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Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Hysteria ticket giveaway!


We'll be honest with you, when we heard that Maggie Gyllenhaal and Hugh Dancy were to star in a period romantic comedy, we didn't really feel the inclination to run to our local cinema and start queuing up in anticipation. Then, our buddy who works at CLEO whispered to us "You know it's about the invention of the vibrator, right?"

"SAYYYY WHAAAAA?" we responded.

It's true. Set in 1880, Hysteria is an offbeat and amusing tale about the invention of said instrument in Victorian England. Based on what actually happened, the film follows Mortimer Granville (Dancy), a young doctor disillusioned by his colleagues' medieval practices. He starts working for Dr Dalrymple, who treats cases of the female ailment commonly known as hysteria by offering them intimate manual relief. Demand becomes so great that Dalrymple and Mortimer cannot keep up with 'curing' women. And so came about the invention of a machine that would solve his medical challenges.

Thanks to our mates at Hopscotch, we're giving away a few free tickets to Hysteria. If you wanna win just drop an email with the subject line "Ooh baby yeah" to info@bobbysix.com. Include your name and address and we'll select the winners at random. As usual with these movie ticket giveaways, the tickets are only valid in Australia. Sorry everywhere else, we're working hard on getting some freebies for you guys too. Soon soon.

Thursday, July 05, 2012

Where Do We Go Now?


From the creator of Caramel, this is a genuinely charming and inventive film which takes its audience through a spectrum of emotions. The story is thus: In an isolated village, a close-knit group of friends of Muslim and Christian women gather daily at the local cafe to share gossip and song. However, their community comes under threat from outside tensions. How do they stop their husbands and sons tearing their lives apart with a sectarian war?

Banding together, the women devise ingenious plans to distract their menfolk. The narrative is really funny, the characters utterly believable and the use of song is superb. The musical number about getting the men stoned is fantastic. What's more, the light tone of the majority of the movie gives all the more weight to the moments of heartbreak which punctuate proceedings like a bullet.

In the same way that the wonderful Life Is Beautiful did with the Holocaust, this film gives heart to a difficult subject-matter through laughter and levity. This certainly doesn't make it any less relevant than more heavyweight movies. Rather, Where Do We Go Now? is a compelling and touching tale of motherhood, family, religion, tolerance and community.

Review by Bobby Townsend

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Sponsored Video: Ted Official Red Band Trailer – from Seth McFarlane, creator of Family Guy



The day I was born, I was given a teddy bear called Pete. He cuddled me through my childhood and witnessed my teenage dramas. He's a stoic, well behaved fellow who nowadays just kinda sits there, looking a bit worn and threadbare. Doesn't say much. In fact, he doesn't say anything because, well, he's a teddy bear. Like, duh.

But what if Pete could talk? What stories would he tell about my adolescence? Christ, just thinking about some of the tales he could tell is cringeworthy. And how would he act now that he is in his 30s? Would he have become world-weary? Less Winnie the Pooh and more "fuck you"? Well, this is an idea that Ted - the first full-length feature film from Seth Macfarlane (Family GuyAmerican Dad) - takes a sideways, funny, and pretty rude glance at.

In the film, John Bennett's childhood dream comes true when his teddy bear, Ted, comes to life. John and Ted grow up together, and at the age of 35, John (played by Mark Wahlberg) and Ted are still best buds. The thing is that, like John, Ted (voiced by Macfarlane) has also grown older with time, and he has become quite the crude, sweary and extremely inappropriate teddy bear. One day John’s girlfriend Lori (played by the ridiculously yummy Mila Kunis) decides she's had enough and gives John an ultimatum: either Ted moves out, or she is making like a banana and splitting. Will John ditch his best mate? You can find out by catching Ted in Australian cinemas from July 5th. And other cinemas around the world at the same kinda time I guess. Google will likely be more useful than me with that kinda info though. Google's such a know-it-all.

While you're waiting for the film's release, you can liven up your Twitter feed with a few swears by following Ted at @WhatTedSaid (it's pretty nsfw, tbh). You can also keep up to date with Universal's other releases on the Twitter machine.


Words by Bobby Townsend. Sponsored by Universal.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Dreams of a Life


Do you ever stop to think about what will happen after you die? What kind of impact your death will have? How you will be remembered? Dreams of a Life, directed by Carol Morley, tells the story of someone who slipped through the cracks.

