Tag: Susie Porter

  • ‘Ladies in Black’ to debut at Sydney’s State Theatre in September

    ‘Ladies in Black’ to debut at Sydney’s State Theatre in September

    Bruce Beresford will return to Sydney to celebrate the Australian Premiere of LADIES IN BLACK at the historic State Theatre on 10 September 2018.

    Beresford will be joined at the Premiere by co-writer and producer Sue Milliken, stars from the film Ryan Corr, Alison McGirr, Shane Jacobson, Noni Hazlehurst, Susie Porter and Celia Massingham and producer Allanah Zitserman.

    Based on Madeleine St John’s best-selling novel, the film is set in in Sydney in 1959. The comedy-drama presents an Australia on the very brink of modernity, at a time of great change and optimism. A shy schoolgirl takes a summer job at the prestigious Sydney department store, Goode’s. There she meets the “ladies in black”, who will change her life forever.

    “Bruce and I have always believed this film will delight audiences,” said producer and co-writer Sue Milliken in a statement. “It is a life affirming story which is also a lot of fun and is so true to Madeleine St. John’s beautiful novel.”

    Also starring Julia Ormond, Angourie Rice, Rachael Taylor and Vincent Perez, it opens in Australian cinemas on 20 September 2018 from Sony Pictures Releasing.

  • New trailer for Bruce Beresford’s ‘Ladies in Black’

    New trailer for Bruce Beresford’s ‘Ladies in Black’

    Sony Pictures Releasing has revealed the first trailer for LADIES IN BLACK, based on Madeleine St John’s best-selling novel, The Women in Black. It releases in Australian cinemas on 18 October 2018. You can check out the trailer and poster below.

    Set in the summer of 1959, when the impact of European migration and the rise of women’s liberation is about to change Australia forever, shy schoolgirl Lisa (Angourie Rice) takes a summer job at the prestigious Sydney department store, Goode’s. There she meets the “ladies in black”, who will change her life forever.

    One of the things that the trailer showcases is the digital and practical recreation of Sydney in the late 1950s. For film lovers and historians alike, this is a terrific opportunity to see another side of the city we call home.

    It also stars Julia Ormond, Rachael Taylor, Ryan Corr, Vincent Perez, Alison McGirr, Susie Porter, Shane Jacobson, and Noni Hazlehurst

    Ladies in Black poster

  • ‘The Second’: Stan Original film will hit cinemas and streaming in July

    ‘The Second’: Stan Original film will hit cinemas and streaming in July

    Stan Australia has revealed that THE SECONDa Screen Queensland and Stan Original Feature Film will premiere in cinemas nationwide on July 5 and on Stan from July 20, where it will stream exclusively alongside the theatrical release. You can check out the launch trailer below.

    We first heard word of this “sexy thriller” back when it was announced as Stan Australia’s first original movie. Directed by Mairi Cameron, and written by Stephen Lance, it’s about two female friends whose lives entwine in the pages of an elusive second novel. It stars Rachael Blake, Susie Porter, Vince Colosimo, Martin Sacks and Susan Prior.

    READ MORE: ‘The Second’: Stan announces first original film with Screen Queensland

    Shot last year on location in Jimbour, north west of Brisbane, THE SECOND, this is the first feature from director Cameron. It is written and produced by Stephen Lance with Leanne Tonkes as producer. Mind Blowing World is handling the theatrical distribution.

    THE SECOND will made its Australian debut at the Gold Coast Film Festival, and will also screen at the Sydney Film Festival this year.

    READ MORE: SFF 2018: Australian cinema at the Sydney Film Festival

    THE SECOND joins a growing state of Stan Originals’ award-winning, fresh and diverse dramas and comedies including Romper Stomper; AACTA Award-winning and Logie Award-nominated drama series Wolf Creek; AACTA Award-winning and Logie Award-nominated series No Activity; the US version No Activity, in association with Funny Or Die, Jungle and Gary Sanchez Productions; One Night Stan and The Other Guy.

