Category Archives: Television

Does the changing landscape require directors to take a ‘humility pill’?

by Jackie Keast IF magazine August 24, 2022

DOP Bonnie Elliott and director Rachel Ward on the set of ‘Palm Beach’.

Directors working in the streaming landscape and alongside showrunners must take a “humility pill” or “move to the exit”, according to Rachel Ward.

The director of films such as Beautiful Kate and Palm Beach, opened the Australian Directors’ Guild conference, Director’s Cut, on Saturday in a keynote address.

In her speech, she referenced a controversial article she penned for the Nine papers in 2019, where she declared the director “dead” and wrote that today’s “Leans and Hitchcocks and Weirs” aren’t making film, but TV, where they have been “sadly neutered”.

“Producers and showrunners are the new brands, not the directors. They cast, they develop the scripts, they set the tone, they have final cut,” she wrote then.

Ward quipped on Saturday the piece did not win her many industry friends. However, she said she wrote it from her own experience.

Her own dose of “humility” came via a TV series where she “was not permitted to change one word of the script without prior consent”.

“I had to respond to eight pages of notes for a set-up episode from some invisible exec, deep in the streamer’s bowels. My editor was removed. Eventually I was too. And as small as our industry is here, I did not work again for many years,” she told the conference.

However, Ward said her most recent experience on a series “could not have been more fruitful, respectful and collaborative”.

“I am tempted to take back everything I said about our imminent death.

“But the truth is, the ground is shifting. And while we have enjoyed incredible autonomy and an unbridled voice in cinemas for decades, that platform, for most genres, is waning fast.

“Whether we like it or not, streaming – and with it our diminished voices – is the delivery service and the workplace for most directors of the future.

“It won’t be the same. We’ll have to conform to the streamer’s niche markets. We must do coverage execs may want, even if we don’t. We’ll get notes we have no option but to attend to. We won’t get the usual six to eight weeks to play in our edit; I have three days for a 35 minute episode in my latest.

“Of course there is no keeping good talent down. The best will rise. Their pilots will get picked up. Their set-up eps will rate the highest. They will be afforded the classiest fare; or they will develop, write and sell their own shows to streamers, and retain exec power. Either way, these director voices will increasingly be re-centred.”

Rachel Ward addressing the ADG conference.

Indeed, the role of the directors’ voice in a changing creative landscape – and their industrial rights – was among Director’s Cut’s key discussions.

In the “golden age of TV”, it’s not unusual to see six, eight or 10-episode series entirely shot by just one director, and to hear directors speak of how that creative opportunity presents to them like a “long film”.

But on that kind of project, whose voice is at the centre? Is it the director or the creative producer? What happens when you add a showrunner into the mix? Does a director get a say in major production decisions, like casting? Who gets final cut? Should a writer-director be able to be fired off their own project?

The role of the director continued in a panel session following Ward’s address, ‘Director at the Centre’. Moderated by ADG president Rowan Woods, it featured the Emmy-nominated Daina Reid, Bus Stop Films co-founder Genevieve Clay-Smith, Adrian Russell Wills and Partho Sen-Gupta.

Woods began the session by positing that throughout the history of screen storytelling, authorship has been shared in a “jostle-like manner” by directors, writers and producers.

“This movement, or this jostle at the centre is often rooted in a belief that a singularity of vision brings originality and coherence to screen storytelling.”

While collaborative practice was paramount, he added the director leads the interpretation of a text and the process of creating screen language – mise en scene – stating: “We must stand up for what that voice is worth to the screen project and to what it’s worth to the audience.”

There was an emphasis on a directors’ singularity of vision in the TV landscape like never before, Reid said.

However, if she was to have put on the ADG’s conference, she would have called it “Episode 8”, referring to some of her frustrations working under the showrunner model. She noted that often a showrunner’s attention is pulled in multiple directions, leading to script delays.

“I have been in the position where I’ve finished a few series. I never have that script. I wait and I wait and I wait and it doesn’t come.

“It all breaks apart at that point, because a director can’t direct, a producer can’t produce, and the actors can’t act if there’s no script. So if that showrunner has had their focus split so much they can’t deliver it to you, then where are we?”

In terms of how she sees the director’s role, Reid compared herself to a conductor, arguing the role is collaborative.

