Ali's Wedding.
Tiding audiences over until the official event returns in 2017, Adelaide Film Festival will run a mini-festival this October.
Known as Adelaide Film Festival Goes Rogue, the mini-fest will run October 27 — 30 and feature premieres, in-conversation events and a retrospective screening of Michael James Rowland's Lucky Miles..
Jeffrey Walker.s feature debut Ali.s Wedding. is set for its world premiere at the event. Australia.s first Muslim rom-com, the film is based on the life of actor, writer and comedian Osamah Sami, who also co-wrote the screenplay and stars as the titular character. There will also be a .work in progress. premiere screening of David Stratton.s Stories of Australian Cinema.
Festivities will also include the Australian premiere season of Lynette Wallworth.s Vr film Collisons (Oct 5 — 30), and a free talk by Greg Mackie, last year's Jim Bettison and Helen James Award recipient, at the Adelaide Festival of Ideas.
Tiding audiences over until the official event returns in 2017, Adelaide Film Festival will run a mini-festival this October.
Known as Adelaide Film Festival Goes Rogue, the mini-fest will run October 27 — 30 and feature premieres, in-conversation events and a retrospective screening of Michael James Rowland's Lucky Miles..
Jeffrey Walker.s feature debut Ali.s Wedding. is set for its world premiere at the event. Australia.s first Muslim rom-com, the film is based on the life of actor, writer and comedian Osamah Sami, who also co-wrote the screenplay and stars as the titular character. There will also be a .work in progress. premiere screening of David Stratton.s Stories of Australian Cinema.
Festivities will also include the Australian premiere season of Lynette Wallworth.s Vr film Collisons (Oct 5 — 30), and a free talk by Greg Mackie, last year's Jim Bettison and Helen James Award recipient, at the Adelaide Festival of Ideas.
- 9/26/2016
- by Jackie Keast
- IF.com.au
The Australian Director’s Guild has announced its nominees for the 2012 Adg Awards
Across the various categories, the nominations include Justin Kurzel for Snowtown, Matthew Saville for The Slap, Tony Krawitz for The Tall Man, Paul Scott for documentary series Outback Fight Club and Bruce Hunt for Subaru Xv’s Carwash.
The ceremony will be held as part of the Adg’s 30th anniversary at the Australian Maritime Museum in Sydney on May 11.
Kingston Anderson, general manager of the Adg said: “This will be the largest celebration and Awards ceremony the Adg has ever hosted and will be an opportunity to highlight the many achievements of Adg members over the past 30 years and the significant role they have played in the development of the Australian screen industry, as well as to honour the best directors of 2012.”
The nominations are:
Feature film
Brendan Fletcher - Mad Bastards
Justin Kurzel – Snowtown
Julia Leigh...
Across the various categories, the nominations include Justin Kurzel for Snowtown, Matthew Saville for The Slap, Tony Krawitz for The Tall Man, Paul Scott for documentary series Outback Fight Club and Bruce Hunt for Subaru Xv’s Carwash.
The ceremony will be held as part of the Adg’s 30th anniversary at the Australian Maritime Museum in Sydney on May 11.
Kingston Anderson, general manager of the Adg said: “This will be the largest celebration and Awards ceremony the Adg has ever hosted and will be an opportunity to highlight the many achievements of Adg members over the past 30 years and the significant role they have played in the development of the Australian screen industry, as well as to honour the best directors of 2012.”
The nominations are:
Feature film
Brendan Fletcher - Mad Bastards
Justin Kurzel – Snowtown
Julia Leigh...
- 4/16/2012
- by Colin Delaney
- Encore Magazine
Monday sees critically acclaimed Showcase drama Tangle begin filming in Melbourne.
Returning with it’s fantastic line-up of cast members; Justine Clarke, Catherine McClements, Matt Day, Lincoln Younes, Blake Davis, Kick Curry and Kat Stewart, the series will continue to explore the intertwining relationships between two generations of family.
Tangle is produced by John Edwards and Imogen Banks for Southern Star with Executive Producer Kim Vecera, who called it one of their ‘a landmark series’ when speaking with Encore about Cloudstreet, recently.
In a statement, Chief Executive Officer of Showtime Australia, Mr Peter Rose said, “After the immense success of Tim Winton’s Cloudstreet, we are thrilled to continue our commitment of commissioning world-class Australian drama.”