    Watch the official launch trailer below.

  • First images from Bruce Beresford’s ‘Ladies in Black’

    First images from Bruce Beresford’s ‘Ladies in Black’

    Sony Pictures Releasing have shared the first images of LADIES IN BLACK, the new comedy drama from Academy Award® nominated director Bruce Beresford. Based on Madeleine St John’s best-selling novel The Women in Black, the film is due for release in Australian cinemas on 18 October 2018.

    Set in the summer of 1959, when the impact of European migration and the rise of women’s liberation is about to change Australia forever, a shy schoolgirl (Lisa) takes a summer job at the prestigious Sydney department store, Goode’s. There she meets the “ladies in black”, who will change her life forever. Beguiled and influenced by Magda, the vivacious manager of the high-fashion floor, and befriended by fellow sales ladies Patty and Fay, Lisa is awakened to a world of possibilities. As Lisa grows from a bookish schoolgirl to a glamorous and positive young woman, she herself becomes a catalyst for a cultural change in everyone’s lives.

    At the start of production, Berseford had previous commented in a statement: “I’ve been obsessed with making a film of Madeleine St John’s The Women in Black since I first read the novel about 15 years ago, after being told about it by Clive James, who had also been at Sydney University with Madeleine and myself. I was attracted by Madeleine’s wit, her light touch, her deft characterisations and her portrayal of a Sydney I knew so well ‐ the Sydney of the 1950s and ‘60s ‐ a time when the whole of Australia began to change because of the influx of European migrants (most of them escaping a depressed war‐ruined Europe), who brought a whole range of talents (and invariably delicious cuisine) that created the successful multi‐cultural society of the Australia we live in today.

    The film features a massive ensemble cast that includes Julia Ormond, Angourie Rice, Rachael Taylor, Alison McGirr, Ryan Corr, Shane Jacobson, Noni Hazlehurst, Susie Porter, Luke Pegler, Nicholas Hammond (Spider-Man!) and Vincent Perez. Production began in October last year with shooting taking place in Sydney and the Blue Mountains.

    Berseford is, of course, best known as the director of Breaker Morant (1980), Driving Miss Daisy (1989), and Mao’s Last Dancer (2009). His most recent work was the TV film Flint (2017) starring Marin Ireland, Queen Latifah, and Betsy Brandt.

    Ladies in Black (2018)Ladies in Black (2018)

  • Australia’s ‘Cargo’ gets new trailer and poster from Umbrella

    Australia’s ‘Cargo’ gets new trailer and poster from Umbrella

    Umbrella Entertainment has dropped a new trailer and poster for Yolanda Ramke and Ben Howling’s superb film CARGO. While the rest of the world gets the film via Netflix on 18 May 2018, the festival success and rave reviews have led to the film garnering a theatrical release on 17 May 2018 around Australia. 

    Adapting their own Tropfest short of the same name, the feature film introduces us to Andy (Martin Freeman) and Kay (Susie Porter) and their daughter Rosie, surviving on a houseboat in the wake of a pandemic. When tragedy strikes, Andy has less than 48 hours to find a suitable caretaker for Rosie before he too succumbs to the virus.

    We reviewed the film in October last year at the Adelaide Film Festival, throwing a 4-star review at it: “A terrific spin on the ‘zombie’ movie, weaving traditional Aboriginal narratives into an unforgiving landscape for an experience that’s truly unique.”

    Umbrella’s Head of Theatrical Dov Kornits said “CARGO is one of the best and most commercial Australian films of the year. The reaction at the film’s World Premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival last year was overwhelming, and we saw first-hand how audiences respond to the emotional journey of this film.”

    CARGO is also bound for the Tribeca Film Festival in New York at the end of the month.