In 2003, the remains of Joyce Carol Vincent were found in her North London bedsit. Nothing unusual there, perhaps; people die alone all of the time. The strange thing about this was that she wasn't discovered until three years after she had died. Her skeleton was stretched out on the sofa, the television was still on and there were wrapped Christmas presents at her side. Joyce Vincent was not an old woman with no family. She was 38, had siblings, friends and ex-boyfriends. In that time, nobody had called round to see her, nobody had tried to track her down, even the electricity company hadn't shut her power off.  

Part documentary, part drama, part detective story, this intriguing film attempts to solve the mystery behind one young, beautiful, seemingly popular woman's lonely death. Carol Morley conducts interviews - which range from funny to heartbreaking - with friends, colleagues and lovers (traced through personal ads, posters and Internet sites) and uses dramatised sequences (featuring actor Zawe Ashton) to recreate the life of this glamorous and vivacious young woman. 

While Joyce Vincent died a lonely death, this touching, achingly sad film keeps her name and her memory alive and serves as a reminder to us all that, in this increasingly busy and fractured world, it is vital to remain close to the people you care about.

Review by Bobby Townsend. Dreams of a Life plays at the Sydney Film Festival on Weds morning the 13th June. If you are elsewhere, you can buy the DVD or order it on itunes. Visit the official site for links.

(Incidentally, while we're on the subject of the Sydney Film Fest, we've just noticed that one of our all-time faves is playing this year. Don't miss The Dreamers on Sunday 17th June).

Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Sydney Film Festival kicks off today


Sydney Film Festival gets underway today. There are heaps of awesome movies to check out. We've already cast our eyes over a couple of the highlights:

Obviously we're interested in the music doccos that are on offer at this year's Sydney Film Festival. We're especially excited for Marley, and we were fascinated to watch Under African Skies, which sees Paul Simon return to South Africa to reunite with the musicians who collaborated on his mega-hit Graceland.

The album's 1986 release put Simon in the eye of a storm of controversy for breaking the UN cultural boycott of the South African Apartheid regime. Prize-winning filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Metallica: Some Kind of Monster and the Paradise Lost trilogy) follows Simon to South Africa for the album's 25th-anniversary celebrations, where he confronts his critics - including Artists United Against Apartheid founder Dali Tambo - and defends his appropriation of African music. Anyone who has an interest in Simon, in this seminal album, or in the politics of South Africa at the time, will be absolutely fascinated by this interesting and thought-provoking documentary. To be honest, it's worth watching just to see footage of the studio sessions. Awesome.

Coincidentally, yesterday we checked out another film based in South Africa (we were sitting next to Margaret and David in the screening - eeek). Beauty is a study of desire that won of the Queer Palm at Cannes. In it, South African director Oliver Hermanus focuses on Francois (Deon Lotz), a middle-aged, Afrikaans-speaking family man who becomes obsessed with the young son of longtime friends. As Francois stalks the young man, his world begins to unravel. Beauty is a gripping, tough watch. It's difficult to discuss the film's more difficult scenes without giving away plot-spoilers, but suffice to say its challenging, powerful content is typical of the kind of unrelenting cinema that Sydney Film Festival offers up as part of its extensive programme.

Under African Skies is playing Friday 8th June at 6.30pm and Sunday 10th June at 2.30pm at Event Cinemas, George Street, Sydney. Tickets are selling fast. You can see Beauty on Sunday 10th June at 8.30pm and Monday 11th June at 8.15pm at Event Cinemas, George Street, Sydney. Tickets here. For a full schedule of all the amazing stuff that Sydney Film Festival has got going on, visit: http://sff.org.au/public/home/

Saturday, May 19, 2012

The Human Rights Arts and Film Festival Australia


The fifth Australian Human Rights Arts and Film Festival (HRAFF) opened in Melbourne this week. Vinisha Mulani tells us more: 

What started as a group of friends brainstorming in a share-house kitchen six years ago, is now a national film festival in its fifth year, based at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, has Margaret Pomeranz as a festival patron, includes a music festival, art exhibition, forums and the President of the Maldives doing a live Q&A.

But that's not the sole summary of its success - despite its escalation from the kitchen table to ACMI, the success and soul of the Human Rights Arts and Film Festival lies in its content and intent. As inspiring as the festival's establishment and growth, are its films.

