Featured Articles
RECENT HIGHLIGHTS
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Salt of the Earth
Our own production, Salt of the Earth - about the South Australian man who invented Chicken Salt - recently had its world premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival!
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The Aegean
Our debut feature film, The Aegean, just premiered at Brisbane International Film Festival and the Greek Film Festival in Australia! Find out more about the film and its release plans for 2025!
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Elise McCredie
We sit down with Elise McCredie, the showrunner and writer behind Stateless and the upcoming Disney+ series The Clearing, for a wide-ranging discussion ahead of her panel presentation at Screen Forever this May.
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Conclave Review
Conclave is shaping up to be one of the strongest movies of this year! We caught an early screening of it, so check out our review before it hits cinemas this January!
One Night
A film that feels personal, almost gritty even in its emotional honesty, One Night is a drama worth the watch.
Tsukiji Wonderland
All in all, Tsukiji Wonderland is a highly enjoyable feature which does well to spur interest in an international landmark.
Takeshi Yashiro Shorts
Watching these short films was a delight and the collective magic of the productions makes insignificant the small imperfections.
Wonder Woman 1984
WW84 is pretty disappointing - a surface level plot, barely held together. For a character who was holding up the DCEU, one expected better. Instead, we’ll have to settle for yet another star turn from Pedro Pascal.
Happiest Season
This is a worthy addition to the Christmas movie pantheon, but its ending rings hollow due to the subverted character arcs.
Misbehaviour
In the end, girls just want to have fun … damental human rights.
Let Him Go
Let Him Go isn’t a film you’re likely to let go for quite some time. It stays with you long after you leave the cinema - that weirdly enjoyable, oddly engaging movie that dealt with grief, heartbreak, and loss, along with a healthy dose of gruff action and drama.
Fatman
In the end, Fatman is a convoluted mess, and a disappointment in that it never reaches its true potential. At the same time, however, it would be a lie to say this wasn’t a fun and bonkers watch.
Summerland
Summerland isn’t breaking any boundaries, but it is a movie you can sink into with ease.
Ammonite
Ammonite needed more to say, but what a beautiful way to have said what it did.
Freaky
Freaky is a helluva lot of fun, and while it isn’t as scary as it could be, it is certainly funny as hell.
Radioactive
Radioactive is a strange, hard to pin down film, but the incredible true story of this historical pioneer and the performance from Rosamund Pike make this a worthy time at the cinema.
SIX60: Till The Lights Go Out Review
An interesting documentary that will introduce you to a New Zealand ban you’ve never heard of.
Never Rarely Sometimes Always Review
Never Rarely Sometimes Always is a harrowing and unrelenting film that ultimately is a treatise on the ability of young women to overcome a system designed to keep them down.
The Last Black Man in San Francisco Review
A weird and engaging film; tackling gentrification and the steady marginalisation of San Francisco’s minorities in an undeniably magical mood piece.
The Trial of the Chicago 7 Review
A good, but not great, courtroom drama.
Kajillionaire Review
A quirky romantic comedy that draws you ever deeper into a complete adoration of its strange world.
Honest Thief Review
Liam Neeson sleepwalks through this unsurprising actioner.
Big Time Adolescence Review
Big Time Adolescence is a solid start for first time feature film director and writer Jason Orley.
The Secrets We Keep Review
A dark, meticulous and slow film.
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It’s certainly an odd choice to make a documentary on Pharrell Williams in LEGO, and it’s one that has both pros and cons.