    CARGO poster

  • Review: Cargo

    Review: Cargo

    The zombie film has undergone some pretty radical changes between the late, great George Romero and The Walking Dead. What keeps us engaged with the stories is the core belief that humanity will ‘make it’ even in the face of adversity. Which is what makes Yolanda Ramke and Ben Howling’s CARGO less about zombies than it does about survival and love.

    Adapting their own Tropfest short of the same name, the feature film introduces us to Andy (Martin Freeman) and Kay (Susie Porter) and their daughter Rosie, surviving on a houseboat in the wake of a pandemic. When tragedy strikes, Andy has less than 48 hours to find a suitable caretaker for Rosie before he too succumbs to the virus.

    Cargo - Martin Freeman

    If Geoffrey Simpson’s breathtaking photography of outback South Australia doesn’t immediately distinguish CARGO from other films in the genre, then Ramke and Howling’s commitment to world-building will. They don’t simply place their lone wolf and cub in the middle of a familiar setting, but instead craft a whole background to the viral epidemiology and the response to it.

    This is never done with heavy-handed exposition, with Ramke’s occasionally episodic script dropping visual hints about the events that led to this. ‘First aid’ kits tell us all we need to know about how far the virus had advanced by the time we join Andy and Rosie. A key encounter with Vic (Anthony Hayes) and Lorraine (Caren Pistorius) show us what people are willing to do for the sake of normality in this fresh hell of post-apocalyptic Australia.

    Cargo

    Undoubtedly one of the points of difference is the seamless incorporation of Indigenous stories into the character arcs, principally led by the young Toohie, in search of the Cleverman (David Gulpilil) who she believes can save her own zombified father. Rather than come across as somehow tokenistic, these elements offer an alternative to the returning to ‘status quo’ before the plague.

    Freeman leads an excellent cast, taking his unlikely trajectory as a leading man and focusing all of his energy on a singular goal. Hayes and Pistorius in particular offer great counterpoints to his protectionism, and its great to see faces like Rabbit-Proof Fence‘s Natasha Wanganeen in small but significant roles.

    While there’s a very thin line that CARGO skirts along the edges of saviour and magical native narratives, it never gives into either. What Ramke and Howling manage to do is use our familiarity with the tropes and continue to ramp up the tension until we get to the inevitable but powerful conclusion. The result is a showcase for original Australian stories, and one of the most remarkable new takes on the genre.

    Adelaide Film Festival ADLFF

    2017 | Australia | DIR: Yolanda Ramke and Ben Howling | WRITERS: Yolanda Ramke | CAST: Martin Freeman, Anthony Hayes, Caren Pistorius, David Gulpilil, Susie Porter, Kris McQuade, Bruce R. Carter, Natasha Wanganeen | DISTRIBUTOR: Umbrella Entertainment Films (AUS) | RUNNING TIME: 105 minutes | RELEASE DATE: 6 October 2017 (ADLFF)

  • ‘The Second’: Stan announces first original film with Screen Queensland

    ‘The Second’: Stan announces first original film with Screen Queensland

    THE SECOND has begun production in south east Queensland this week, and is the first feature film to be developed through a partnership between Stan and Screen Queensland. Due to premiere in cinemas and Stan in 2018, it’s marked as as the first of the Queensland Originals to go into production.

    Starring Rachael Blake, Susie Porter, Vince Colosimo, Martin Sacks and Susan Prior, THE SECOND is about two female friends whose lives entwine in the pages of an elusive second novel. It’s directed by Mairi Cameron, with writer/producer Stephen Lance with Leanne Tonkes as producers.

    The distribution model that has worked well for Amazon (Manchester By the Sea) in the US appears to be emulated by Stan for their first original film, perhaps indicating a new way that Australians can see homegrown films. Netflix has also controversially been creating films specifically for their streaming network, but with limited theatrical screenings at festivals (such as Okja). Indeed, Netflix announced their first Australian original film, Tidelands, earlier this year.

    The psychological thriller will film in Western Downs region including at Dalby’s Jimbour House, Jandowae, Lake Broadwater, and in Brisbane.