From Wrinkles, a Spanish comical animation about Alzheimer's, to Buffalo Girls, about girls in a Muay Thai child boxing tournament, the films range in topics but are all consistent in how you feel when you leave the cinema. HRAFF films can catapult even the most cynical suit-clad individual into a state of inspiration to change the world for the better. (Just a heads up, Australian Volunteers International and Intrepid Travel - there may be an unexplained exponential increase of people lining up in front of your offices over the next month). The Island President is also a program highlight; an inspiring documentary about the president of the Maldives' and how he tackles his small nation's slow extinction in the face of climate change.

Whatever incredible film you choose to watch at HRAFF, you will have something to gain - whether it be inspiration to do something great, raising your awareness in something you had no idea about, or a window into the life of an individual on the other side of the world.

HRAFF's dates around Australia:
Melbourne 15 – 27 May
Canberra 28 – 30 May
Adelaide 29 May – 1 June
Sydney 29 May – 1 June
Brisbane 5 – 8 June
Alice Springs 8 – 10 June
Byron Bay 12 – 15 June
Perth 14 – 16 June

For more detail on the program in general and to purchase tickets: http://hraff.org.au/
Words by Vinisha Mulani

Thursday, May 03, 2012

Double feature for Sydney library-goers


Sydneysiders will get a double-barrel chance for a sneak peek at movies in the 2012 Sydney Film Festival program at the City’s libraries in May. Incoming Sydney Film Festival director, Nashen Moodley, will launch the festival at Customs House Library on 9 May, while Festival programmer Richard Kuipers will lead a taster event at Surry Hills Library (pictured, top) on 24 May.

The Surry Hills evening will showcase snippets from some of the freakiest films on the program for this year’s festival, which will run from 6-17 June.

Lord Mayor Clover Moore MP said, “The festival screens a huge program of exceptional films from around the world, the challenge is working out which of the more than 150 films and 250 screenings to see. I hope these taster events at Customs House and Surry Hills libraries make the decision easier.”

Festival director Nashen Moodley said: “We have put together a program of fascinating films for this year’s Sydney Film Festival and I look forward to presenting it to the public at Customs House Library on Wednesday, 9 May. From some of the best, prize-winning films from the world’s most prestigious film festivals, to some wonderful lesser known titles, this year’s selection really does have something for everyone. I’m also looking forward to spending time at Festival Hub @ Lower Town Hall - our brand new SFF venue – which promises to be a centre for filmmakers and festival-goers alike.”

This year, for the first time, Sydney Town Hall will act as the Sydney Film Festival Hub, with free exhibitions, screenings, talks, panels, parties, live music, performances, cheap tickets and DJs from 5 to 10pm each night.

The Hub, from 7-17 June, will be located in Lower Town Hall, and will feature a headline exhibition by Italian-born photographer Fabrizio Maltese, who has captured dozens of the world’s best stars and directors of the silver screen, including Sofia Coppola, Helena Bonham Carter and Jeff Bridges.

2012 Sydney Film Festival public program launch:
Wednesday 9 May
6-7pm
Customs House Library
31 Alfred Street, Circular Quay
Free; call 02 9242 8555

Freak Me Out  
Thursday 24 May
9-10pm
Surry Hills Library
405 Crown Street, Surry Hills
Free, call 02 8374 6230

Sydney Film Festival Hub 
Thursday 7 June-Sunday 17 June
5-10pm
Lower Town Hall
483 George Street, Sydney
Free; for more information visit sff.org.au

For more information, visit cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/library

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

Kieran Darcy-Smith interview


“There are two things I really care about when I write something,” Kieran Darcy-Smith says from beneath a baseball cap and over a glass of red wine. “The first thing is I need a ball kicked up straight away and I want it to stay there. I want to keep turning the page because of the plot, the characters and the themes. I don't want the audience to fall away. At the same time, I really want them to care, to be there from the point of view of the character so that it's not just a sequence of events.”

Sydneysider Darcy-Smith is the writer and director of new Australian movie, Wish You Were Here, a gripping psychological drama/mystery centred around the disappearance of a holiday-maker in Cambodia. Coming from a musical background (his band once supported Wendy James' Transvision Vamp), and with a fine career as an actor and directing/writing shorts, it is his first full-length feature as a director. Starring Joel Edgerton, Felicity Price and Teresa Palmer, the film's fractured timeline tells of how four friends head off to South East Asia but only three return, and is inspired by Darcy-Smith's fascination with the whole idea of disappearance. “I knew we could kick the ball in the air pretty early with the mystery. I wanted the audience to have that overhanging framework... the suspense... but that it only operated to keep that ball in the air and the real thing that people were interested in were the characters and what they were going through. So it was about drip-feeding little bits of information to keep them wanting to know what is going to happen, but to allowing enough room to really get to know the characters and what was at stake for them.”

