west. The features join the previously-announced VERA DE VERDAD, from Italian director Beniamino Catena, in a program that has grown to 15 sessions in 2021.

Starring Chynna Walker and Richard Rennie as best friends being stalked in an abandoned ghost town by prehistory’s favourite villain, CLAW is the second feature for Rascionato, following 2017’s deep sea creature feature, Cage Dive. Hailing from the far north coast of New South Wales, the LA-based Rascionato and collaborator Joel Hogan shot in remote desert locations through the 2020 pandemic to ready their film for a 2021 release.

Enjoying its Australian Premiere in Sydney, NO TOMORROW is a true auteur’s vision, with Tedesco (pictured, right) starring and assuming production duties on his handmade but very polished film; it was shot on his iPhone 11Pro, GoPro Hero 7 Black and using screen recordings from his MacBook Pro. Filming took place in his parents home in Arizona and en route to his own home in Los Angeles, and all points in between, with the entire shoot adhering to COVID-19 lockdown conditions.      

Also selected from the earlybird submission period were four short films that will debut for Aussie audiences in Sydney:

HIRAETH (Dir: Ryan Andrews; UK). Commander Amber Jones’ mission is to research newly discovered life on Europa. She has courted controversy her entire career, not least because Commander Jones is the daughter of child killer Crista Jones, the first woman to be hanged in Britain in 70-years. Smashing loss and sadness into the limitations of life itself, Hiraeth is a deeply human story of consciousness and loss, raising harrowing questions about the nature of love and the things we do to honour it.

TODAY (Dir: Andrew Jaksch; Aust) Today is November 19th, 1969, and this young successful couple find themselves in a vicious cycle, trapped within an impenetrable void. He wields his power and entitlement like weapons, can she distinguish one day from another? And how does she survive?

BEACON (Dir: Anna Twomey; Aust; pictured, top). Goose is a 16-year-old ‘charger’, a girl whose body produces massive amounts of electricity due to nuclear side-effects. Alongside her warrior older sister, Goose must fight for her freedom from violent raiders, hunting her with the aim of harvesting her energy.

DAILY DRIVER (Dir: Jonathan Adams; Aust; pictured, above). Shane and V.I.N.C.E, a dying old Holden made sentient through artificial intelligence, navigate life and love from polar perspectives.

The 2021 Sydney Science Fiction Film Festival will run November 3-14 at the Actors Centre Australia in Leichhardt, Sydney. 
Web: https://www.sydneysciencefictionfilmfestival.com.au/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SydneyScienceFictionFilmFestival
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SydSciFiFest

 Pictured: Chynna Walker in Claw

Sunday
May162021

PREVIEW: 2021 IRANIAN FILM FESTIVAL

The 2021 Iranian Film Festival (IFFA) commences its nationwide rollout this week, with ten films in competition as part of this year’s celebration of Iranian film culture. Despite a 12 month period that has proved particularly difficult for international filmmakers, the 10th edition of IFFA features a complex and layered selection of award-winning features from the Islamic Republic.

“We have had a very strong year for Iranian cinema, enabling us to present a fantastic and diverse range of films for our audiences in Australia,” said Festival Director, Armin Miladi. “In particular, we are delighted to present three films from female filmmakers.” 

Foremost among these is the Opening Night film Titi, written, produced and directed by Ida Panahandeh. Steeped in Iranian Gypsy lore, it is the story of a friendship between a hospitalized, critically ill physicist, working on a theory about black holes, and an eccentric hospital housekeeper named TiTi, possessed of supernatural powers that she must use to take her new friend on a mystical odyssey.

A highlight of the IFFA will be writer-director Massoud Bakhshi’s Yalda: A Night of Forgiveness, a searing based-on-fact drama about a young woman, sentenced to death for an act of self-defence, who seeks atonement on live television. The riveting and superbly acted film, which poses a critical moral conundrum born out of a theocratic system that disfavours women, won the Grand Jury Prize (World Cinema Dramatic) at last year’s Sundance Film Festival. 