Written by Fiona Seres and Tony McNamara and to be directed by Emma Freeman (Love My Way, Hawke, Offspring) and Michael James Rowland (Spirited, Lucky Miles), Tangle is being produced with investment by Austar.
Returning with it’s fantastic line-up of cast members; Justine Clarke, Catherine McClements, Matt Day, Lincoln Younes, Blake Davis, Kick Curry and Kat Stewart, the series will continue to explore the intertwining relationships between two generations of family.
Tangle is produced by John Edwards and Imogen Banks for Southern Star with Executive Producer Kim Vecera, who called it one of their ‘a landmark series’ when speaking with Encore about Cloudstreet, recently.
In a statement, Chief Executive Officer of Showtime Australia, Mr Peter Rose said, “After the immense success of Tim Winton’s Cloudstreet, we are thrilled to continue our commitment of commissioning world-class Australian drama.”
Written by Fiona Seres and Tony McNamara and to be directed by Emma Freeman (Love My Way, Hawke, Offspring) and Michael James Rowland (Spirited, Lucky Miles), Tangle is being produced with investment by Austar.
- 6/17/2011
- by Colin Delaney
- Encore Magazine
The Australian Directors Guild has published its list of nominees for this year’s awards, with Jeremy Sims, Rachel Perkins, David Michod, Claire McCarthy and Robert Connolly competing in the feature film category.
Television nominees include Tony Tilse for Underbelly: The Golden Mile, Peter Andrikidis for East West 101 and Amanda Brotchie for Lowdown; there are also nominations for environmental efforts and online projects.The wiinners will be announced on September 23 at Star City, Sydney.
This is the full list of nominees:
Feature Film
Beneath Hill 60 Jeremy Sims Bran Nue Dae Rachel Perkins Animal Kingdom David Michôd The Waiting City Claire McCarthy Balibo Robert Connolly
Television Mini series
East West 101: Atonement Peter Andrikidis The Circuit II: Sorry Business Steve Jodrell The Circuit II: Of Mice and Men James Bogle
Documentary Feature
Indonesia Calling: Joris Ivens in Australia John Hughes Three Boys Dreaming Michael Cordell The Burning Season...
Television nominees include Tony Tilse for Underbelly: The Golden Mile, Peter Andrikidis for East West 101 and Amanda Brotchie for Lowdown; there are also nominations for environmental efforts and online projects.The wiinners will be announced on September 23 at Star City, Sydney.
This is the full list of nominees:
Feature Film
Beneath Hill 60 Jeremy Sims Bran Nue Dae Rachel Perkins Animal Kingdom David Michôd The Waiting City Claire McCarthy Balibo Robert Connolly
Television Mini series
East West 101: Atonement Peter Andrikidis The Circuit II: Sorry Business Steve Jodrell The Circuit II: Of Mice and Men James Bogle
Documentary Feature
Indonesia Calling: Joris Ivens in Australia John Hughes Three Boys Dreaming Michael Cordell The Burning Season...
- 8/30/2010
- by Miguel Gonzalez
- Encore Magazine
SINGAPORE -- The Third Asian Festival of First Films tapped two productions for its best film award Monday night, jointly awarding the prize to India's "Dharm" and Australia's "Lucky Miles".
Director Bhavna Talwar's "Dharm" is about a devout Hindu priest who unknowingly adopts a young Muslim boy and the consequences that engenders. "Lucky Miles", Michael James Rowland's bittersweet comedy about the plight of illegal immigrants in Australia, also garnered the best producer award for Jo and Lesley Dyer.
The festival's directing nod went to Kabir Khan for his film "Kabul Express", also from India, about two Indian journalists in search of the ultimate news scoop in Afghanistan: meeting the Taliban. "Kabul Express" also scooped the Foreign Correspondents Assn. Purple Orchid Award.
The best male actor award went to Batzul Khayankhyarvaa for his role in "Khadak", as a young Mongolian nomad confronted with his destiny to become a shaman, while the award for top female performance went to India's Mamatha Bhukya for her role in "Vanaja" as a young girl who dreams of escaping her poverty through dancing but faces sexual abuse from her employer's son.
