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

|

 

Tasmanian docu-drama First Fagin begins filming

[Tue 29/11/2011 02:17:18]

By Sam Dallas

One of Australia’s most infamous convicts is the subject of a new Tassie-based production, which started filming yesterday.

Docu-drama First Fagin, about the dramatic, turbulent career and adventures of English-born criminal Ikey Solomon, is a co-production from Brisbane’s Wild Fury and Hobart’s Roar Film.

Solomon was a notorious criminal, regarded for his crimes (receiving stolen goods) and capture and is rumoured to be the inspiration behind Charles Dickens’ Fagin character in novel Oliver Twist (although that's still disputed).

After his wife was found guilty of receiving stolen goods and transported to Tasmania (then known as Van Diemen’s Land), Solomon travelled to the Apple Isle to be by her side. He was later sentenced to prison and died in 1850.

“It’s a marvellous story, it’s a surprising romance and I just think it’s one of those Australian and Tasmanian stories, one of those colonial stories, that people just don’t know about and I think it’s really going to get some notice,” Roar Film’s Steve Thomas told IF.

The docu-drama will be directed by freelance drama and documentary-maker Helen Gaynor (drama sequences) and international filmmaker Alan Rosenthal (interview sequences). The two directors initially discussed the project a few years ago at a documentary conference and it came to fruition again at this year’s MIPTV.

Arts Minister Lara Giddings said the Wild Fury/Roar Film collaboration was a direct result of the recent Screen Tasmania strategic review and new funding guidelines that encouraged non-Tasmanian companies to partner with locals to secure production investment from the Tasmanian government.

First Fagin is one of the first productions approved under the new guidelines and this partnership is a ringing endorsement of the capabilities of Roar Film,” Giddings said in a statement.

Produced by Thomas, Wild Fury's Veronica Fury and Rosenthal, it will be shot for the next three weeks in southern-Tasmania (and small pickups in the UK) including Kempton and near Pontville. The cast is completely Tasmanian with Ryk Goddard playing Solomon and Carrie McLean playing his wife Ann.

Fury said it was important that the feature captured the "uniqueness of Tasmania".

Thomas said the docu-drama, shot by cinematographer James Grant, had a theatrical deal in Australia and it would premiere at the Melbourne International Film Festival next year. Discussions with Australian broadcasters will take place at a later date.

Screen Tasmania injected $110,000 into the project, while further finance was provided by German broadcaster ZDF, French channel Arte and Screen Queensland.

It's an exciting project for the state which is still buzzing from feature film The Hunter, starring Willem Dafoe. A production of that scale reinforced the state's industry and filming locations.

First Fagin won't be the first Australian production on the infamous figure. A four-hour miniseries on Solomon, entitled The Potato Factory (based on the Bryce Courtenay book of the same name) screened in Australia in 2000. It starred Ben Cross and Lisa McCune in the main roles and was produced by Screentime.

For more on Isaac 'Ikey' Solomon, click here.
 

[Tue 29/11/2011 02:17:18]

Help. WHEN IS THE FIRST FAGIN PREMIERING IN MELBOURNE,CAN'T GET ANY INFO THIS END.Isaac and Hannah are my 5 times great grandparents and would love to see the film any info re their lives needed. Many thanks Sue
Posted by carol sue campbell. 20/02/2012 06:35:37 PM
Add your own comment

1,653

 

 

 

 


 

 

Advertise

Quick Links

About us

 

Subscribe

Visit Intermedia Sites

 

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