  

Other highlights of the capital city screening schedules include The Wasteland (Dasht-E Khamoush; pictured, below right), an incisive look at life on the outskirts of Iranian society focussing on a brick factory supervisor who acts as go-between for the workers and the boss; Majid Majidi’s Sun Children, the story of 12-year-old Ali and his three friends who survive doing small jobs and committing petty crimes to make fast cash; and Shahram Mokri’s Careless Crime (Jenayat-E Bi Deghat; pictured, top), in which a modern-day plot to burn down a movie theatre replicates a historical tragedy that occurred four decades ago, as Iranian society was teetering on revolution.

A sidebar presentation will focus on the culture and music of Southern Iran, the region adjacent to the Persian Gulf, as seen in two rousing documentaries - Raha Faridi’s Chicheka Lullaby, a study of the alternative artist and musician Ebrahim Monsefi, and Mohsen Nesavand’s Sebaloo, which highlights the African music culture of the region and one of its greatest proponents, Mahmoud Bardaknia. The centrepiece of the sidebar will be Manijeh Hekmat’s recent hit, Bandar Band (pictured, above right), a music-infused twist on a road movie that follows a band's day-long journey across a flooded Tehran landscape.

 IFFA 2021 will also honour late director Kambuzia Partovi with a screening of his final film, The Truck (Kamion), the story of a Yazidi woman and her two children escaping an ISIS massacre. Partovi was a writer and co-director, known for Closed Curtain (2013), winner of Best Screenplay at Berlinale 2013; Café Transit (2005), his nation’s submission for the Foreign Film Oscar race; and, his groundbreaking family film Golnar (1989), which used music and puppet animals to help the lives of villagers in rural Iran. The director died on November 24, 2020 in Tehran due to complications from Covid-19.

The 10th Iranian Film Festival unfolds in Perth at Luna Cinemas Leederville, 20 - 26 May; in Brisbane at the Elizabeth Picture Theatre, 27 May - 2 June; at Cinema Nova in Melbourne, 3 - 9 June; and in Sydney at Dendy Newtown, 10 - 16 June. An online version of the festival will be held from 20-30 June 2021 Australia-wide. Full session and ticketing information can be found at the festival’s Official Website.

Thursday
Apr012021

JUDI DENCH ‘LITTERBOX SHUFFLE’ INCLUDED ON CATS 4K DISC RELEASE

Director Tom Hooper has confirmed that ‘Litterbox Shuffle’, a dance number shot at a reported cost of $1.5million but cut from the final edit of his 2019 adaptation CATS, will be reinstated in sequence for the 4K Blu-ray disc.

An original composition penned for the much-maligned bigscreen version of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s stage phenomenon, ‘Litterbox Shuffle’ features Dame Judi Dench in her role as ‘Old Deuteronemy’, scratching at an uncleaned litter tray in the hope of finding some fresh granules upon which to defecate. 

 

The scratching leads to a modern dance/tap number which also includes James Cordern (as ‘Bustopher Jones’) and Rebel Wilson (as ‘Jennyandots’), reportedly burying themselves in the waste tray and, at one point, laying prone as Hooper’s camera captures them making ‘litter angels’ with their arms and legs.

More to follow….


 

Friday
Mar122021

OUR DEFINITIVE DOZEN FROM SWIFF 2021

It has become Australia's most in-demand destination festival. In the coastal paradise of Coffs Harbour, Screenwave International Film Festival (SWIFF, as it has become affectionately known) is a showcase of the planet's greatest cinema, but also a cultural event that is part of what defines its hometown. In 2021, co-directors Dave Horsley and Kate Howat up the ante again - acting great Jack Thompson has been announced as festival patron; mentors, technicians and industry insiders will guide fresh minds through the inaugural SWIFF Create initiative; and, executive chefs Richie Dolan and Carla Jones prepare a degustation menu celebrating food and wine from the region. All this before you even get to the film program!

SCREEN-SPACE Managing Editor Simon Foster will be present again when the 2021 event kicks off April 14, broadcasting his podcast Screen Watching from the festival and co-hosting the Sci-Fi Trivia Night. He'll also be watching a lot of films; here's his list of 12 must-see SWIFF sessions. All ticketing and session details can be found at the festival's official website...

A BOY CALLED SAILBOAT: In Cameron Nugent’s magical-realism masterpiece, soulful innocence and communal humanity combine with soaring potency. A little boy with a ukulele and love for his grandma can transform the world, the implication being we all can if we just believe we can. The perfect post-2020 movie. Soundtrack to be performed live The Grigoryan Brothers. 

