Trevor Graham's disability rights documentary 'Chef Antonio's Recipes For Revolution' tells the story of chef Antonio de Benedetto who is on a quest to change the world with his delicious Italian food.
Kyle Davis' debut feature 'Dry Winter' is a portrait of a young couple surviving life in an off-the-beaten-track, opportunity-starved outback town.
'Franklin', set to premiere at the Melbourne International Film Festival, recounts the '80s environmental campaign to save Tasmania's Franklin River through the eyes of Oliver Cassidy, who retraces the journey taken some 40 years before by his late activist father.
James Vaughan's feature debut 'Friends & Strangers' is a satire that explores the drift of 20-something life.
An American coming of age story set against the backdrop of Ted Bundy's execution in 1989 has won the Best Short Film prize at the Melbourne International Film Festival.
Led by newcomers Daisy Axon and Wesley Patten, 'H is for Happines's is the story of Candice Phee, a relentlessly optimistic and hilariously forthright girl on the cusp of her 13th birthday. Candice’s family is in disarray: her mum has been living with depression since the death of Candice’s baby sister, while her dad and his brother – Candice’s beloved Rich Uncle Brian – are not on speaking terms. As she faces the uncertainties of impending adolescence with the help of her new friend Douglas Benson, Candice hatches a variety of outlandish schemes to make her nearest and dearest happy again.
Christopher Amos' debut feature 'Hating Peter Tatchell' is a portrait of the Melbourne-born human rights activist who has taken on the likes of Margaret Thatcher and Robert Mugabe, campaigning for gay liberation, the environment and against war.
From the Beatles to the Backstreet Boys, One Direction to Take That, three generations of zealous boyband fans reflect on the objects of their obsessions and explore how the thrills, fantasies and roller-coaster emotions of fandom have changed and challenged their lives.