Thrown into a world of turmoil are Dave (Joel Edgerton) and Alice (Felicity Price, Darcy-Smith's wife and the film's co-writer), a middle-class married couple with two young children. “Ultimately it came down to how we pitched the character of Dave, more than anything. The film is from Alice's point of view. She doesn't really know what is going on and the audience is just a little step ahead, getting clues, and we are kind of wary of Dave but it doesn't compute because he seems like a really nice person. So it was just about balancing that whole thing. You just have to innately judge what to give and what not to give.”

As was Darcy-Smith's intention, the connection that the audience feels with Alice and Dave is vital. This is as much a story about people's frailties and relationships as it is about solving a mystery, and it is the weaving together of both these elements that makes Wish You Were Here so utterly gripping. “The relationship was always what we wanted the audience to invest in. We wanted them to go through an experience with a couple, to fall in love with these people in a sense and to care when it got to the point where they were going to fall apart. But, while the relationship was at the forefront, I knew that an introspective naval-gazing relationship story was something that no one was going to see, and I've always loved good drama that utilises genre elements, so the word 'thriller' was just always hanging around. I wanted to shoot it with little thriller cues that you could play on which would have a profound effect on the audience and also with the rhythm of the whole piece.”

Originally, the plan was for Darcy-Smith and his wife to rent a house out in Sydney's Gladesville, live there for a year as Alice and Dave, shoot the film and make it for $150,000. However, when producer Angie Fielder came on board, she told the real-life husband-and-wife, "No, it's too good, let's do it properly.” And so Darcy-Smith's best mate Edgerton was brought in and Gladesville was ditched for the seaside. Tamarama to be precise. “I've got a thing for borders and coastlines, there is something about the drama there,” Darcy-Smith explains when asked about the location of Dave and Alice's home in the film. While Wish You Were Here stands alongside the likes of recent Australian classics Snowtown and Animal Kingdom in its tenseness and in the compelling nature of its gritty drama, it does so in more salubrious surroundings. “I wanted to show a fresh, contemporary, I guess... middle class... Sydney. You don't often see it. Let's not lie about this, most of us who go to the cinema, and who go to drama school and university are generally middle-class people.”

Contrary to the initial idea of the entire story taking place post-holiday, as the film grew, a large chunk of the action was shot in Cambodia, allowing the narrative to jump between the present and the past as the mystery begins to unravel. As one might expect, filming over there wasn't without its share of problems. “I knew Cambodia was going to be difficult but it was harder than we thought,” the director recalls. “All the locations we had scouted a month earlier had gone. Buildings had been knocked down and beaches had been wiped away. I fell into a sewer on the first day and we realised within five minutes of shooting that no-one on the crew spoke English, so we had to get translators in. We had a huge schedule to get done in seven shooting days. We had our two tiny kids there with us and Felicity was still breastfeeding. I got really sick. I had flu and dysentery and was vomiting. Every problem you could throw at us was thrown at us. It was like being in a war but at the same time is was incredibly fun and I'd do it again.”

The affable Australian goes on to admit to having suffered pretty heavily from anxiety his entire life. He talks about there being a lot of things about directing a feature film that made him "curious as to whether I was going to handle it." However, the finished product is a fine, beautifully-crafted piece of work that intelligently tells the story in a truly page-turning way and such anxieties surely served him well in the creation of it, as the film uses the emotion to push the narrative forward. “One of the thing I have always been interested in is the human condition. Behaviour and psychology. It was an opportunity for us to put ourselves in the shoes of these people and consistently challenge ourselves. What would you do in this situation? How would you feel?”

Wish You Were Here is in cinemas now. Interview by Bobby Townsend.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Wish You Were Here ticket giveaway!


Wish You Were Here is a psychological drama/mystery starring Joel Edgerton, Felicity Price and Teresa Palmer. Four friends - husband and wife Dave and Alice, and Alice's sister Steph and her new boyfriend Jeremy - head off on a South East Asian holiday, but only three return back to Australia. Dave and Alice come home to their young family desperate for answers about Jeremy's mysterious disappearance. When Steph returns not long after, a brutal secret is revealed about the night her boyfriend went missing. But it is only the first of many. Who amongst them knows what happened on that fateful night when they were dancing under a full moon in Cambodia?