ALIENS: James Cameron’s perfect sequel (perhaps the best ever?) remains a riveting, raucous celebration of speculative cinema - a lean, mean exercise in myth-building and world-crafting, in which macho, militaristic posturing is countered by themes of maternal love and female empowerment. With acid-seeping aliens, to boot! (Pictured, right: Sigourney Weaver and Michael Biehn in Aliens)   

COLLECTIVE: The Romanian health care sector harbours corruption, greed and tragedy; organised crime and political heavies are profiteering, while patients die. Director Alexander Nanau’s insider account of the journalists fighting to expose and dismantle their country’s systemic avarice is thrilling, inspiring and terrifying; ranks alongside All the President’s Men and The Post as one of the great films about the power of the press.

 

THE PAINTED BIRD: A young Jewish boy’s odyssey of horror through Eastern Europe’s combat-ravaged landscape makes for a WWII story of merciless heartbreak. Recalling the hell-on-earth nihilism of Elem Klimov’s 1985 Russian masterpiece Come and See, Václav Marhoul’s shattering monochromatic nightmare is the festival’s bravest programming choice, the kind of film that reinforces SWIFF is a truly global film celebration.  

DAVID BYRNE’S AMERICAN UTOPIA: In 1984, David Byrne fronted arguably the greatest concert film ever made in Stop Making Sense. Thirty-seven years later, he delivers another one. Directed by Spike Lee, American Utopia - a filmed-version of Byrne’s hit Broadway concert series - is as purely joyful, soul-enriching, thought-provoking American performance art as has ever been created. 

JUMBO: It’s called objectophilia, the sexual attraction to and emotional connection with an inanimate object. Noémie Merlant, star of one of the great cinematic romances, 2019’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire, this time focuses her passion towards ‘Jumbo’, the latest crowd-pleasing attraction at the local amusement park. I kid you not, this is the most unlikely and wonderful love story of the year.

LITTLE GIRL: Bring Tissues #1 - Sébastien Lifshitz captures a life both coming into focus and transitioning in Little Girl, the story of Sasha, an eight year-old assigned male at birth who wants to live as a girl. She possesses a soaring spirit, a strength of character that is called upon in the face of social intolerance and institutional bias. Documentary filmmaking at its finest

STRAY: Bring Tissues #2 - A study in displacement as seen from the perspective of three homeless dogs living on the streets and in the abandoned buildings of a Turkish metropolis. Elizabeth Lo’s flea-on-the-wall camera provides a glimpse into lives seeking companionship, acceptance and basic needs; the smallest moment of kindness carries with it immense change.

BREAKER MORANT: With apologies to Mad Max 2, Starstruck and Don’s Party (another Beresford joint), my favourite Australian film of all time is Breaker Morant. In telling the story of our nation’s most famous scapegoat, Bruce Beresford forges one of the great anti-war films, filled with iconic moments (“Rule 303!”), extraordinary craftsmanship and career-defining performances. (Pictured, right; l-r, Lewis Fitzgerald, Bryan Brown, Edward Woodward and Jack Thompson in Breaker Morant)     

THE TROUBLE WITH BEING BORN: As we hurtle towards a technological singularity - a world in which robotics and humankind share a consciousness - what responsibilities do we, the ‘creators’, have to the sentient ‘beings’ we have made in our own image? Director Sandra Wollner poses this question in her stark, often shocking, deeply complex near-future sci-fi drama. The best debut feature of 2020.      

MEANDER: Challenge your latent claustrophobia with Mathieu Turi’s white-knuckler, in which a young woman (Gaia Weiss, from TV’s Vikings) must navigate booby-trapped tunnels to discover why and how she ended up in this predicament. A little bit ‘Saw’, a little bit ‘Cube’, but so drenched in its own unique style and narrative flourishes it stands on its own merits.

 

WHITE RIOT: London, late 1970s. Ultra-right racist Martin Webster’s National Front party, spouting Nazi rhetoric and backed by some high-profile music industry types (um...f*** you, Eric Clapton), is polluting the minds of U.K. youth. To fight this scourge, a small group of anti-fascist activists create Rock Against Racism, and a counter-movement is born. Rubika Shah’s inspiring account of the rise of goodness amidst a nation’s ugliest era is enraging, enlightening and ultimately, exhilarating.

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