On that point, Clay-Smith agreed, noting her directorial style was that of “servant leadership”, as opposed to others serving her vision. That is, the creative vision is worked out as a team, with the director’s role then to get the best out of said team.

This idea of allowing others authorship in the creative process has informed her work with the disability community via Bus Stop Films. The concept of the auteur was not something that sat right with her.

“There is a way to have a creative vision and to lead with empathetic leadership; to be able listen to people, to give other people the space and to see them as valued members of the team, not just servants for the machine. That’s where inclusive filmmaking for me really came from; it was the idea of a shoulder-to-shoulder model, not a hierarchical model,” she said.

Contrastingly, Sen-Gupta argued the idea of the auteur needed to be reclaimed and revisited. They encouraged delegates to remember where the idea of the ‘auteur’ came from; a reaction against the studio industrial model in France in the ’50s where directors were seen as craftspeople – they believe we are at similar juncture now.

“I’d like to like to take that word back and own it. Yes, I do call myself an author-director because I am the author of the story and the film. As I go along, I work with different collaborators, all contributing to my vision in their own way. But they come and they go, and I continue to work on that project for a long time,” they said.

Wills added at times, strain on time and money on Australian productions – particularly in episodic TV – can mean a director is made to feel they are just there to “shoot a call sheet”.

“That’s when I start to feel my mental health declines, because I’m after the art; I’m after the performance, the storytelling… I think that’s getting further and further out of reach in this country.”

Adrian Russell Wills, Daina Reid, Genevieve Clay-Smith, Partho Sen-Gupta and Rowan Woods.

In another session, ‘Rights, Representation and Residuals’, RGM’s Jennifer Naughton and Frankel Lawyers’ Greg Duffy spoke to negotiating directors’ rights within the changing landscape.

Duffy said that over the last decade, he had increasingly observed directors getting siloed out of key decisions, though noted that was changing somewhat. Within that, he flagged concerns around showrunners ‘cutting behind’ directors across the US, Australia and the UK.

“You’ve got to be really clear about your vision, how you’re going to present it and what process, contractually, that means. So for instance… What period do you have to exclusively work with the editor to do the director’s cut? Then, who do you deliver to? Who do you take notes from? Do you get a chance to go back and interpret those notes and do another cut, and then who does it go to? That last jump is the bit that’s creating tension.”

Another growing trend was the early termination of directors. Naughton noted examples of clauses in contracts that would allow a director – shooting all episodes of a series – to be fired after the first episode if a platform didn’t like their approach.

Duffy cautioned termination provisions should be careful negotiated, particularly when the director was also the creator of the project. He noted that in feature film, there was a typically process before a director could be terminated: consultation, back and forth and then arbitration. He encouraged directors working in other mediums to also include an arbitration clause in their contracts, allowing a neutral party to resolve decisions quickly.

In terms of residuals, Naughton said that directors rarely see more than upfront fees on streaming projects. Both she and Duffy noted it is very hard for representatives, whether agent, manager or legal, to argue against the global might of streamers in contracting, with the argument often: “It’s been signed and used in 190 countries worldwide.”

In that sense, Duffy said there was a need for industrial action. “Writers, composers and producers around the world have been dealt into that particular pie for a long time. It’s only just started with directors in a small way.”

Further, Duffy noted that most countries around the world, except the US, have moral rights for directors, which involves the right to be credited and the right of integrity. He has started pushing this on contracts with global streamers as Australian directors are afforded these productions under the Copyright Act.

“We don’t want [directors] to be cut behind or pushed out of the of the consultation, collaboration process in the final delivery,” he said. “If the production company wants the director enough, there’s a discussion.”

Naughton said if a director waived the attribution of authorship in their moral rights, it was actually in conflict with their credit clause. “We keep raising this with the various legal teams that represent these companies, and it’s like bashing your head against a brick wall.

“These companies, most of them are coming out of the US. They have an understanding of working with the guilds there. Those guilds have such strong memberships, such strong powers. It very difficult for us to rely on that in this market without that industrial instrument in place. If we’re relying on the guild to step in and say, ‘Well, no, the director needs to be credited, and you can’t cut up their work’, that’s what the ADG should be doing.”