We were lucky enough to have a beer or two with director Kieran Darcy-Smith the other day, and will be bringing you the results of our chat real soon. For now though, wanna see the movie for free? Course you do. Well, we've got a bunch of passes to give away thanks to our mates at Hopscotch. All you gotta do is complete the following sentence: "I wish I was...". Just send your answer, along with your address to info@bobbysix.com, we'll randomly pick some winners and shoot some free passes in the post this week. The passes are only valid in Australia, so, you know, bear that in mind when entering the competition, otherwise it might be quite a pricey cab ride home.

Friday, March 30, 2012

This Must Be The Place ticket giveaway!


Okay, so any movie which has David Byrne in it and features a fair amount of Will Oldham on the soundtrack was always gonna appeal to us. Add to that Sean Penn as a perplexingly funny goth rocker and the ever-wonderful Frances McDormand as Penn's wife, and you have yourself quite the film.

The story is thus: Penn plays Cheyenne, a bored, retired, eye-linered, wealthy American former celeb living in Dublin. He's a complex character, bumbling around town with friends and living in an enormous mansion. When he learns of the death of his father - who he has been estranged from for over 30 years - he returns to America to embark on a road trip that will change him forever. His quest is driven by the revelation that his father was humiliated in Auschwitz at the hands of an SS officer, who may still be alive and living in America. Cheyenne's search takes him across the heartland of a country now foreign to him, encountering some great people as he is reawakened to the possibility of reconciliation and self-discovery.

At first, Penn's character is hard to get a handle on, but soon, his bumbling confusion combined with some cracking one-liners make him genuinely appealing and his journey across The States is intriguing and shot beautifully. This really is a stunning film to look at - an absolute feast for the eyes. While some of the sub-plots serve to confuse, This Must Be The Place is entertaining and at times touching, sad and laugh-out-loud funny.

The good news for you (if you live in Australia) is that Bobbysix.com has teamed up with our mates at Hopscotch Films and have a couple of double passes to give away. All you have to do is send your name and address to info@bobbysix.com with the subject "This must be the place to score a double pass" by April 4th and we'll select the winners at random. The pass is valid at selected cinemas in Sydney, Perth, Brisvegas, Radelaide and Melbs and the film is rated M. 

Thursday, February 23, 2012

A Separation


A Separation is an Iranian film which deals with the fallout of a married couple's difficult decision over whether they improve the life of their child by moving to another country or stay in Iran and care for a deteriorating parent who has Alzheimers.

A tragic event soon leads to the taut and utterly engaging A Separation bouncing between thriller and courtroom drama. The film, directed by Asghar Farhadi, is fascinating in that, while it deals with an world completely alien to most - Iranian family life, its religion and the chaos of its legal system - ultimately the themes at the heart of the tale are universal. There are so many questions asked, so many moral issues raised. When is it okay to lie? What constitutes sinning?

Simin wants to leave Iran with her husband Nader and daughter Termeh. When Nadar refuses, she moves back to her parental home in protest. Nadar remains torn between loyalty to his Alzheimers-ridden father and trying to save his marriage, while Termeh just wants her parents to get back together. When Nadar hires a maid to look after his father, he introduces a whole new world of problems into his own and, as events spiral, the swim against the tide of turmoil that all the characters face is a futile one. Crucially, the lines between who the audience is supposed to sympathise with become increasingly blurred.

This tense, beautifully scripted and directed picture offers gritty, believable and exceptional performances across the entire cast. It will win the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. It deserves it.

POST OSCARS UPDATE: Told you so!

Review by Bobby Townsend

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Kill List


Bobbysix.com's resident film buff, Neil Martin, tries to wrap his head around the uncompromising, brutal Kill List: 

Ben Wheatley’s much talked about Kill List is a dark, claustrophobic and disorientating journey into hell. It follows the descent into madness of Jay, a man haunted by the violence he has seen and committed both as a soldier in Iraq and in his post military career as a hit-man for hire. Whether that descent into madness is internal or external is not clear and I will leave that up to you to decide. What is not in doubt though is that this is visceral, gut-wrenching, low budget film making at its very best.

The film starts relatively normally as a tale of domestic disintegration as Jay is still struggling to come to terms with a botched job eight months previously. The largely improvised dialogue and handheld verite style of the film place it firmly in the British social realist genre of Leigh, Loach and Meadows. Things soon start to take a turn for the weird as Jay and his partner take on a mysterious new job. It is at this point that the film really comes into its own as an exercise in creating a claustrophobic and unsettling atmosphere. Jay starts to unravel as things get increasingly out-of-hand and escalate towards a truly horrifying and upsetting denouement. Whether we are to take the events of the film literally or as some kind of manifestation of Post Traumatic Stress I am not sure and ultimately it does not really matter as, for me, it works either way. It is clear though that Wheatley has crafted a highly original and unsettling film that will undoubtedly become a cult classic in years to come.

