Sunday, 15 July 2018

NZIFF Q&A - Dog's Best Friend, Eryn Wilson

NZIFF Q&A - Dog's Best Friend, Eryn Wilson


My film is....
Dog’s Best Friend. It’s a documentary about one man, Jacob Leezak and his life’s work; to rehabilitate man’s best friend, one dog at a time. Whilst Jacob works with domestic pets with minor behaviour issues, he specialises in working with the powerful breeds that we often see in the media for all the wrong reasons.

The moment I'm most proud of is....
Getting into the NZIFF. To be recognized by a festival with the international appeal and profile the NZIFF has, it’s both a privilege and acknowledgement of what we’ve achieved with this indie film.
NZIFF Q&A - Dog's Best Friend, Eryn Wilson

The reason I carried on with this film when it got tough is.....
I trained as an actor at Toi Whakaari. I come from a free-lance background. I’ve never had a 9 to 5 job. The down side is there’s nobody else there to fire you for not turning up to work. The upside though is that you develop a thick skin, a resourcefulness, a discipline and a self-belief that if you’re passionate enough about something and you’re prepared to stick with it, you can create your own opportunities and your own work. You don’t need anybody else.

The one moment that will resonate with an audience is.......
I won’t give that moment away. Safe to say that because my protagonist Jacob is so good at what he does, it would be easy for an audience to be lulled into the expectation that Jacob is in control of these dogs at all times and nothing unexpected ever happens in the film….. That’s all I’ll say…

The hardest thing I had to cut from this film is........
An old draft of the film had it opening with a scene of a dog being put to sleep. He’d been sentenced to death after biting someone and not being registered and his owner basically gave him up. A sad but typical story. Bad ownership of the first degree. I treated the scene delicately, knowing it would be controversial but I felt passionate that my audience needed to filter the rest of the film through that opening scene. Well. Festivals wouldn’t go near it with a barge pole. After being knocked back by several festivals I finally took out that scene and we got into the very next festival we entered. Safe to say, it’ll be left in the director’s cut.

The thing I want people to take from this film is ......
Dogs are like children. They are not born bad. They simply reflect the time and attention their owners choose to put into them. And it takes a very special person who’ll dedicate their lives to helping these damaged dogs. That person is Jacob Leezak.

The reason I love the NZIFF is.......
I’ve always loved the NZIFF. The wide range of films, the numerous venues, the buzz of the festival, especially at night. Buying a 10-trip ticket and dissapearing into the festival for a couple of weeks is invigorating, inspirational and opens the mind. It’s truly wonderful and a credit to Bill and the team.

What the 50th NZIFF means to me is......
Its testament to the quality, integrity and popularity of the NZIFF. And what better way to mark my feature film directorial debut than to be a part of the 50th anniversary. I’ll never forget it.

Doctor Who Series 11 trailer is here

Doctor Who Series 11 trailer is here




The BBC has confirmed the first look at the new series of Doctor Who, with an exclusive new trailer shown during the BBC coverage of the World Cup final. 

It comes as American magazine Entertainment Weekly brings us the first look at the new Doctor Who series starring Jodie Whittaker as the 13th incarnation of the Time Lord.

There are also exclusive first looks at the new TARDIS team, led by Jodie Whittaker too.
Doctor Who Series 11 trailer

Doctor Who Series 11 trailer

Doctor Who Series 11 trailer


NZIFF Q&A - Merata Heperi Mita

NZIFF Q&A - Merata Heperi Mita


My film is....
A family story about a solo mother of 5 who struggled through social upheaval to pioneer a cinematic art form.

The moment I'm most proud of is....
Sharing the bittersweet nostalgia I feel when revisiting my family’s past.
Merata

The reason I carried on with this film when it got tough is.....
I felt a huge sense of responsibility to my family to portray their story with integrity, and because the story was too inspirational to give up on.

The one moment that will resonate with an audience is.......
My sister’s honesty around the sacrifice she and her family made as children while their mother documented some of the ugliest aspects of New Zealand’s society.