The ADG is finalising a TV director’s agreement with Screen Producers Australia.

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“Writing Impenetrable Characters” Lenny Abrahamson on ‘Normal People’ and ‘Conversations with Friends’

It kind of grew out of Normal People,” said Lenny Abrahamson about his new series Conversations with Friends. Both stories come from Irish author Sally Rooney. “It seemed very obvious having gone through the adaptation in episodic form. We learned how best to work with Sally’s material and we all felt like Conversations should be a series.

The series are listed as Normal People premiering in 2020 and Conversations with Friends premiering in 2022, but the process was a little more overlapping for the writer/director. “We were cranking up with breaking the episodes while Normal People was still not out in the world.”

I’ve been attending to other things on the slate, but I’ve been in Sally Rooney’s world since starting on Normal People,” joked Abrahamson.

TV Series Not Films

For both stories, it would appear longevity is a major player in what makes the stories work. You need to see a long rise and fall of the relationships to truly understand the joy and turmoil. “Partially it is that,” said Abrahamson. “It’s the amount of screen time.Creative Screenwriting Magazine

Lenny Abrahamson. Photo by Molly Keane

But, with Sally’s work, it also benefits from a quiet, close look. You need to draw people into the characters]and the details of their experiences. You need to have them pay close attention to the small changes and shifts going on in their lives.

This feels like a luxury given today’s instant gratification audiences, but Abrahamson has earned some patience delivering projects like Room, Frank, and Normal People. “If you try to impose the stronger, more extreme arc of a feature film — the single rise of a traditional story — it doesn’t work for what is really an accumulative, slow build.

I think the short episodes mean they don’t feel like traditional TV drama with the plot and B-story. It’s not a traditional TV hour,” he said of the latest series. “You can work in a movie style but these short, intense bursts of story over 25 minutes allows you to be pure in this filmmaking style, but it doesn’t impose the feature length demand for a crescendo.

In Conversations with Friends, the team had some difficulty building the episodes. “You’re juggling and trying to keep those balls in the air. You have this dynamic of Frances and Nick that changes everybody and pushes the story, but if you’re not careful, you lose the focus on Bobbi and Frances.

With these two adjacent paths, the writers had to spend time moving back and forth, then re-examining lines from the book to make it all work on the screen. “We had to expand those short references into scenes so each episode had its own point, but also leaves you with something strong. But if you compress too much, you lose detail and the breath [the episode] needs.

The Normal People Style

Abrahamson developed a very specific style with Normal People, which he wanted to push even further for Conversations with Friends. Some critics have described the style as “the intimate camera” which is needed for the intimate journey of the characters.

We wanted to push that further. So if anything, it does make some strong demands of the audience, unless you lean in and let yourself be drawn into the characters, then that’s when it works.” He continued, “But if you just sort of tuning in and hoping for an easy ride through, then it’s not as satisfying I think. And I like that. It’s good to push yourself and challenge the audience.

In many ways, this also helps with re-watchability as there’s always more to catch on a second viewing. “It is interesting. I think this style of work does pay to rewatch. I think there is a lot of stuff happening that you may enjoy in a different way or see in a rewatch. I never make something with that in mind, but I hope everything I make does pay re-watching because that’s a sign that there’s depth and density.Creative Screenwriting Magazine

Connell (Paul Mescal) & Marianne’s (Daisy Edgar-Jones) Photo by (Photo by Enda Bowe/Hulu

All of this comes back to the novels. Abrahamson read Conversations with Friends as a fan, but didn’t see either as a series until he read Normal People. “For me, if I see pictures when I’m reading, if I can feel a tonal territory visually and in terms of screen storytelling, that’s the thing. I felt it quickly with Normal People. I think it has to do with the simplicity of her writing. There’s little in the way of literal pretension or purple prose.

The writer/director added, “She writes in a very direct way, but she does bring you deeply into contact with the characters. I think the chimes with how I make films. I like my structure and scaffolding to be hidden and to just seem like you’re with people and hard to analyze or reverse engineer.”

Fully Developed Characters

Another aspect somewhat unique to these stories is that even though all of the characters are relatively young, they appear to be fully developed. This is quite different from many American teen soap opera narratives. “A lot of TV and movie depictions of people in their lives… it’s either soapy or dystopian or provocative,” joked Abrahamson. “Partially around young people sexuality. It’s intensely shocking and designed to be around dysfunction, where intimacy is a problem.

