Email
 
 

QUICK LINKS:

IF Magazine
IF Awards
Production Book
IF FX Quarterly

 

HotWare
 

AJA Io XT - Perfect Partner for Avid

Purchase AJA Io XT for broadcast-quality capture, monitoring and output for Avid and receive free Eye Scream Factory presets to quickly add stunning effects to your productions. Pair Io XT with Avid, MacBook Pro and Thunderbolt storage for a no-compromise more...

 

Want up to a year's free training for Autodesk's 3ds Max, Maya and others

For a limited time, Digistor is including Digital Tutors online training with every commercial 3ds Max or Maya purchased* giving you and your team access to the world's largest online CG training library for free. more...

 

Crossgrade to EDIUS 6 for $449 and experience real realtime editing

Grass Valley and Corsair Solutions are proud to announce that, as part of a special competitive upgrade promotion, users of Apple's Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere, and Avid's Media Composer can now upgrade to EDIUS 6 nonlinear editing software for just... more...

Goodies!
 

WIN a pass to storyboard masterclass Direct Before You Shoot.

Competition closed. more...

 

WIN a ticket to the Australian International Movie Convention valued at $1100

IF is giving two lucky readers the chance to attend the 67th Australian International Movie Convention more...

 

WIN a Flexipass to the Sydney Film Festival

IF and the Sydney Film Festival are giving away a Flexi10 worth $137 more...

Your Vote

Do you agree that the producer offset should be raised from 20 to 40 per cent for television?

Yes

No

|

 

Screen Australia, WA gov invest in Sam Worthington's Drift

[Wed 16/03/2011 09:16:47]

By Brendan Swift

Screen Australia and the Western Australian government have announced plans to invest in the Sam Worthington surf drama Drift while the national agency has also backed indigenous feature Satellite Boy.

Drift marks the WA government's largest ever single committment to a feature film – $1.5 million – with two-thirds drawn from the government's Royalties for Regions fund and the remainder from ScreenWest's Production Attraction Fund.

The $11 million film is set in 1972 and follows the Fisher brothers as they start a new life in a remote Australian coastal town, where they must battle suspicious locals, killer waves and ruthless bikers as they struggle to kick-start a business from their greatest passion – surfing.

WA regional development minister Brendon Grylls said the film would provide an economic and promotional boost to the region while culture and the arts minister John Day said the film would also be a boost to the State’s growing screen industry.

The film – which will begin shooting around the Margaret River and the South-West regions later this year – also has local support from the shires of Augusta-Margaret River, Busselton, and the Augusta-Margaret River Tourism Association.

The film will be directed by Ben Nott (the commercials and action sports film director – not the cinematographer by the same name) and Morgan O'Neill, who also wrote the project. O'Neill (Solo) will concentrate on the drama sequences while Nott will concentrate on the many land and water action sequences during filming.

Screen Australia’s chief operating officer and acting chief executive Fiona Cameron said the unique combination of surfing and performance expertise gives Drift "the potential to be the first character-driven action movie set in the surfing world since Kathryn Bigelow’s Point Break".

Screen Australia will also invest in Satellite Boy, an indigenous coming-of-age story set in the Kimberley region that marks the directorial feature debut of writer-director Catriona McKenzie. The project is being produced by David Jowsey (Mad Bastards) and Sue Seeary (Solo). ScreenWest said it is currently assessing the project for production funding.

The film is about a small boy, Pete, who tries to save his home from developers.

"Indigenous filmmaking is going from strength to strength with Satellite Boy as the latest instalment in world-class indigenous storytelling," Cameron said in a statement. "Satellite Boy, told through the distinctive cultural lens of the Kimberley region, has the ability to make a significant contribution to screen culture and the national cultural life."

Screen Australia has now invested $12.6 million in 17 projects this year, triggering production worth over $43 million, according to the agency.

The decision by Screen Australia to back Drift and Satellite Boy follows the national agency's announcement last week that it would fund 15 new screen projects, including a big screen version of the Kath and Kim TV series.

bswift@if.com.au

[Wed 16/03/2011 09:16:47]

Add your own comment

4,360

 

 

 

 


 

 

Advertise

Quick Links

About us

 

Subscribe

Visit Intermedia Sites

 

© IF (IF) | Contact Us | Privacy | Copyright