Powered by Blogger.

Home

Showing posts with label Dying Breed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dying Breed. Show all posts

Why Tasmanians shouldn't breed

Monday, November 3, 2008

BAHAHAHA! Fucking Tasmanians! Seriously, only Tasmanians would be stupid enough to make the comments in the story below which appeared in The Australian on Friday. I've highlighted the parts I found particularly amusing. Note: BEST. HEADLINE. EVER.

Tasmanian tourism hopes cannibal film will attract tourists
By Katherine Field | October 31, 2008

TASMANIANS hope a new Australian horror film about cannibals will attract more tourists and movie makers to the Apple Isle.

The film, Dying Breed, portrays a remote Tasmanian community as flesh-eating savages.

But Tasmania Tourism Council chief executive Daniel Hanna said the movie, mostly filmed near the Pieman River, western Tasmania, should help lift the state's profile.

"Any film that shows some of the key parts .. like the rugged wilderness, is going to be a good thing and will hopefully spark some interest," Mr Hanna said today.

"Obviously as long as visitors don't expect there really to be cannibals in Tasmania."

Starring Leigh Whannell and Nathan Phillips, the film, to be released on November 6, is about four people searching for the Tasmanian Tiger when they happen on a cannibal tribe descended from escaped convict Alexander `the Pieman' Pearce.

Pearce was a real life convict who escaped a brutal penal colony in the 1830s and survived by eating other people.

West Coast Mayor Darryl Gerrity said the story's background was real and locals were happy to promote the area.

"Cannibalism did happen here, you can't ignore history although it's a bastardisation of that story," Mr Gerrity said.

Mr Gerrity joked that locals should have been used as the actors.

"Most of us would have fitted the bill admirably and true to life.

"Because we're all descendants of the Pieman."

Mr Gerrity said the area had "lots of stories here that would make good movies".

Director and writer Jody Dwyer said filming the movie, which had a $3m budget, was difficult as a lot of equipment had to be shipped to Tasmania.

Some scenes were also shot in Victoria's Dandenong Ranges.

Dwyer said the Tasmanian wilderness and isolation played the role of a character in the film, he said.

"I would have loved to have shot the whole thing in Tasmania, but I'm afraid Tasmania don't really have any back-ups in terms of film industry," Dwyer said.

Dwyer said he wanted to make a movie that would appeal to people worldwide and was commercially viable.

He believed other horror films such as Saw and Wolf Creek were changing the way Australian films were viewed internationally.

"There is a move to be more commercially aware by a new wave of filmmakers that is actually getting tired with the cliches of drug ridden suburbia or flat red heat haze outback movies, we've seen a lot of them," Dwyer said.

"You are going to still make those the Rowan Woods films, – the Little Fish films because they're beautiful films but they won't do well internationally they will be respected but not do well economically.

"A lot of films are being funded that nobody wants to see and it's a shame because people want to support the industry but if something doesn't excite me I won't spend my 15 bucks."

Dying Breed opens on November 6.

Read more...

Forget coffee, lets breed baby!

It's no secret I'm a fan of horror movies and the latest Australia offering has got me peeing my panties with excitement. The fact it's yet another juicy Australian production may also have a lot to do with my excitement. Regardless, it's great to see Australian films being made that aren't about the outback or recovering drug addicts or coming of age. One of my favourite films is Wolf Creek and I was a fan of the Saw franchise (until they started producing a thousand bastardisations) and Dying Breed is from the creators of those. Dying Breed interweaves the two most fascinating icons of Tasmanian history: the extinct Tasmanian tiger and 'The Pieman' (aka Alexander Pearce) who was hanged for cannibalism in 1824. Basically four people searching for the Tasmanian Tiger in the wilderness stumble across the descendants of `Pieman'. Terror ensues. The film stars two of the biggest names in Australian horror- Leigh Whannell one of the stars and creators of Saw and Nathan Phillips from Wolf Creek. The trailer for this film is pretty darn freaky (to say the least) and hopefully its as successful as its predecessors. Decent horror movies are few and far between these days but in recent years Aussie horror films have struck a rare balance between being critical applauded and commercially successful overseas, a rare feat especially within said genre. Keep the quality Aussie horror coming!
View the trailer here:
http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=72tfEhFcIS8

Above: Image from Dying Breed set

Read more...

  © Blogger templates Newspaper by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP