Ol Parker's 'Ticket to Paradise' reunites George Clooney and Julia Roberts as exes who find themselves on a shared mission to stop their lovestruck daughter (Kaitlyn Dever) from making the same mistake they once made
With Screen Forever back on the Gold Coast this week, Queensland's capabilities will once again be on show to local and international producers.
The AACTA Audience Award for Best Film will this year be a duke between local titles and Hollywood blockbusters that recently called Australia home: 'Thirteen Lives', 'Thor: Love and Thunder', 'Ticket to Paradise', 'Elvis', 'The Drover's Wife the Legend of Molly Johnson' and 'Wog Boys Forever'.
A re-release of the highest grossing film of all time coupled with a super weekend for 'DC League of Super-Pets' has led to another strong week-on-week increase at the Australian box office.
With school holidays underway in every state and territory, 'DC League of Super Pets' pulled into pole position over 'Ticket to Paradise' at the box office last weekend, with new releases 'Smile', 'Ponniyin Selvan: I' and 'See How They Run' trailing behind.
The box office had a much-needed refresh last weekend by way of Julia Roberts and George Clooney rom-com 'Ticket to Paradise' and 'DC League of Super-Pets', and to a lesser extent, 'Moonage Daydream' and 'Bodies Bodies Bodies'.
Universal Pictures rom-com 'Ticket to Paradise', starring Julia Roberts and George Clooney, is the latest international project to be lured to Australia, with production to start in Queensland in November.
The NSW production sector has received a welcome boost amid the ongoing Greater Sydney lockdown, with the news that HBO Films' 'Days of Abandonment', starring Natalie Portman, will commence filming in the state this month.