Director Bhavna Talwar's "Dharm" is about a devout Hindu priest who unknowingly adopts a young Muslim boy and the consequences that engenders. "Lucky Miles", Michael James Rowland's bittersweet comedy about the plight of illegal immigrants in Australia, also garnered the best producer award for Jo and Lesley Dyer.
The festival's directing nod went to Kabir Khan for his film "Kabul Express", also from India, about two Indian journalists in search of the ultimate news scoop in Afghanistan: meeting the Taliban. "Kabul Express" also scooped the Foreign Correspondents Assn. Purple Orchid Award.
The best male actor award went to Batzul Khayankhyarvaa for his role in "Khadak", as a young Mongolian nomad confronted with his destiny to become a shaman, while the award for top female performance went to India's Mamatha Bhukya for her role in "Vanaja" as a young girl who dreams of escaping her poverty through dancing but faces sexual abuse from her employer's son.
- 12/5/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
SYDNEY -- Two films that deal with Australian immigrant stories -- one set in the postwar era and one in the 1970s -- dominated the nominations for the Australian Film Institute Awards.
Actor Richard Roxburgh's directorial debut, "Romulus, My Father", swept the board, earning mentions in every category and doubling up in the best actor and supporting actor categories for 15 nominations, while Tony Ayres' semi-autobiographical "The Home Song Stories" also was nominated in every category for a total of 12 nominations.
"Romulus" is based on the life of Australian philosopher Raimond Gaita and his embattled migrant family in postwar Australia, while "Home Song" centers on Rose, a glamorous Shanghai nightclub singer who struggles to survive in '70s Australia with two young children.
Both are up for best feature, where they will compete with Matthew Saville's "Noise" and Michael James Rowland's "Lucky Miles".
"Home Song"'s 12 noms continues the film's domination of Australia's awards season: This month it received nine nominations at the people's choice-style Inside Film Awards; Joan Chen is up for best actress at next month's inaugural Asia Pacific Screen Awards; and it was chosen last week as Australia's entry in the foreign-language Oscar race.
Actor Richard Roxburgh's directorial debut, "Romulus, My Father", swept the board, earning mentions in every category and doubling up in the best actor and supporting actor categories for 15 nominations, while Tony Ayres' semi-autobiographical "The Home Song Stories" also was nominated in every category for a total of 12 nominations.
"Romulus" is based on the life of Australian philosopher Raimond Gaita and his embattled migrant family in postwar Australia, while "Home Song" centers on Rose, a glamorous Shanghai nightclub singer who struggles to survive in '70s Australia with two young children.
Both are up for best feature, where they will compete with Matthew Saville's "Noise" and Michael James Rowland's "Lucky Miles".
"Home Song"'s 12 noms continues the film's domination of Australia's awards season: This month it received nine nominations at the people's choice-style Inside Film Awards; Joan Chen is up for best actress at next month's inaugural Asia Pacific Screen Awards; and it was chosen last week as Australia's entry in the foreign-language Oscar race.
- 10/25/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Related story: MEIFF acknowledges local talent
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- Paul Haggis' "In the Valley of Elah" closed the inaugural Middle East International Film Festival here Friday, while Nic Balthazar's "Ben X" took home the Black Pearl Grand Jury Prize for best feature at a glittering gala award ceremony held at the Emirates Palace.
Also honored Friday were Michael James Rowland's "Lucky Miles", which took the award for best new director (feature film); Nadine Labaki's "Caramel", which garnered its female cast a joint best actress award; and Karl Markovics "The Counteirfeiters", which received the Black Pearl for best actor. Paul Taylor's "We Are Together" earned the documentary nod.
The Black Pearl Award carries a cash prize of AED300,000 ($81,710).
"I think they gave the grand jury prize to 'Ben X' because the production value was so strong and solid as much as the vision, and on every level they succeeded," festival director Jon Fitzgerald told The Hollywood Reporter. "And 'Lucky Miles' ... this guy had a lot of different actors that he brought together in remote locations, not an easy film to pull off, a good choice for new filmmaker."
Producer Gundny Hummelvoll and director Hisham Zaman of "Bawke" received the Black Pearl for top short film.
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- Paul Haggis' "In the Valley of Elah" closed the inaugural Middle East International Film Festival here Friday, while Nic Balthazar's "Ben X" took home the Black Pearl Grand Jury Prize for best feature at a glittering gala award ceremony held at the Emirates Palace.