Some have criticised Kill List as two different films clumsily welded together but the move from thriller to horror in the final act is a masterstroke and left me reeling despite expecting this change of focus. It will not be for all tastes and indeed some of the people I watched it with absolutely hated it. What cannot be denied though is that, love it or hate it, Kill List will undeniably stay with you long after it has finished.

Review by Neil Martin

Friday, December 30, 2011

Bobbysix.com's End of Year Review 2011 - Neil Martin


As we head towards the conclusion of our End of Year reviews, Neil Martin give his recommendations from 2011. Check back on New Year's Day for Bobbysix.com's overall winners of best film, album, gig and song:

Top 10 Albums
1. We Must Become The Pitiless Censors Of Ourselves - JOHN MAUS (pictured, above)
2. Space Is Only Noise - NICHOLAS JAAR
3. Wolfroy Goes To Town - BONNIE PRINCE BILLY
4. The Ship’s Piano -DARREN HAYMAN
5. Veronica Falls - VERONICA FALLS
6. The Last Of The Country Gentlemen - JOSH T. PEARSON
7. Ravedeath, 1972 - TIM HECKER
8. Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming - M83
9. James Blake – JAMES BLAKE
10. All Eternals Deck - THE MOUNTAIN GOATS

Top 10 Songs
1. On Battleship Hill - PJ HARVEY
2. Believer - JOHN MAUS
3. Space Is Only Noise If You Can See - NICHOLAS JAAR
4. Found Love In A Graveyard - VERONICA FALLS
5. Boeing 737 - THE LOW ANTHEM
6. Love The Way You Walk Away - BLITZEN TRAPPER
7. Tree By The River - IRON AND WINE
8. Thou Art Loosed - JOSH T. PEARSON
9. Blue Suicide - COMA CINEMA
10. Replica - ONEOHTRIX POINT NEVER

Films

1. Drive 

2. Snowtown
3. The Guard
4. Troll Hunter
5. Small Town Murder Songs
6. The Future
7. Confessions
8. Tyrannosaur
9. Submarine
10. Attack The Block




Neil Martin - Contributor
Englishman Neil is a media teacher, musician and disc golfer - not necessarily in that order. He also knows more about films than you know about anything.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Tyrannosaur

 

Neil Martin gives his opinion on the much-anticipated, and heavy-going, Tyrannosaur: 

Paddy Considine’s directorial debut is a bleak and uncompromising film which shows that as well as being arguably the finest British actor of his generation, Mr Considine also has considerable talent behind the camera. 

Tyrannosaur is not for the faint of heart but if you have the stomach then it is well worth putting yourself through it. Peter Mullan plays Joseph, a middle-aged alcoholic consumed by rage and impotent anger at the world. His booze-fuelled bitterness brings him into the world of Hannah (Olivia Colman) a do-gooding Christian whose own life is far grimmer than her positive, outwardly-smiling persona initially suggests. It is this central relationship and the incredible, brave performances from the two main actors that create the film’s heart and drag you along when the going gets really tough. Colman in particular is outstanding and should be a serious contender come award season. Her performance brings to mind that of Kathy Burke in the very similar Nil By Mouth (clearly a touchstone for Considine) in that an actor known mainly for comic roles proves more than a match for more experienced “heavyweight” actors. 

There are a few missteps in Tyrannosaur, a lazy montage sequence for example that borrows too heavily from Considine’s good friend Shane Meadows as well as some clumsy music choices. Considine does show a definite visual flair in Tyrannosaur though and his use of close ups and focus as well as some interesting drony soundtrack choices (reminiscent of this year's Snowtown) give the film a stronger visual style than most British realism. 

Whilst I initially found myself a little disappointed with Tyrannosaur, the final 20 minutes absolutely floored me. This is a film with flawed characters living flawed lives where nothing is black and white and no easy solutions tie up the loose ends. A triumphant debut and the first step in what is sure to be a vital new voice in British cinema.

Review by Neil Martin. Follow him on Twitter.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Waste Land - 2 for 1 ticket giveaway!


