Our ‘new normal’ is a reality show


OPINION:

Vicki Anderson reviews the second part of the three-part TV drama Hope and Wire.

Did the Earth move for you last night

If only Gaylene Preston had spared us from the thrush, racism, violence, weird chicken stroking, stilted teenage sweethearts and ”disaster sex”.

Last week’s launch of Hope and Wire, a three-part television drama series about the earthquakes and their aftermath, was something many in Canterbury simultaneously anticipated and feared.

Created by award-winning Wellington film-maker Preston, it has polarised viewers.

Perhaps, and correct me if I’m barking up the wrong road cone here, this is because post-quake it has often felt as if things are being done ”to” us in Christchurch, rather than ”with” us.

I refer to the ”special war-time powers” that hide all manner of callous acts and acquisitions; the disturbing colour-coding of our suburbs (yellow, red, green); the exhausting insurance wrangles and the blatant destruction of our heritage buildings.

The continued portrayal of our city in Hope and Wire as a stereotypical place of skinheads and random violence, is irritating and offensive.

Our city has skinheads and violence, of course, but there is a much greater story to be told. As one of the characters said last night: ”The problem is, they just don’t do complexity.”

People are outraged because in this flattened city characters like ”Joycie” outnumber the skinheads 70,000 to one.

Last night the cookie-cutter characters returned, pearls in place, to battle red tape, thrush and insurance paperwork.

Again I found the real footage the most affecting. Again Joycie, played by Rachel House, and Len’s characters shone.

Last night’s episode began in Lyttelton, the epicentre of it all.

It was there, outside the Lyttelton Library, where the Lyttel Stitches group encouraged people to join them making hearts that eventually went on the wire fences, that the phrase ”hope and wire” was articulated by The Eastern’s Adam McGrath.

Highlights were Simmo Abbari, a classically-trained chef, who played himself, determined to get his wife’s ashes from a broken building within the cordon.

He lost his restaurant in the September 2010 earthquake, got another one up and running which was destroyed that December. His next restaurant was locked behind the cordon after February 22, 2011.

Lyttelton stalwart Al Park helped tell another story.

Park ran popular live music venue AL’s Bar which was destroyed in a devastatingly contrary process by Cera post February 2011.

In last night’s episode Park helped tell of futile attempts by owners of the Southern Blues Bar to get their sign before its building was demolished.

Nothing in the stories of Park and Abbari were made up. The characters are invented, the stories are real.

With the majority of the city’s venues destroyed, I went to a lot of house parties in random places post-quake.

We shared food and live music. Such events were supportive and immensely comforting.

Christchurch’s only rape crisis centre closed last week after being turned down for Government funding.

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I mention this because of something hinted at in one of last night’s storylines involving a house party hinted at.

It cost taxpayers, through Government funding body New Zealand On Air, $5M to make this TV series.
Which do you think most deserved $5M

Ryan, played by Jarod Rawiri, is a character I’m warming to. There are many Ryans in this city and the all too familiar stories of places like Sunshine Close are worth sharing.

But how many times in one minute is it necessary to use the phrase ”teenage sweethearts”

It was shockingly bad dialogue. Pun intended.

Preston’s heart is in the right place. It is the task of storytellers to translate human experience. This is a human experience which is mighty difficult to translate to the small screen.

Perhaps with distance we may view this series with kinder eyes, but right now many are still living this painful ”story”.

In less than a minute, life was stripped back to what really counts for people from all walks of life. We share a common bond which is complex to articulate.

After the dust settled, kindness and incredible community spirit rose up. This is the true heart of our quake story.

Everyone in Christchurch has a broken heart on a wire fence somewhere. Hope, intangible as it is, has helped us get through.

Wire

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The continued damning of Yoko Ono

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Aussie anchor red-faced over dong doodle


Australian TV presenter Carrie Bickmore has taken doodling to a new level.

The co-host of Network Ten’s The Project caused a stir on Twitter after holding up a piece of paper with a drawing of a phallic symbol on it at the end of Thursday night’s show.

Viewers responded immediately, taking to the social networking site to express their shock and amusement.

“Am I the only one that noticed the drawing on Carrie’s sheet tonight” hillsy81 tweeted.

“What have u been doodling” Kristen Haythorne wrote.

Gary Lovell said: “@BickmoreCarrie has other things on her mind at the end of the show #bickmorewilly.”

“My little sister just asked what Carrie drew on the back of her paper …,” Bridie Pamment tweeted.

Some suggested Bickmore might have been the victim of a prank.

“Looks like somebody pranked you Carrie!” Chris tweeted.