Also honored Friday were Michael James Rowland's "Lucky Miles", which took the award for best new director (feature film); Nadine Labaki's "Caramel", which garnered its female cast a joint best actress award; and Karl Markovics "The Counteirfeiters", which received the Black Pearl for best actor. Paul Taylor's "We Are Together" earned the documentary nod.
The Black Pearl Award carries a cash prize of AED300,000 ($81,710).
"I think they gave the grand jury prize to 'Ben X' because the production value was so strong and solid as much as the vision, and on every level they succeeded," festival director Jon Fitzgerald told The Hollywood Reporter. "And 'Lucky Miles' ... this guy had a lot of different actors that he brought together in remote locations, not an easy film to pull off, a good choice for new filmmaker."
Producer Gundny Hummelvoll and director Hisham Zaman of "Bawke" received the Black Pearl for top short film.
- 10/20/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
SYDNEY -- The Australian film and TV awards season kicked off Wednesday with the announcement of nominations for the annual Inside Film awards, with the Australia -Singapore co-production Home Song Stories dominating the 2007 lineup.
Tony Ayres' semi-autobiographical film about a Chinese singer and her family who settle in Australia in the '70s picked up nine total noms, including best feature film, best director, best actor (Joel Lok) and best actress (Joan Chen).
The IF Awards are considered the people's choice awards, voted by readers of Inside Film magazine, although the awards for best director, best editing, best production design and best sound are voted on by industry professionals in each craft category.
Also vying for best picture are Dee McLachlan's independently-financed and produced thriller The Jammed, about the sex slave trade in underground Melbourne, which was nominated in a total of six categories, and Michael James Rowland's gentle comedy about Iranian and Cambodian refugees, Lucky Miles, which received five nominations.
Tony Ayres' semi-autobiographical film about a Chinese singer and her family who settle in Australia in the '70s picked up nine total noms, including best feature film, best director, best actor (Joel Lok) and best actress (Joan Chen).
The IF Awards are considered the people's choice awards, voted by readers of Inside Film magazine, although the awards for best director, best editing, best production design and best sound are voted on by industry professionals in each craft category.
Also vying for best picture are Dee McLachlan's independently-financed and produced thriller The Jammed, about the sex slave trade in underground Melbourne, which was nominated in a total of six categories, and Michael James Rowland's gentle comedy about Iranian and Cambodian refugees, Lucky Miles, which received five nominations.
- 10/12/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
SYDNEY -- With his debut feature Lucky Miles, Michael James Rowland leaches the politics out of the prickly topic of illegal immigration and turns out an unexpectedly amiable comedy. The narrative -- which follows a motley crew of asylum seekers stumbling through the Outback -- lacks momentum, and the film falls short of the Gods Must Be Crazy-style mayhem for which it appears to be shooting. But its congeniality is disarming, and the themes are slyly conscience-pricking.
Inspired by a number of real-life events, Miles features a cast of unknowns, which, together with frequent subtitles, could limit accessibility upon its local release. It's already proven to be a festival favorite in Australia, and Cineclick Asia has picked it up for international distribution.
Setting the action in 1990, Rowland harks back to a time before the nation, or at least its government, seemed to lose any sense of compassion for the Third World refugees seeking sanctuary on its shores. It starts on a cheery note as a group of Cambodians and Iraqis wade ashore after being dropped off by Indonesian people-smugglers on a deserted stretch of coastline in Western Australia.
Their joy soon turns to despair as the boat chugs off. They crest the sand dunes to discover, instead of the promised bus stop to Perth, an abundance of what is referred to by locals as "bugger-all."
They splinter into two groups: Iraqis heading one way into nothingness, Cambodians the other. The Cambodians are quickly picked up by police after they stop at an isolated pub to ask directions, though a fateful trip to the outhouse means one, Arun (Kenneth Moraleda), escapes the roundup. Meanwhile, a bunch of laconic army reservists on border patrol have been dispatched to investigate a suspicious fishing boat in the area.
They pick up Arun's tracks but soon discover three sets of footprints: A couple of only slightly strained plot contrivances have thrown the Cambodian together with one of the Iraqis, a structural engineer named Youssif (Rodney Afif), and Ramelan (Srisacd Sacdpraseuth), the Indonesian boat owner's ne'er-do-well nephew.