The hardest thing I had to cut from this film is........
One of my brothers passed away unexpectedly two weeks after I interviewed him, so cutting anything out from him was very hard for me as I felt that seeing him on screen was a way of being close to him again.

The thing I want people to take from this film is ......
Great people aren’t necessarily motivated by ambition or political ideals. Smaller, more intimate drives such as love of family, can be just as powerful.

The reason I love the NZIFF is.......
Over the years the festival has entertained me, educated me, horrified me, made me laugh, broken my heart, helped me escape, made me want to make a difference. It’s where I go to feel the full spectrum of the human experience.

What the 50th NZIFF means to me is......
The continuation of the annual ritual of trying to juggle life around obscure film showings during times where I probably should be taking care of more pressing responsibilities…  Long may it continue!

Saturday, 14 July 2018

NZIFF Q&A - Bludgeon - Ryan Heron and Andy Deere

NZIFF Q&A - Bludgeon - Ryan Heron and Andy Deere


NZIFF Q&A for directors: Bludgeon – Ryan Heron and Andy Deere

My film is…. 
One of only a handful of things that I’ve made that I want people to see. Ryan Heron
A unique little documentary that I hope people find entertaining. Andy Deere

The moment I'm most proud of is…. 
Starting.  That first step of turning down commercial work, social commitments etc and instead driving to the Taranaki to film an old school pal swing an axe around outside an old bread factory is kind of tough one.  After that we were both invested and knew we were onto something so it had momentum.  (RH) 
Finishing. We’ve both invested so much time and energy into making this film it’s pretty exciting to get to show it to people.  (AD)
Bludgeon

The reason I carried on with this film when it got tough is…..  
Other than Andy’s erratic mood swings it was plain sailing.  (RH)
I was already in too deep and I’m generally afraid of Ryan. (AD)

The one moment that will resonate with an audience is……. 
For me I think the whole film is about finding your team. Whatever you’re into (no matter how bizarre that may seem to other people ) there’s bound to be others out there who are into it too. (AD)

The hardest thing I had to cut from this film is……..  
Some of the Polish national team talking (in Polish) about getting aroused in armour.  I had a Polish friend translate it. (RH)
Some of the other success stories from the team in Denmark but unfortunately it felt too confusing to introduce too many characters. (AD)

The thing I want people to take from this film is …… 
Nothing, it’s not really an issue focused film.  I’d just hope they’re entertained. (RH)
I just want people to be entertained.  (AD)

The reason I love the NZIFF is…….  
Well this year it’s because they’ve given us the opportunity to show our film off in the cinema. (RH)
I love being able to blindly turn up to a film I know nothing about and know i’m pretty much guaranteed to see something interesting. (AD)

What the 50th NZIFF means to me is……  

They’ve been going as long as my parents have been married then.  I can’t imagine it’s been easy. (RH)

NZIFF Q&A - Malcolm Turner, Animation Now

NZIFF Q&A - Malcolm Turner, Animation Now


Welcome back to the NZIFF - and part of the festival run's Akl aftermath - how did that come about?
There have been a couple of animation programs in the general body of the NZIFF for a long time. When I first started programming those in the mid 1990s we were getting 400-500 submissions and everything was shown from 35mm film prints or betacam tapes. Nowadays we get in excess of 4,000 submissions and the entire line-up can be moved around on a pendrive. So, basically, expanding those couple of programs into a stand-alone festival is a response to trying to ensuring our animation programming continues to be representative of what’s happening out there in the big wide world of independent animation while at the same time acknowledging that New Zealand was one of the last countries to not have a specialist animation festival.