Once again, we're teaming up with our good mates at Hopscotch Films to give away some film tickets because, you know, we're nice like that. We've got three 2-for-1 passes to dish out for the Oscar-nominated documentary, Waste Land, which are valid at the Hoyts Cinema Paris in Sydney for the duration of the film's run (we had some for Melbourne too but they have already been snapped up by our Twitter followers - sorry).

Filmed over nearly three years, Waste Land follows renowned artist Vik Muniz as he journeys from his home base in Brooklyn to his native Brazil and the world's largest garbage dump, Jardim Gramacho, located on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. There he photographs an eclectic band of "catadores" - self-designated pickers of recyclable materials. Muniz's initial objective was to "paint" the catadores with garbage. However, his collaboration with these inspiring characters as they recreate photographic images of themselves out of garbage reveals both the dignity and despair of the catadores as they begin to re-imagine their lives. Director Lucy Walker (Countdown To Zero) and co-directors João Jardim and Karen Harley have great access to the entire process and, in the end, offer stirring evidence of the transformative power of art and the alchemy of the human spirit.

For your chance to grab one of these two-for-one passes, simply tweet us @bobbysix (including the hashtag #wasteland) or drop an email to info@bobbysix.com with the subject heading "I'm wasted." We'll shove everyone's name into a hat and send the winners' passes this week.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Red Dog dominates the Jameson IF Awards Sydney


Hot off the press for you, here are the top stories from tonight's Jameson IF Awards in Sydney:

RED DOG takes home seven awards including the Event Cinemas IF Award for Best Box Office Achievement and the Showtime IF Award for Best Feature Film 
MARGARET POMERANZ and DAVID STRATTON are named the Jameson Living Legend IF Award recipients for 2011
EMILY WATSON takes out the Dinosaur Design IF Award for Best Actress for Oranges and Sunshine
JOSH LUCAS wins the IF Award for Best Actor for his role in Red Dog
KRIV STENDERS wins the IF Award for Best Direction for Red Dog
ANNA MCGAHAN, most recently seen in Underbelly: Razor, wins the Out of the Box IF Award · RACHEL PERKINS, known for First Australians and Bran Nue Dae, receives the Docklands Studio Melbourne IF Award for Contribution to Television

On a rainy night in the Harbour City, stars of the big and small screen came together to celebrate another great year in Australian film at the Jameson IF Awards Sydney. This year’s awards was dominated by Box Office favourite Red Dog which took out seven awards on the night including the IF Award for Best Script, the Event Cinemas IF Award for Best Box Office Achievement, IF Award for Best Cinematography, IF Award for Best Music and the coveted Showtime IF Award for Best Feature Film. Kriv Stenders took out the IF Award for Best Direction whilst Josh Lucas won the IF Award for Best Actor. The film Oranges and Sunshine, a look at the forced migration of English children to Australia, was also acknowledged on the night by winning the Dyson IF Award for Best Production Design and by Emily Watson winning the Dinosaur Designs IF Award for Best Actress. The Jameson Living Legend IF Award was awarded to Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton for their continual support for Australian films, and for just being totally fucking cool really.

Monday, November 14, 2011

The Help


Last Friday, Bobby's thoughts on The Help were featured on BBC Radio Five Live's flagship film programme: Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo's Film Review. Upon hearing it, we jumped around Bobbysix Towers like schoolgirls dancing to Bros (that's a contemporary pop reference, right?). Here's an elongated review:

The Help tells the story of an aspiring author (played by the ever-amazing Emma Stone) during the civil rights movement of the 1960's, who decides to write a book from the perspective of the many African-American maids that work for white families in the neighbourhood.

While this story of daily hardship, oppression, racism, friendship and morality is overt in its audience manipulation and certainly has both eyes focused firmly on The Oscars, the performances are fantastic, pretty much across the board. Stone especially continues to establish herself as a really fine actor and, to be honest, if she simply read from the phone book for a couple of hours, it would probably still be enrapturing. There are also fine, utterly believable turns from Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer.

A little long at 146 minutes, and clearly Oscar fodder, The Help may tug on the heart strings with mathematical precision, but tug on them it undoubtedly does.

Review by Bobby Townsend.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Tim Freedman and The Idle to play at the Jameson IF Awards Sydney


Not only do the Jameson IF Awards support the Australian film and television industry but they also embrace the music scene, and performing at this year’s show will be Tim Freedman and The Idle. Best known for his role as the lead singer and keyboardist in The Whitlams, Freedman last week launched his first new album in six years with his new band. They will be performing the song, You Weren’t In Love With Me, from the album Australian Idle.