The ill-matched trio unites around a single water bottle and shared survival instincts, though the two refugees wonder how much they can trust a man who sadly informs them that his mother died before he was born. Arun's sketchy map gives no sense of the unpopulated vastness that surrounds them and sends them off on an elliptical odyssey that sorely tests their uneasy alliance.
Underpinning the naive slapstick and droll verbal clashes is a deep seam of humanism that makes its point about tolerance of difference gently. Heated debate about national identity and the ethics of detention have no place in this comic fable, and neither do cultural stereotypes.
Discord is rooted in the need for survival in a strange and hostile environment. Even the army trackers seem motivated by a desire to save the skins of the bumbling trespassers.
Moraleda is particularly effective as the politely resolute Arun, dogged in his determination to reach Perth and the father he has never met. Afif gets great comic mileage out of a centerpiece scene involving a cobbled-together Jeep.
Indian composer Trilok Gurtu contributes a dramatic percussive score, while cinematographer Geoff Burton does a terrific job conveying the enormity of the brutally beautiful West Australian landscapes.
LUCKY MILES
Cineclick Asia
Short of Easy
Credits:
Director/co-producer: Michael James Rowland
Screenwriters: Helen Barnes, Michael James Rowland
Producers: Jo Dyer, Lesley Dyer
Executive producer: Michael Bourchier
Director of photography: Geoff Burton
Production designer: Pete Baxter
Music: Trilok Gurtu
Costume designer: Ruth de la Lande
Editor: Henry Dangar
Cast:
Arun: Kenneth Moraleda
Youssif: Rodney Afif
Ramelan: Srisacd Sacdpraseuth
O'Shane: Glenn Shea
Greg: Don Hany
Tom: Sean Mununggurr
Muluk: Sawung Jabo
Abdu: Arif Hidayat
Running time -- 104 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Inspired by a number of real-life events, Miles features a cast of unknowns, which, together with frequent subtitles, could limit accessibility upon its local release. It's already proven to be a festival favorite in Australia, and Cineclick Asia has picked it up for international distribution.
Setting the action in 1990, Rowland harks back to a time before the nation, or at least its government, seemed to lose any sense of compassion for the Third World refugees seeking sanctuary on its shores. It starts on a cheery note as a group of Cambodians and Iraqis wade ashore after being dropped off by Indonesian people-smugglers on a deserted stretch of coastline in Western Australia.
Their joy soon turns to despair as the boat chugs off. They crest the sand dunes to discover, instead of the promised bus stop to Perth, an abundance of what is referred to by locals as "bugger-all."
They splinter into two groups: Iraqis heading one way into nothingness, Cambodians the other. The Cambodians are quickly picked up by police after they stop at an isolated pub to ask directions, though a fateful trip to the outhouse means one, Arun (Kenneth Moraleda), escapes the roundup. Meanwhile, a bunch of laconic army reservists on border patrol have been dispatched to investigate a suspicious fishing boat in the area.
They pick up Arun's tracks but soon discover three sets of footprints: A couple of only slightly strained plot contrivances have thrown the Cambodian together with one of the Iraqis, a structural engineer named Youssif (Rodney Afif), and Ramelan (Srisacd Sacdpraseuth), the Indonesian boat owner's ne'er-do-well nephew.
The ill-matched trio unites around a single water bottle and shared survival instincts, though the two refugees wonder how much they can trust a man who sadly informs them that his mother died before he was born. Arun's sketchy map gives no sense of the unpopulated vastness that surrounds them and sends them off on an elliptical odyssey that sorely tests their uneasy alliance.
Underpinning the naive slapstick and droll verbal clashes is a deep seam of humanism that makes its point about tolerance of difference gently. Heated debate about national identity and the ethics of detention have no place in this comic fable, and neither do cultural stereotypes.
Discord is rooted in the need for survival in a strange and hostile environment. Even the army trackers seem motivated by a desire to save the skins of the bumbling trespassers.
Moraleda is particularly effective as the politely resolute Arun, dogged in his determination to reach Perth and the father he has never met. Afif gets great comic mileage out of a centerpiece scene involving a cobbled-together Jeep.
Indian composer Trilok Gurtu contributes a dramatic percussive score, while cinematographer Geoff Burton does a terrific job conveying the enormity of the brutally beautiful West Australian landscapes.