“Maaaan … The interns have all the fun,” Tom Read wrote.

A red-faced Bickmore found the funny side to the incident and blamed former host Charlie Pickering for the drawing.

“OMG! So embarrassed! Was laughing with audience in the break about what @charliepick signed at the end of every show! #CharliesRevenge #oops,” Bickmore tweeted on Thursday night.

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– AAP

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Trailer to Angelina Jolie’s Unbroken looks great


The first official trailer for Angelina Jolie’s emotionally rousing Unbroken has been released, five months after wrapping its Australian shoot.

It’s based on the true story of WWII hero Louis Zamperini, an Olympic runner who joined the Air Force in 1941 and survived on a raft for 47 days after his plane was shot down, only to be captured by the Japanese.

The trailer begins with that fateful flight, before dipping back into Zamperini’s childhood and tracking his life – showing his training for the Olympics, enlisting in the army, the crash, and a glimpse at some of the torture and pain Zamperini had to endure in the Japanese POW camp.

Directed by Jolie, it was shot around Australia, in spots including Sydney’s Cockatoo Island, and also stars Garrett Hedlund and Australian actor Jai Courtney.

The trailer debuts just over a week after Zamperini’s death on July 2 at age 97.

Unbroken is set for release early next year.

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Wellington writer up for an Emmy


Wellington writer Neil Cross is up for an Emmy award.

The Bristol, England-born author and screenwriter has been nominated for an Emmy for outstanding writing for a mini series, movie or dramatic special for his writing of Luther, a BBC crime drama he created.

But he faces stiff competition, with American Horror Story: Coven, Fargo, Sherlock, The Normal Heart, and Treme also nominated in the same category.

Cross said the idea for his obsessive, possessed Detective Chief Inspector John Luther, who first appeared on TV screens in the form of Idris Elba in 2010, came from a life of reading, watching and writing crime fiction.

In 2011, the Booker Prize nominee was named among Variety magazine’s ”Ten Screenwriters to Watch”.

In 2012, he was also nominated for an Emmy for Luther.

This year’s Emmy winners will be announced in August.

Cross, who lives in Wellington with his wife Nadia and sons, said he now thought of New Zealand as home despite writing for American and British television.

”Kiwis as a culture have certain attributes that I really admire, a confidence without arrogance, enormous acceptance without being superior or smug. I’m the most English man ever. I spend my life in a haze of embarrassment and self-hatred.”

He has also written for Doctor Who.

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– The Dominion Post

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Aussie’s anchor red-faced over dong doogle


Australian TV presenter Carrie Bickmore has taken doodling to a new level.

The co-host of Network Ten’s The Project caused a stir on Twitter after holding up a piece of paper with a drawing of a phallic symbol on it at the end of Thursday night’s show.

Viewers responded immediately, taking to the social networking site to express their shock and amusement.

“Am I the only one that noticed the drawing on Carrie’s sheet tonight” hillsy81 tweeted.

“What have u been doodling” Kristen Haythorne wrote.

Gary Lovell said: “@BickmoreCarrie has other things on her mind at the end of the show #bickmorewilly.”

“My little sister just asked what Carrie drew on the back of her paper …,” Bridie Pamment tweeted.

Some suggested Bickmore might have been the victim of a prank.

“Looks like somebody pranked you Carrie!” Chris tweeted.

“Maaaan … The interns have all the fun,” Tom Read wrote.

A red-faced Bickmore found the funny side to the incident and blamed former host Charlie Pickering for the drawing.

“OMG! So embarrassed! Was laughing with audience in the break about what @charliepick signed at the end of every show! #CharliesRevenge #oops,” Bickmore tweeted on Thursday night.

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– AAP

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An unlikely harmony


Amid the swirl of an early 1960s party scene in Clint Eastwood’s latest movie, an adaptation of Jersey Boys, the hit Broadway musical about Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, a television screen flashes an unexpected face: young Clint, himself, in black-and-white.

