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Reviews
Into the Shadows (2009)
Into The Shadows. The fate and future of Australian Cinema.
Into The Shadows is a very enlightening documentary on the fate and future of Australian Cinema. It explains each stage of development which the craft has undergone since the late 60's with panache and humor. I was riveted to the screen while this excellent narrative of the rise and fall of Australian themed cinema played on ABC TV 1.
The range of Australian professional talent and expertise on screen was wonderful. While it was biased towards the success of Australian independent film-making Into The Shadows had a strong dose of reality throughout.
Piquant criticism of the funding models, distribution monopolies and anti-competitive thuggery is balanced by self deprecatory pokes at film-makers who don't make films people want to see.
In several sections the film unfolds its historical appreciation and its verdict on the golden days of Australian film and its sorry contemporary situation, where 3.8 % or thereabouts of the AustralianBox Office is gleaned from showing Australian themed and made films. The arguments of Into The Shadows about what is wrong with Australian film were very acute.
I thought that it made less than it might of the possibilities for independent film-makers to sell their films or co-produce with Television and related platforms but that was not its main focus.
As a musician and song writer, I was struck by the comments that the Film Industry threatened to become a cottage industry. The sub-text of this part of the film touches a raw nerve about trying to produce an album or a film and only being able to do so every now and then because of the difficulties of making a living of any kind as a creative person in Australia.
I was very impressed with the way this film was an example of the very processes the film- makers wanted to promote, especially the creation of independent small budget films as platforms for newcomers and new ideas that people do want to hear. I would like to see a follow up featuring the micro-independent scenes that are developing and the people who are making the classic independent films of tomorrow.
The Producers have created a film which makes me want to see more of their work and to be prepared to take what they have seriously, which is a rare response from me. Rob Scott
Stones in Exile (2010)
Unexpected insight into the genesis of one of the Stones most enduring albums.
It was a surprise to see this on Australian TV. It was unheralded but worth staying up late to see the way that the chaos of Keith Richards life was translated into an album of rare if unself-conscious depth. I am constantly amazed by how good the Stones look in retrospect compared to many of their contemporaries. I think Keith is the key to much of it but the link between his ideas and Charlie Watts drums and Bill Wyman's bass playing is another factor that is highlighted here. Mick Jagger's casual admission of the cut and paste way that the lyrics flowed together is another revelation. Mick Taylor's input is of course a highlight. I would have enjoyed seeing him jam with the the other band members for a contemporary take on a couple of the songs.
I was particularly intrigued to hear the out-take of a song called Exile On Main Street at the end of the film. It seems to be a pastiche of bits of lyrics from other songs on the album.
A delightful peek into a world we all wanted to be part of back in the heady days of the early 70's and into an album that is dense with unexpected rhythms and marvellous slide and saxophone work and a great series of lyrics, made from the detritus of the Stones love affair with America.
The comments made by the band members and hangers on for this 2010 film are worth the price of admission. The Stones now seem to be able to poke fun at their youthful excess and their more preposterous behaviour and all without a taste of regret or pomposity.