LUCKY MILES
Cineclick Asia
Short of Easy
Credits:
Director/co-producer: Michael James Rowland
Screenwriters: Helen Barnes, Michael James Rowland
Producers: Jo Dyer, Lesley Dyer
Executive producer: Michael Bourchier
Director of photography: Geoff Burton
Production designer: Pete Baxter
Music: Trilok Gurtu
Costume designer: Ruth de la Lande
Editor: Henry Dangar
Cast:
Arun: Kenneth Moraleda
Youssif: Rodney Afif
Ramelan: Srisacd Sacdpraseuth
O'Shane: Glenn Shea
Greg: Don Hany
Tom: Sean Mununggurr
Muluk: Sawung Jabo
Abdu: Arif Hidayat
Running time -- 104 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 7/19/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
- Baltasar Kormákur’s "Myrin" (Jar City) has won the Grand Prix Crystal Globe, the highest prize at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival. The Icelandic filmmaker (The Sea) and A Little Trip to Heaven) tells the tale of a desperate man is trying to locate the genetic origin of his little daughter’s brain illness. A solitary detective is investigating the murder of an old eccentric whose eventful past changes this seemingly ordinary case into a bizarre mystery. Both storylines gradually become intertwined in Baltasar Kormákur’s latest film – the biggest Icelandic box-office hit of all time. The 42nd Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (June 29th to July 7th) also handed out top prizes to Norwegian director Bard Breien won best director for his film, The Art of Negative Thinking. Acting prizes went to Elvira Minguez for her role in Pudor and Sergey Puskepalis for his role in Simple Things.
- 7/9/2007
- IONCINEMA.com
MELBOURNE -- Two keenly awaited Oz premieres have been selected to open and close next month's Adelaide Film Festival.
The festival will open with "Lucky Miles", the feature debut of writer-director Michael James Rowland, and close with "Dr. Plonk", the latest from maverick helmer Rolf de Heer.
Described as an accessible, entertaining and slightly absurd political farce, "Lucky Miles" is the story of an Iraqi and two Cambodian refugees who search for democracy in the Australian outback after being abandoned by an Indonesian fishing boat.
De Heer's "Dr. Plonk" is a slapstick comedy in the style of silent-screen comedies and marks a change of direction from de Heer's widely applauded, indigenous-language "Ten Canoes". It stars Magda Szubanzski, a well-known film and television comedian in Australia.
While Adelaide trails well-established film festivals in Sydney and Melbourne in terms of profile and attendance, it has become a significant player in the production industry thanks to its associated investment fund.
In partnership with federal and state agencies, distributors and private investors, it has backed such films as "Look Both Ways" and "Ten Canoes" among others for premieres at the festival.
The festival will open with "Lucky Miles", the feature debut of writer-director Michael James Rowland, and close with "Dr. Plonk", the latest from maverick helmer Rolf de Heer.
Described as an accessible, entertaining and slightly absurd political farce, "Lucky Miles" is the story of an Iraqi and two Cambodian refugees who search for democracy in the Australian outback after being abandoned by an Indonesian fishing boat.
De Heer's "Dr. Plonk" is a slapstick comedy in the style of silent-screen comedies and marks a change of direction from de Heer's widely applauded, indigenous-language "Ten Canoes". It stars Magda Szubanzski, a well-known film and television comedian in Australia.
While Adelaide trails well-established film festivals in Sydney and Melbourne in terms of profile and attendance, it has become a significant player in the production industry thanks to its associated investment fund.
In partnership with federal and state agencies, distributors and private investors, it has backed such films as "Look Both Ways" and "Ten Canoes" among others for premieres at the festival.
- 1/16/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
SYDNEY -- The Film Finance Corporation Australia gave four new feature films the "amber light" and greenlighted five documentaries during its March board meeting Wednesday. Provisional investment approval went to The Home Song Stories, in which producer Liz Watts (Walking on Water) again teams with writer-director Tony Ayres; The Tender Hook, from producer Michelle Harrison and writer-director Jonathan Ogilvie; To Hell and Bourke, from producer Ross Hutchens and Aboriginal auteur Richard Franklin; and Lucky Miles, from producer Jo Dyer and writer-director Michael James Rowland.
- 3/24/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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