    THE SECOND will have a national theatrical release via Mindblowing World, with the potential to be shown at film festivals across the globe, followed by an exclusive release on Stan in 2018.

  • Review: Hounds of Love

    Review: Hounds of Love

    From the opening frames of HOUNDS OF LOVE, writer/director Ben Young wants you to be uncomfortable. An extreme slow-motion pan across schoolgirls playing sport, a virtual freeze-frame shot to ominous music, sets the voyeuristic tone of this claustrophobic nightmare. It’s never easy viewing, but the skin-crawling normality that these characters apply to suburban mayhem will get under your skin.

    Set in Perth, Western Australia during December 1987, seventeen year old Vicki Maloney (Ashleigh Cummings) is heading out to a party when she is lured into the home of serial killer couple John (Stephen Curry) and Evelyn White (Emma Booth). As a series of humiliating tortures and ultimately death await her, she begins to view the power dynamic between the couple as something she can leverage to win her freedom.

    Hounds of Love

    HOUNDS OF LOVE plays in the borderlands between anticipation and horror. By the time Vicki is pulled into the White’s web, we have already formed an opinion on the horrors they are capable of based on nothing but the fetishisation of objects and blood splatters. There’s a constant threat of foreboding underneath the eternally bleak outlook on the White’s domestic ‘bliss,’ as “Nights in White Satin” by Moody Blues disturbingly peppers the soundtrack. Everything is designed to make the White’s actions ordinary, such as their ritualised breakfasts, with Evelyn presenting John with evenly spaced pieces of toast.

    Yet it’s also an undeniably difficult film to watch. Young uses familiar tropes to batter the audience into false hope, from a thwarted escape attempts to tense stand-offs with angry neighbours. The means of redemption is telegraphed early on, so some of the psychological cat-and-mouse games are just going through the motions. Even so, an especially icky sequence shows us very little as the pulsing soundtrack is shut off by a scream and a slammed door. Like Texas Chainsaw Massacre or Australia’s similarly themed Snowtown, it’s what we don’t see that horrifies us.

    Booth’s (Gods of Egypt) award-worthy performance is a revelation, from the impossible to read blank stare she presents as the opening titles drops, to the gut-wrenching emotional rollercoaster she also goes through. She is might be psycho-adjacent, but as her paranoia grows over John’s feelings for his prey, we feel for her as well. She’s a well-rounded character, a victim just as much as Vicki, and hints about her estranged children point towards John’s dominance. Even John gets his moments of pathos, bullied by the local drug dealers in the one part of his life he can’t control. Indoors, he is every bit a homegrown screen villain that consciously pushes against his past personas.  

    Which makes the final act something of an anti-twist. As the climactic scenes plays out over Joy Division’s “Atmosphere,” an otherwise white-knuckle scene gives way to expectations and an anti-twist. Despite this, HOUNDS OF LOVE unquestionably grabs our attention and holds it in place for the duration, and while it might be difficult to stare directly at it the whole time, it’s hard to walk away in silence. 

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2017 | Australia | DIR: Ben Young | WRITER: Ben Young | CAST: Ashleigh Cummings, Emma Booth, Stephen Curry, Susie Porter  | DISTRIBUTOR: Label Distribution | RUNNING TIME: 108 minutes | RELEASE DATE: 1 June 2017 [/stextbox]

  • Review: Don’t Tell

    Review: Don’t Tell

    While 2015’s Oscar winning Spotlight explored the journalistic investigation into child sex abuse in the Boston area by numerous Roman Catholic priests, Australia’s own disgraces had only recently been brought to light. The 2013 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard hundreds of tales of systemic cover ups of the crimes of child abusers. 