The period-appropriate shot from the television Western Rawhide – a wry Hitchcockian cameo – condenses in a moment the almost unfathomable breadth of Eastwood’s career: fresh-faced cowboy to steadfast Oscar-winning director. Does it feel like a lifetime ago to Eastwood

“Several lifetimes ago,” chuckles the 84-year-old director. “Seeing myself in 1959 or ’60 or ’61 or whenever that episode was done, it was kind of like, ‘Wow’. I’ve travelled a long road since then.” That road – from Sergio Leone’s spaghetti Westerns to Eastwood’s own Unforgiven, from “Make my day” to “Get off my lawn” – has made an unlikely detour down the New Jersey Turnpike. Jersey Boys – Eastwood’s 12th film as director since turning 70 – only adds to what’s by now one of the most remarkable late chapters of any film-maker. How has he done it

“I just never let the old man in,” says Eastwood . “I was always looking for new things to do. I rightfully or wrongly always thought I could do anything.” Such an attitude explains many of his accomplishments. Who else would have thought a tragic story about a female boxer (Million Dollar Baby) could be such a success Who else would have come to Iwo Jima to make the World War II drama Flags of Our Fathers and, out of curiosity and empathy, opted to also make a film (Letters from Iwo Jima) about the other side of the battle field

And who would have expected the man – “a tall, chiselled piece of lumber, a totem pole with feet,” as James Wolcott called him – mythologised as both The Man With No Name and Dirty Harry would be taken by the story of the guys behind Big Girls Don’t Cry

“The whole secret in life in any profession, regardless of whether it’s entertainment or anything else, is just being interested,” Eastwood says. “Are you interested in life Are you interested in what’s going on Are you interested in new kinds of music” Eastwood, a piano player and jazz fan, has long been known for his passion for music. He made a film about Charlie Parker (Bird), sung in Paint Your Wagon and Gran Torino, produced a documentary on Thelonious Monk (Straight No Chaser) and has composed most of his scores over the last decade.

But the falsetto-rich pop confections of Valli (played by John Lloyd Young, who originated the role on Broadway) and the Four Seasons would seem a higher register than Eastwood’s natural pitch.

“So many times you’d look off to the wings or even between shots and see him standing there trying to figure it out for himself, going [in a high voice] “Ooooo,” says Michael Lomenda, who plays the Four Seasons’ Nick Massi in the film.

Thtough the Jersey Boys sensation on Broadway immediately brought interest from Hollywood, earlier adaption attempts flat-lined before Eastwood revived it with Warner Bros.

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“I couldn’t understand quite why after nine years on Broadway, somebody didn’t want to do it,” says Eastwood.

Eastwood favoured a faithful adaptation written by the musical’s writers, Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice, and cast veterans of the Broadway and touring productions over more famous options. Erich Bergen, who plays songwriter Bob Gaudio, and Lomenda both come from touring shows. Vincent Piazzo of HBO’s Boardwalk Empire was the lone outsider.

“We knew there was no chance in hell it would be turned into fluff,” Young says of hearing that Eastwood would direct Jersey Boys. Instead, Eastwood’s film has more melancholy than your average musical, and gravitates toward the group’s tumultuous offstage personal lives.

Eastwood’s famously efficient style of film-making – usually just one or two takes, always on time and under budget – was an education for the actors, most of them unseasoned in movie-making.

“His fearlessness is somehow contagious,” says Piazza. “The harmony that you walk into and the space he creates for you as an actor is a rare, rare thing.”

Though Eastwood may seem like cinema’s answer to a chunk of Mt. Rushmore, he has a warm presence and is quick to smile. He has a habit of pulling the skin of his cheek taut, as if making age an idle plaything.

He recently finished shooting the Navy SEAL drama American Sniper, with Bradley Cooper, which he calls “a love story and a military story about a guy who’s very talented at shooting people”. It’s two films in one year for Eastwood in what he notes is his 60th year in movies.

“It’s fashionable to pigeonhole everybody,” he says.

“You’re 60, you’re a senior. At 60, I felt like I was about 40. At 40, I felt like I was about 18. It’s just all mental attitude.”

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Director wins by a Whisker


The story of a homeless, hungry drifter trying to feed his dog has won the hearts of the judging panel at the Palm Springs International ShortFest.

Auckland director Steve Saussey was awarded the Jury Future Filmmaker Award at the short film festival for his work on the film Whisker.

Set in small-town New Zealand the film tells the story of a man who enters a beard-growing competition at a quintessential pub. The prize is a meat pack which he desperately wants to win to feed his dog.

“What attracted me to the script is that it is a really great exercise in telling a complete story in 10 minutes and making people laugh and cry in that time,” Saussey said. “I’ve always wanted to make an iconic New Zealand fable.”

Saussey describes the film as a Barry Crump-like tale with a twist.

“For a New Zealand short film to be recognised by a major United States festival jury is fantastic, given the amazingly high standards of the films in competition.”

The Palm Springs International ShortFest is one of only a handful of festivals specifically for short films.

According to Saussey it is among the biggest and most prestigious.

The film, written by Corey Chalmers and produced by Yolande Dewey, is a real Kiwi affair.