What are the trends this year for animation?
Every year there are random thematic ‘trends’ that pop up for no discernible reason – this year, for some reason, there were a number of films depicting Rubic cubes – who knows why. In terms of technique and technology there aren’t really any emerging trends above and beyond recent times but I get a sense that there is a growing divide between the countries who are funding and those who are not funding animation as an artform.
NZIFF Q&A - Malcolm Turner, Animation Now

4000 films vied for a place in the festival - this seems up on in the past - where was the most prolific in terms of animation and why do you think this is?
Europe and funding are the two short answers to those questions. Beneath that though it is a big more complex. Some countries – the USA for example – have never really funded auteur/independent animation which is why they produce so little. Funding in China hasn’t appreciably increased but animation is being taken a lot more seriously there and a really interesting community of true auteur animators are emerging. In other places (particularly New Zealand, Australia to some extent the UK) the concept that animation can be made and appreciated as an artform is giving way to a more purely utilitarian understanding of what animation is. Another angle is that prolific doesn’t automatically equal quality. Some countries produce and distribute vast numbers of often pretty ordinary work whereas Estonia produces 15-20 professional films a year, virtually all of them ranging from very good to outstanding.

I'm really pleased to see a handmade section in there as well - what's your favourite from this one and why?
Oh-hoh, I learned a long time to be – ahem – judicious about picking individual favourites. That said, “Negative Space” seems to be a firm favourite pretty much everywhere it screens (and appears to have stolen the hearts of some of the people at NZIFF HQ) plus it was nominated for an Oscar. And “After All” is one of the most genuinely affecting films I think I’ve ever seen and it took out both Best Of The Fest and Best Australian at MIAF in Melbourne a couple of weeks ago, the first time any film has taken that double prize there.

What's the state of NZ animation? Are we doing enough, could we do more?
I think it’s fair to say it’s patchy. The best of it (such as the films “Tom” and “Trap” screening in the festival this year) are world class though. And it seems to alternate between high tech CG and  authentically kiwi DIY in terms of technique. Are we doing enough? Hard to know if you are asking the right guy or not. Of course not is my reflexive answer. I don’t buy for a moment that the level of support for animation in New Zealand is because of its size; one only has to look at Estonia (a country with half the population of New Zealand and nothing like the per capita GDP) to see what a committed society can do when it wants to. But I would say that and there’s more to it. Just lifting the lid and pouring in tsunami of cash probably wouldn’t change a hell of a lot and every country has differing priorities in what it supports. Sometimes those priorities shape social/cultural debate, sometimes they respond to it. My hope is that the rising priority we are giving to animation by establishing a stand-alone animation festival will help raise the profile of animation as an artform in this country and ultimately that is the kind of thing that is going to encourage wider respect for the artform, inspiration for coming generations of animators and perhaps a reappraisal of whether certain animated projects are worth supporting financially. Somebody also needs to sit down and make sure that what good animation that is produced here is properly distributed through the international animation festival network – that would be one significant kick-start that would probably bear early fruit.

Fresh Eyes on Estonia seems to be a recognition of a country that regularly produces material - what do you think motivates their content?
Estonia is probably the most culturally rich society I know. I’m not necessarily talking about huge museums, giant opera halls and lavish events; I’m talking about a society-wide understanding that everything gets filtered through a cultural prism simply as a way of life. And this happens at pretty much every strata. It produces a kind of social honesty that you don’t really encounter much and it’s an all-permeating part of the air they breathe. It’s a kind of ‘smart’ that has to be inhaled. They have become acculturated to incorporating a level of cultural expression into pretty much everything they do and this shows in their animation particularly because animation is such an expressive artform. When you blend in the geo-political history of Estonia you find older animated films with an astonishing texture and nowadays with that awful history behind them you see an emerging generation that are taking the artform in new directions.


Are there any films you couldn't get and what were they?
Not really. There was a great film called “Happiness” that I had originally included in the line-up but some issues with the music rights emerged and I elected to replace it. The task is more about which films to leave out – it’s great having the expanded Animation NOW! structure, it gives me lots more real estate to programme work into but even so, there are some really great films that there just weren’t room for.