The IF Awards have always been a highlight in the Australian cultural calendar, with some of the coolest and most talented film stars walking the red carpet. The 2011 Jameson IF Awards Sydney are no different, with the announcement that Callan McAuliffe, Richard Roxburgh, David Wenham, Sophie Lowe and Dan Wyllie will be joining Xavier Samuel as presenters on the evening.

At just sixteen years old, Callan McAuliffe has already been tipped as the actor to watch, with the young Australian having made his way onto the US screens in the film I am Number Four. Currently filming the Baz Luhrmann epic, The Great Gatsby, as the role of young Gatsby, McAuliffe is also due to star in Paradise Lost alongside Bradley Cooper, Camilla Belle and Casey Affleck. David Wenham has starred in blockbuster movies such as 300, Australia and Public Enemies alongside Johnny Depp. Film veteran, Richard Roxburgh is well known for playing a villain or two in his career. The actor has starred in many well known films including Moulin Rouge! and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. Dan Wyllie has starred in some of Australia’s most iconic films including Muriel’s Wedding, Romper Stomper, Chopper and Animal Kingdom. Sophie Lowe has shown off her acting skills in films such as Beautiful Kate, Road Train and Blame. 

Held at Sydney’s harbourside Luna Park on Wednesday 16th November, the Jameson IF Awards Sydney will be hosted by star of stage and screen, Eddie Perfect. You can get your hands on a ticket now at www.ifawards.com. You gotta be over 18 to attend though.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Midnight in Paris ticket giveaway!


Here at Bobbysix.com, we've teamed up with our good friends from Hopscotch films in Sydney to give you the chance to see the brand new Woody Allen film for FREE!

The romantic comedy is about a family travelling to the French capital for business. The party includes a young engaged couple forced to confront the illusion that a life different from their own is better. Yeah, okay, we totes just copy and pasted that off IMDB. Well, we haven't seen it yet. What do you people expect from us?

What we do know is that it stars Owen Wilson, who we love so much for his performance as Dignan in Bottle Rocket that we can even forgive him for Drillbit Taylor. And, also, that our fave reviewer, Mark Kermode - who has been quite critical of Woody Allen of late - really enjoyed it. Being fans of Mr Allen (Annie Hall is never off the DVD player at Bobbysix Towers) we're super excited to head along to check this new offering out.

If you want the chance to WIN one of THREE DOUBLE PASSES to this film, then all you have to do is either LIKE BOBBYSIX.COM'S FACEBOOK PAGE, FOLLOW BOBBYSIX ON TWITTER or, if you are already a follower, then simply SHOOT AN EMAIL to info@bobbysix.com titled "Hells yeah, I want some Woody." We'll put everyone's name in a hat and draw out the three lucky winners on Wednesday.

The double passes are valid for screenings from October 20 for the duration of the film's run. Oh, and while we love our chums from around the globe, this giveaway is open to Australia-based readers only. Sorry.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Snowtown


Written and directed by Justin Kurzel, Snowtown deals with the true story of Australia's most notorious serial killer, John Bunting, and his relationship with 16 year-old Jamie Vlassakis.

Set in the 1990s in a housing trust home in Adelaide's northern suburbs, Kurzel's first full-length feature is an unrelenting account of the 'Bodies in Barrels' murders which shocked a nation and, fittingly, is very difficult viewing from the opening scene to the closing credits. 

The narrative starts slowly - deliberately so - as it builds an almost unbearable sense of tension which increases as the story progresses. In a disenfranchised neighbourhood, Jamie's household is a pit of hopelessness, violence and sexual abuse until a salvation seemingly arrives in the form of the charismatic Bunting (played by Daniel Henshall). The two form a bond, with the terrifying Bunting imposing a strong influence over the confused youngster. As the pointless and gruesome murders begin to occur with painful inevitability, it becomes increasingly clear that Snowtown is a film that offers not a single shard of light, not a second of relief. This is an almost unbearably heavy journey which deals with horrific malice, violence and bigotry. But, tough as it is, it is also undeniably gripping and expertly crafted.

Stunningly shot, slow-burning, grim and incredibly tense, Snowtown is one of the bleakest and heaviest films you will ever see and is absolutely not for the faint hearted. But if you are looking for an exceptional piece of uncompromising Australian cinema, then you'll find it here. Just don't expect to feel good about the world as the credits roll.

Review by Bobby Townsend