“It was interesting to see what the Americans laughed at versus the New Zealanders,” Saussey said.

“Americans react to it as a story. When there’s a sad bit they go ‘awww’ and when there’s an exciting bit they screech, but Kiwis are a quieter audience.”

It was his first time directing a short film and it’s behind the camera that the father of three feels most comfortable.

“I think the separation of the writer and director is quite an important thing.”

“There are a lot of writer-directors but I think it’s rare to be exceptional at both things.”

Saussey has directed hundreds of TV commercials in Australia and New Zealand, and last year set up the production company Stuff and Nonsense.

He attributes much of his film-making success to his experience crafting commericals for the past 15 years.

Whisker has just been accepted into the Portland Film Festival and Saussey hopes the festival run will continue.

The New Zealand Film Commission helped fund some of the film and plays a role in submitting Whisker to international film festivals.

Saussey is now putting together his first feature film.

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– Auckland City Harbour News

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Planet of the Apes ‘isn’t too far from reality’


Animal welfare group Humane Research Australia has thrown its support behind the latest

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Jungle – the sound of 2014


British duo Jungle quickly built up a fanbase without revealing their names or faces.

Two of their early singles swiftly went viral thanks to attention-grabbing, share-friendly videos made by the band and their mates.

Six-year-old break-dancer, a B-Girl named Terra, stars in the hit video for search-and-destroy-the-beats track Platoon, which has had more than four million plays, while The Heat includes impressive roller skating routines from the High Rollaz.

The British music press have dubbed Jungle “the most exciting band in the world” and pounced on Jungle’s already impressive hype – the BBC Sound of 2014 nomination, the United States tour that sold out on the back of their SxSW appearance before Jungle even had an official record out in America.

Working from their home studio in Shepherd’s Bush, Jungle are soulfully connecting 2014 with “seedy tribal funk” from 1974.

The core Jungle duo, West London neighbours initially known only as J and T, were cast as “mysterious” when they exploded from seemingly nowhere late last year.

The mystique was not intentional, Josh Lloyd-Watson tells The Press from London.

“Me and T [Tom McFarland] have been friends for about 15 years,” he says. “We met when we were 10 years old. I moved in next to him, we were neighbours. I used to hang out on the wall behind our house.

“The mystery is something the media dreamed up really.”

There were guitars “lying around” at home and the pair naturally gravitated towards music.

“It is for ourselves, we never really wanted to seek outside attention. We didn’t really tell anyone.”

The friends had been making music for six months in a bedroom when they released it online under just their initials, J and T, accompanied by a simple picture.

“It’s been the maddest thing. We just thought we were putting the art out, as producers. but we’ve been dragged to the front of this project to be the people the press want us to be but it’s never really been like that.”

Jungle is about music and art. It’s not about ego.

“There is no statue.

“Me and T are very close, nothing’s really changed. We don’t pay too much attention to it. Hype is hype.”

Live, Jungle becomes a seven-member collective that command your feet to dance.

“People like seeing people. It’s developed naturally and gone to a new level.

“Live it’s about the now, being carefree, and finding the energy. Our crowds are getting bigger, the audience becomes the eighth member.”

Jungle perform two sideshows for the Splendour in the Grass Festival in Australia this month. Their schedules don’t permit a visit to New Zealand this time around but they hope to perform here later in the year.

Today marks the release of their self-titled debut album. It’s personal.

“It’s all based on personal experience, that’s what makes the songs honest. They mean something. That’s the place you start from.”

He sounds genuinely delighted that someone on the other side of the world can recite lyrics he has written.

“Busy Earnin’, that had 18 versions,” he says.

“For The Heat. . . the beach. We immersed ourselves in location and imagination.”

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Each track on the album is a mini-film, he says. Its lyrics are the script.

“Making music is symbiotic, it’s something we do as mates just sitting around.

“We live together in that creative experience, we never get hung up, we don’t think about the outcome, we think about the now.”

Hit Platoon was off the cuff, arriving in two stages.

“The first half had a long time bubbling along, when the second part came it was a moment. We got super excited and started jumping around the room.”

Jungle has been described as the most exciting band in the world right now, but he isn’t dazzled by the hype.

“I just said to T, whether we are 45-years-old or just kids, sneaking over to each other’s houses, it will still be the same, an honest simple place that we start from when we’re writing and creating.

“We are just trying to write the best we can for the music, the art.”

Their album is tipped to be one of the hottest releases of the year.

Welcome to the Jungle, J.

Jungle’s self-titled album is released today.

– Canterbury

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