I'm guessing you want the animation section to inspire new fans and also budding animators ?
Absolutely. And I also want people to understand that animation – along with all its other uses and permutations – is also a credible artform in its own right AND one that certainly has not been overrun with computers in the way that most people think it has.

What's the best Animated film in your programme and why?
I think I’ll take the 5th on that one

And finally, what's the one film from the rest of the programme you're excited for and why?
If I had to just pick out one I think it would probably be “Manivald” by Chintis Lundgren. It was co-produced with the National Film Board of Canada which always helps but in Lundgren we are witnessing the emergence and rapidly maturing mastery of a really unique filmmaker and one who is confidently leading the way not just for female animators but for those who create and develop interesting and complex female characters within the narrative structure of their work. Luckily I secured “Manivald” last year the minute I saw it at the NFB in Montreal before it was released so that made it easy but it is a film I would have fought to the wire to secure for Animation NOW!

Top Of The Lake: China Girl DVD Review

Top Of The Lake: China Girl DVD Review


New Zealand director Jane Campion's sequel to the first series of Top Of The Lake relocates the action from New Zealand to Aussie shores.

Once again, The Handmaid's Tale Elisabeth Moss returns as Detective Robin Griffin to investigate a case of a body washing up in Sydney's Bondi Beach.

But as ever, the crime masks so much more of what actually happened - and as Griffin begins to dig in to the story, a deeper and more disturbing story awaits.
Top Of The Lake: China Girl DVD Review

Top Of The Lake: China Girl is a studious 7 part series that revels a lot in its mood and atmospherics than the fluidity of its story.

That's not to say that with a cast that includes the likes of Gwendoline Christie and Nicole Kidman, it doesn't sparkle in places - and certainly, Moss delivers a performance that's powerful. But it's the story itself which becomes more problematic the more it goes on.

Top Of The Lake: China Girl may lack the power that came with the first series and its complete narrative, but as a drama, it's almost up there with some of the best.

NZIFF Q&A - Shirley Horrocks

NZIFF Q&A - Shirley Horrocks


My film is Paul Callaghan: Dancing With Atoms.
Paul Callaghan: Dancing With Atoms.

The moment I'm most proud of is Making Paul’s boyhood come alive to explain how a boy became a scientist. I had great stories from his brother Jim, from a boyhood friend, and from Paul’s own writing, and I used dramatization including cartoons and old photos to tell the story of a curious boy who revelled in freedom and experiment.  At a large preview screening it was great to hear the audience laugh at Paul’s escapades.

The reason I carried on with this film when it got tough is
That I thought Paul was an extraordinary guy and I wanted people to know the range of his achievements. In another country he’d be on our stamps and banknotes, he’d be a household name like Sir Ed Hillary.

One moment that will resonate with an audience is
The way Paul faced his diagnosis of terminal cancer. He talked about it with Kim Hill on her popular Saturday morning broadcasts and kept a running blog of his results. Above all he remained busy with all his important projects up to the very end. I wanted to show how much Paul enjoyed life and what a fun person he was. There’s a little surprise at the end of the film which I love.

The hardest thing I had to cut from this film was
His work with young people in projects like the Eureka Awards and the Eureka Trust. He had such an energetic life with so many diverse interests – science, environmentalism, the arts, and developing the NZ economy - that even in a feature film I could not include everything.

The thing I want people to take from this film is Paul Callaghan’s love of science, of life, and of people, and his desire to “make NZ a place where talent wants to live.”

The reason I love the NZIFF is Its dogged determination (particularly in the person of director Bill Gosden) to bring world-class films, both fiction and documentary, to New Zealand. I love the buzz and excitement of it. I love seeing full-houses because the festival depends for its survival on ticket sales, to a greater extent than most overseas festivals which receive more city or government support.

What the 50th NZIFF means to me is
That it’s a proud moment in the festival’s history. It’s also a proud moment for me as this film is my 11th film in the festival. Bill Gosden has generously said that I’m the NZ film-maker who has been most often represented.

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