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Recently I shot and edited this BTS video of a photoshoot that I was PA’ing for Khushboo Sahrawat Photography. All credits in video.
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MICF Review - Glittery Clittery
Glittery Clittery: A ConSENSUAL Party, presented by the Fringe Wives Club comedy group is exactly what it says on the label, and in the best way possible. Recipient of the 2017 Moosehead Award, the show is belly-laugh good from the moment the trio step into the audience, black velvet capes over sparkling costumes. These Fringe Wives – Tessa Waters, Rowena Hutson and Victoria Falconer-Pritchard – are all the proverbial Beyoncé. With unique and differing brands of humour, they deliver a high-energy, all-singing, all-dancing cabaret spectacular featuring glitter, sequins, feminism, sex and vaginas, or as the ladies call them, glitter holes.
Glittery Clittery is interactive: several times during the show it breaks into a dance party, during which the Fringe Wives encourage the audience to dance along – the best dancer being awarded a high-five from Hutson, a glass of Falconer-Pritchard’s champagne or a make out session with Waters. There are frank discussions of sex, early crushes and lady boners. Occasionally the show trends towards heteronormativity, for the sake of clarity, such as when Hutson is dressed as a plushie of born-female genitalia during an audience inclusive quiz. This fortunately detracts little from the overall feeling of love and inclusivity
After the first song and dance of the show, the ladies straight up advise the audience “this is definitely not Wil Anderson.” The show might not be everyone’s cup of tea, and they acknowledge that, offering audience members who may be uncomfortable an early opportunity to leave. With a name like Glittery Clittery, or its featuring of the renowned Waters, there shouldn’t be any confusion regarding the tone of the show. The content of the show itself isn’t revolutionary feminism, at least not for someone with an understanding of the current politics surrounding the subject, but instead presents feminist issues and discussions in an open way that speaks to a much wider audience without losing its comedic edge.
One song early in the show particularly stands out – ‘He Only Did It Because He Likes You,’ a Bieber-esque love song. The song has the three Beyonce’s singing of personal incidents dismissed due to their ‘complimentary’ nature, from being bitten in the schoolyard by a vampiric young boy, ogled as a teenager by older men, then being sexually assaulted on public transport. These sorts of stories are horrifically rife from young women, yet when Falconer-Pritchard sings of her experience on the London Underground, it moves these experiences from an awful story to something heart-wrenching.
On paper, this show may seem serious, but much of the humour comes not in spite of the issues discussed but because of them. Perhaps it’s a little bit confronting when someone asks you to touch the labia attached to the shoulders of their costume, but with Glittery Clittery, that feels like the whole point.
Score: 9/10
#micf#glittery clittery#fringe wives club#review#micf review#rmitv#rmitv review#in review#writing#made by me
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Movie Review - Other People
On the surface, Other People might seem like a film aimed at winning awards – it follows a young gay man’s return home to his homophobic town and dying mother in order to help with her care. While Other People doesn’t entirely avoid the typical tropes of the cancer story or of the LBGT acceptance story, it plays with these motifs in a way that avoids over-sentimentality. Nor does it reach for any feelings that have not been wholly deserved.
In the feature directorial debut of Saturday Night Live writer Chris Kelly, the cast is littered with some elite talent from television and comedy circles. Fargo and Breaking Bad’s Jesse Plemons stars as David, a young gay comedy writer from New York who returns to Sacramento to be with his mother through her illness and death. He’s joined by Bradley Whitford who plays father Norm. Molly Shannon shines as his mother Joanne, with smaller parts from the likes of Paula Pell, Matt Walsh, Maude Apatow, Retta, Lennon Parham and the always delightful Zach Woods.
If the cast isn’t enough of an indicator, don’t be fooled by the subject matter – this is not a dark dramatic movie about death, it’s a typical dramedy. Yes, Kelly starts the movie with Joanne’s death before returning to the beginning of the last year of her life, but this is a movie about acceptance, about family and home, and throughout has spatterings of lighthearted comedic moments that help prevent the movie delving into pure depression fare, with a particularly great moment of an obscene and wildly inappropriate dance from a scantily clad ten-year old boy.
While Sacremento is hardly a small town, to David, his homecoming represents a return to small town values; he’s a cultured person amongst small-town folk – his mother his only kindred spirit. David is largely estranged from his younger sisters, and with his father’s refusal to acknowledge David’s sexuality, their relationship barely mimics a functional one. Despite these values, Whitford brings charm to the role – his love for Joanne is evident, and Norm feels like the dad of every high-school friend you ever had.
It’s this normality behind situations that are often emotionally heightened that creates the real heart of Other People. We touch on the typical moments of a cancer story, but they all feel real and understated, with not one emotion feeling contrived. It is self-aware, but not annoyingly so. The film’s title comes from one of David’s early lines in the film “this all just feels like something that happens to other people.” There are awkward family situations, joking about cremation, David’s grandparents wondering if Joanne’s tumours were instead parts of her twin that she had absorbed in the womb, amateur improv shows, family sing-alongs to a rather inspired piece of soundtrack (Train’s 2001 song ‘Drops of Jupiter’), and situations that feel so wonderfully mundane and familiar that it makes you feel like another character too. This set-up causes all the emotional moments to hit hard when they arrive – it is truly effective storytelling.
Other People technically is functional – it’s well shot without being the most beautifully composed film ever, and has no technical errors but no huge achievements either, other than the excellent combination of lighting and makeup to emphasis Joanne’s physical changes as her health declines. But these technical elements are peripheral to the true strength of the film – Kelly’s script and the excellent performances. Shannon almost feels robbed with the lack of award recognition, and both Plemons and Whitford could surely put their hands up too. In a year with some dubious choices, a film with such strong performances that are truly soul-wrenching might have been given a nod.
Score: 8.5/10
Cross posted from RMITV’s In Review.
#review#other people#movie review#chris kelly#molly shannon#jesse plemons#rmitv#made by me#rmitv review#writing
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During this session, I had three unnamed male characters. They became William, Simon and Alan. My weak spot is naming characters clearly.
Writing Workshop
Spending the second day of 2017 doing a writing workshop with some talented friends, Will, Simone and Alaine. We’re discussing short films, television series, or in my case, screenplays we’re working on.
They’re providing great feedback and forcing me to work on my own stuff too.
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Writing Workshop
Spending the second day of 2017 doing a writing workshop with some talented friends, Will, Simone and Alaine. We’re discussing short films, television series, or in my case, screenplays we’re working on.
They’re providing great feedback and forcing me to work on my own stuff too.
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The Remarkables, Queenstown, November 18th 2016
#remarkables#queenstown#new zealand#photos#lake wakatipu#made by me#georgie davies#georgie's nz project
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Queenstown, November 13th 2016.
#queenstown#lake wakatipu#lake#new zealand#boats#photos#made by me#georgie davies#georgie's nz project
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Stirling Falls, Milford Sound, November 12th 2016.
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Seals at Milford Sound, November 12th 2016.
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Queenstown, November 10th 2016.
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Fiordland, New Zealand, November 12th 2016
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Lake Wakatipu near Queenstown, New Zealand, November 10th 2016
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Queenstown, November 8th 2016.
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Writing update
Instead of Nanowrimo, I’d intended to do the now defunct Script Frenzy - 100 pages of screenplay in a month. To say that I’m behind is accurate, but I’m now on fifteen pages, and I’ve gotta say, that’s fifteen pages more than I would have done.
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Stirling Falls, Milford Sound, November 12th 2016
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Tutko Valley River, New Zealand, November 12th 2016
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Lake Wakatipu and Queenstown at sunset, November 6th 2016
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