Showing posts with label AFTRS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AFTRS. Show all posts

Friday, August 29, 2014

TEACHING: Sutherland Christian Shire School

I love teaching. In between the diverse projects that occupy every moment of my life; my bread and butter from teaching film is a blessing. I had an opportunity to travel all the way to the Shire, work with 14 students in making 3 films: a social twerking mockumentary, a film about the personification of feelings and a futuristic world where everything is in sync.
Teaching is a breathe of fresh air. I get to give kids my tried and tested knowledge and divulge into their own creativity. It gets even more exciting when dull kids are running around and motivated to get all the shots and then plunge into a tight editing deadline.  What's more impressive is when they go out the way to get the highest production value they can get on their 5 hour shoots. 


Monday, January 27, 2014

TEACHING: AFTRS in Muswellbrook & Mudgee

This has got to be one of the highlights for January 2014! I've been a tutor for AFTRS (Australian Film Television Radio School) before for workshops in MacArthur &; Hornsby but this is the first time I get to venture out rural NSW on the good word of teaching the fundamentals of filmmaking amongst the local youngies.
On Market St, Mudgee
One of the workshop participants
I love adventure and I've never been to these two places so I was set up for the road trip with budding filmmaker Brendan Toole.
My road trip journey began on a Sunday morning (12th Jan), filled up petrol at Cessnock and checked into the Red Cedar Motel

Red Cedar Motel
Muswellbrook is a suburb located in the upper part of the Hunter Region with a population of approx. 11,000. It is a place known for coal mining and horse breeding as well as gourmet food and wine production.

Driving the AFTRS van
Loads of fun!
The following day we had out one off workshop at the Muswellbrook Library and has a total number of 14 kids to workshop facilitate. The outcome was great! We has kids making really quirky comedy short films. 
Post workshop I had to log myself into Anything Fitness and go for my daily 5km run just to unwind and de-stress. The heat was blazing and there's not much going in this little town but I'm glad there's a reliable gym and pool facilities for big smoke folk like myself. 
We checked out at 10am the following day, dropped past the local tourist hub - Hunter Belle Cheese Factory and the Vietnam War Memorial. It was then a scenic 2 hour drive to Mudgee.

Hunter Belle Cheese Factory
Cheese making
I have to say, Mudgee is an amazing place! It felt like someone sliced off a piece of Newtown and plonked it outback. Mudgee has a smaller population of about 9,000 but there's a lot happening at this place.

Streets of Mudgee
I stayed at the Wanderlight Best Western Inn and was within distance of everything; shops, fancy restaurants, gyms, pools, RSLs, library etc... The buildings have a funky new vibe too it and people were in and out of places. 
Some recommend places to eat include:
The cafés are hip and trendy. The most recommended is The Quick Brown Fox Cafe (opposite to the theatre space that I was facilitating). I have now adopted the soy milk cappuccino into my daily staple diet now because of this place. 

Mudgee Library & Cinema
Back to the workshops, Mudgee provided us with a relatively older bunch of kids who were creative, self motivated and produced 4 amazing shorts, paired with behind-the-scenes documentaries. These kids were working around the clock to make their final films as best as it could have been. Mind you, their projects were shot on an iPad with no external sound and they managed to produce something compelling and cinema screening worthy. 

Action underway
Some things that I couldn't get about Mudgee is this store selling these dolls. It was literally a full store of them and they seem to be wearing outfits that I've seen in the movie "The Colour Purple". I don't want to say it, but are they slave/ servant outfits on "blackfaced" dolls? Who would buy this stuff? Why a store that specialises in this? Is there a "demand" for it? Makes you wonder doesn't it?
Dolls anyone?
Back to the final day of the workshop; it was a crazy mad dash 3 hours of final video exports, documentary making and the coordination of a public screening of the films. Then a "go-go-gadget-go" last few moments of farewells and a non stop drive back to Fairfield. 
Overall, I has a great time, flexing my teaching as well as filmmaking muscles. Super thanks to AFTRS (Coordinators Lynette & Abigail) for taking me out for this project!

Out in the hot glaring heat!
Trippy moon!
AFTRS happy van
Me at the clocktower



Wednesday, April 13, 2011

EPIC FAIL: Quest for Jackie Chan just doesn’t cut it for Australian Film Television & Radio School (AFTRS)

You know, Quest for Jackie Chan! seems to not cut it for any grants these days. I seriously have been trying and trying to maybe get this one accepted, somewhere, somehow, some funding bodies will get it. So I thought – initially. After either getting knockback from way too many funding orgs and being snubbed off time and time again. This time, even worse, I didn’t even cut it to the shortlist of 50 applications. I spoke to my colleagues and it means one of two things, the other shortlisted projects were also 2 years in the making or my project was some sort of elaborate lie, that I must of forged all the letters of supports, and photoshopped all the people I met around Australia and HK.

“Maybe the project looked too good to be true” another colleague comment.

“Or maybe I should have dumbed it down a bit and not be too fanciful with the multimedia elements. You know, play the I’m a poor ethnic card, make more cultural stories…like refugees and settlement in Australia…”

“Maria, you know how racist this country is. Why the heck would they want to do kung fu action of pay homage to another Asian, even if its Jackie Chan”.

“We can’t deduct that Australia’s most prestigious film school is an “exclusive” film club right? They are not racist?” I interjected.

“You tell me. Movies that make money are action and even the martial arts genre gets a mention. Dramas aren’t even on the list, yet AFTRS students seem to be churning out more and more kitchen sink wanky dramas every single year. I have yet to see the nation’s prestigious film school take a crack at a money making genre, a genre that on the level of politics, connects Australia more with Asia.”

I pondered about this further. Its true, Australian filmmakers most often can woo other Australian filmmakers with their over confident biographies.

“Joe Doe is an awarding winning film director whose directed numerous wanky film festivals such as “Battler in love”, “Kitchensink and wrist slashing dramas” and “I’m an Ethnic”. You’ll also meet Joe & Co. whoring around film networking functions shoving business cards in your face and claiming that they have some vague project in development. Joe is quite online media savvy, with a slick website, so-so serious monochromatic headshot and self made interviews of themselves on their journeys as an Australian film director.

Yes…the conversation drowned my mind out.

After all that back chat, and all that short term relieve it got me, it doesn’t change the fact that the “Quest for Jackie Chan!” will no longer waste more time in applying for film or art grants but to battle this one on a D.I.Y level and as “no budget” it can ever get.

Out of the midst of things, I’m far from alone. After breaking news to my near and dearest in the film world, it just hit me funds is no deterrent. My fellow colleagues such as Adrian Castro who is kicking my butt for feeling sorry for myself and Vanna Seang, who has all the latest film gizmos, film cranes , tracks dollies etc… in the world is ready to shoot at the get go. Down in Melbourne, I’ve got supporter Somchay P. who is a constant reminder of my quest and Craig Anderson, my long time film mentor who wants to play Sammo Hung! There are plenty more to name, but it takes until now to finally realise that everything is at my disposal. I have a team of extraordinary people who believe in my vision and what I stand for and all I have to do is say when.

So whats happening now? The quest is emerging at the forefront of my mind. I’m taking out all the notes I’ve taken so far to recollect what I envisioned the “Quest” to be about. It is about me, and my journey (as well as a shared journey) in meeting Jackie Chan. I’m not sure how to describe the outcome I have in my mind, but I know it will be wack as and unexpected, especially if you know how my mind operates.