    Over a decade before, lawyer Stephen Roche represented a young woman who was abused while in the care of an Anglican preparatory school. This landmark case formed the basis of his subsequent book, and the inspiration for director Tori Garrett’s debut feature DON’T TELL. Following the suicide death of a former client, Roche (Aden Young) is initially reluctant to involve himself in the case of the troubled Lyndal (Sara West), but together they doggedly take on the Church in a quest for justice.

    Don't Tell - Sara West

    Earnestly told, the strength of DON’T TELL is in its unwavering commitment to the notion of truth. A few bits of legal terminology notwithstanding, the story is told through the accurate lens of a legal procedural. Like an extended episode of Law & Order: SVU, albeit told in a far less formulaic manner, the reality of the adversarial system and unreliable witnesses play an important role in the pursuit of justice. Yet the structure of the film never allows the Chruch’s defence barrister (Jacqueline McKenzie) to become the villain of the piece, with that role falling on the administrators of Lyndal’s school and perhaps more broadly on the system at large.

    Even with this courtroom setting, a result of the story being structured around a lawyer’s recollections, Garrett’s film allows plenty of opportunities for her leads to explore their characters. West, seen recently in episodes of Ash Vs Evil Dead, gives an award-worthy performance of the damaged Lyndal, equal parts fragile and fiery. The younger Lyndal, played at age 12 by Kiara Freeman, gets the benefit of cinematographer Mark Wareham’s (Jasper Jones) gorgeous shots of the Queensland countryside during wistful flashbacks. Aden Young’s understated performance brings real pathos to the characterisation, and works as a wonderful contrast to Jack Thompson’s warmly cantankerous barrister. 

    Other more subtle performances speak volumes as to why the culture of silence persisted for so long. Take Lyndal’s father, for example, who exhibits a taciturn guilt through his country-bloke barrier that is at the heart of a nation’s machismo. Her mother (the always wonderful Susie Porter) remained unaware of the clues Lyndal was sending out as a child.  Yet these all form a kind of guidebook for noticing signs of abuse, the kind that can be easily misunderstood.

    Which is where DON’T TELL becomes more than a simple narrative, and instead serves as a missive for standing up for those who slip through the cracks of an often inadequate system. Punctuated by the Missy Higgins song “Torchlight,” in which she advises “If anybody tells you not to tell, don’t listen,” it becomes an important film in helping victims understand their rights, and hopefully gives them additional strength to come forward and confront the criminals who abused them.

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]2017 | Australia | DIR: Tori Garrett | WRITER: Anne Brooksbank, Ursula Cleary, James Greville | CAST: Aden Young, Jaqueline McKenzie, Susie Porter, Sara West, Jack Thompson | RUNNING TIME: 108 minutes | RELEASE DATE: 18 May 2017 (AUS)[/stextbox]

  • First look at ‘The Turning’ trailer and poster

    First look at ‘The Turning’ trailer and poster

    Madman Films and CinemaPlus have revealed a first look at the film adaptation of Tim Winton’s best-selling novel The Turning, consists of 17 chapters that each features a different director and stellar cast.  Under the guidance of curator Robert Connolly (Balibo), first time filmmakers Mia Wasikowska and David Wenham make their directorial debut amongst acclaimed directors such as Warwick Thornton and Justin Kurzel.

    Australian talent starring in the film includes Rose Byrne, Hugo Weaving, Cate Blanchett, Miranda Otto, Brenna Harding, Richard Roxburgh, Callan Mulvey, Dan Wyllie, Oscar Redding, Robyn Nevin, Susie Porter, Wayne Blair, Mirrah Foulkes and numerous others.

    The Turning is a unique cinema event. Seventeen talented Australian directors from diverse artistic disciplines each create a chapter of the hauntingly beautiful novel by multi award-winning author Tim Winton. The linking and overlapping stories explore the extraordinary turning points in ordinary people’s lives in a stunning portrait of a small coastal community. As characters face second thoughts and regret, relationships irretrievably alter, resolves are made or broken, and lives change direction forever. This watershed film reinterprets and re-imagines the work for the screen.

    The Turning poster