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

|

 

Stephan Elliott on A Few Best Men

[Tue 24/01/2012 03:04:40]

By Amanda Diaz

Stephan Elliott is a multi-tasker. For most of his career, he has juggled both writing and directing duties and now, while on the phone with IF, he is in the middle of sweeping his house.

If A Few Best Men seems like a change of pace, it isn't. Although the script was written by Dean Craig (Death at a Funeral), the film's producers gave the director the freedom to contribute his own rewrites.

"There's an awful lot of me in there," he says. "Dean took care of the English and I took care of the Australian."

Elliott first read the script after being persuaded by producer Gary Hamilton.

"I haven't read other people's scripts for years because I basically develop my own," he says. "So he kind of got me in an evil, manipulative way and talked me into reading it."

(For the record, Hamilton's dastardly attack plan involved seeing the stage adaptation of the director's hit film Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, showering Elliott with praise, and then casually mentioning he had a script he wanted him to read.)

A Few Best Men tells the story of David (Xavier Samuel), an English groom who travels with his three best friends to the Blue Mountains for his wedding to the daughter of a local politcian. What is meant to be the happiest day of David's life quickly descends into chaos, as a cross-dressing sheep, a lonely drug dealer and a cocaine-snorting mother-in-law (played by Olivia Newtown-John) are thrown into the mix.

"It got three big belly laughs out of me, which is extremely dangerous," Elliott says. "Richard Curtis said if you get three really good laughs then you're onto something."

Elliott rang Hamilton while the producer was en route to the Berlin International Film Festival, admitting that he'd enjoyed the script but cautioning him not to tell anyone at the festival that he was committed.

"The second Berlin started I had about 37 phone calls from all these people saying 'Are you doing this movie?'" Elliott recalls.

Despite the fact that pre-sales were made at the festival with his name attached, Elliott did not make the decision to take on the project until he'd considered the prospect of developing his own film.

"I was looking at the concept of spending eight years trying to get my own stuff up again and thought: fuck it, why don't I do a broad comedy?" he says. "I've never done it before. Let's just give it a go."

The initial plan was to shoot the film in Queensland, but the production was moved to the Blue Mountains in New South Wales.

"I went up to Queenslad and made up my mind in about eight seconds that there was no way we were shooting there," says Elliott. "It would have been suburban, there would have been no spectacle involved. I did not come all the way home for Queensland. There was nothing happening in Sydney, all my friends were unemployed or dead, so I put my foot down."

Hoping to convince the film's American backers that the Blue Mountains was the perfect location, Elliott enlisted the help of the late pilot Gary Ticehurst. Together, the two took the backers on a helicopter trip around the mountains.

"It was the ultimate joyride," says Elliott. "I said to Gary: 'Take them right down to the harbour, will you?' And they were down on the harbour and the sun was setting, that absolutely nailed them. Very much the reason the film happened here is because of Gary."

The director's one regret is that the film was locked off before Ticehurst's passing in 2011 and that he missed the opportunity to dedicate the film to the friend he had known since he was 19.

"Somewhere out there, I know I've made him proud," he says.

Filming lasted seven weeks, with the director making a particular rule that everybody on set had to be fun to spend time with.

"Anyone who wasn't fun or anyone who looked like being a pain in the arse - we simply didn't employ," he says. "It was a bunch of people just laughing, it was such a giggle. Every time I'd lose my temper, they'd just laugh more. To get paid for that, it's pretty damn good. The last time I had this much fun was Priscilla."

Elliott says that the film's only purpose is to make people laugh. "I've copped a bit of flack from the serious American critics, basically because it is so shallow, but there's not a single audience it hasn't gone through the roof with," he says. "The film isn't rocket science, it's not brain surgery. You'll forget about it twenty minutes later, but so what? It was funny. That's the whole job."

A Few Best Men is out on Australia Day. Watch the trailer here. For an in depth feature on the film, check out the December/January issue of IF, on stands now.


Tim Draxl, Kevin Bishop, Kris Marshall and Xavier Samuel in A Few Best Men

[Tue 24/01/2012 03:04:40]

Add your own comment

1,707

 

 

 

 


 

 

Advertise

Quick Links

About us

 

Subscribe

Visit Intermedia Sites

 

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