In some ways, this is valid, as emotions can be heightened with young loves, but Abrahamson gives the author credit for being “unsentimental” while still “giving a portrait of the joy and healthfulness of love, intimacy, sex, conversation, and friendship.” These transformative years help make these stories work.

While working on the adaptation, he said it’s interesting that once you start to adapt, you see the new story in one light and start to forget aspects of the adaptation that didn’t transfer. “I’m re-reading the book and realizing we changed a lot. I didn’t think we had.

There are aspects we didn’t put in or aspects we had to embellish. Even things like the character of Melissa. She was an essayist, but she’s a writer now. There’s a bunch of story mechanics we didn’t use from the novel. That’s probably my own dislike of movies where the main character is a photographer where you end up with endless actors doing sexy clicking,” he joked.

But I actually think, overall, the changes are small and everywhere. The emphases shift, but there’s not a massive part of the story we didn’t use.” Other parts were merely too internal to make it to the screen.

I don’t believe in a formula for screenplays — those Syd Field books. I think that’s reductive, but the idea of what holds you, what moves you from one moment to the next, I think that’s been clarified for me by working on [adaptations] and that material that doesn’t have that pure shape. You find it on the screen.

Writing Bad Screenplays

To elaborate on the idea of “sexy clicking,” Abrahamson said he avoids “sexy jobs” and other tropes in screenplays. “The other one is a Marine Biologist. Thrillers always have that. There’s a shorthand. It’s adjacent to real life, but it’s not [real life]. Just like everybody is way too attractive and apartments look great. I’m tough on scripts.

I’ve never done something that just came through the door,” he said about scripts arriving on his desk. “Partially because I like to be involved in the conception and execution right from the beginning, but also because I’m very critical of scripts. Part of this is because a lot of scripts are designed to be read by people who might fund them. That means, for very good reason, writers fill the pages with descriptions and color, to make the read vivid. As a Director, that irritates me. Shooting scripts for me are bare.

This means the bulk of screenplays irritate Abrahamson. “Part of it is also the way people are educated to write screenplays. You’ll find the name of a character and then open brackets and five adjectives of who they really are. Then I think, ‘Well, I don’t need to investigate this.’ I’m interested in characters where there’s an impenetrability, where you don’t really understand them.”

I don’t want to see 1. Here’s the person, 2. Here’s the problem. That’s now how life presents itself. Most people experience things as a slightly foggy vista where they don’t know where they’re going and they don’t know where they want to go. That’s more interesting to me.”

In some ways, Abrahamson wishes there were two drafts of the screenplay: one for the investors and one for the director. “In Joanna Hogg’s The Souvenir, I absolutely believed the characters, but I couldn’t reduce them to a… beaten down cop who finds himself in a dead end job when X happens.

For those trying to break into the industry today, Abrahamson advises you to “start doing what you want to end up doing.” He clarified, “It’s hard to push through the studio system if your aim is to go somewhere else. The people who make the best studio movies are people who love studio movies. But if you want to make something more independent, you have to start by doing that.

This interview has been condensed. Listen to the full audio version here (and learn more about Normal People in our first conversation here).  

“It’s time to be very clear that Screen Australia is there for culture”: Sandy George

by Sandy George IF magazine June 20, 2022

Sandy George.

Australian film and television is delivering less local cultural value to audiences, authentic dramas are fewer, and much of it now feels a lot less Australian – even unrecognisable as made in this country, according to veteran screen journalist Sandy George.

George argues if there is nothing recognisably Australian on the screen, it carries little cultural value. It is ‘Australianness’ that excites local viewers, and cultural value is the main reason why taxpayer funding underpins drama production.

The following is an extract from George’s New Platform Paper ‘Nobody talks about Australianness on our Screens‘, just published by Currency House, in which she argues Screen Australia must proactively cultivate film and television that is Australian in look and feel.

Screen Australia must make exceptional local cultural value the focus of everything.

Screen Australia needs to shout “What do we want? Cultural value! When do we want it? NOW!”

Senior executives say that local cultural value is a plank in their decision making and it is. But it is no longer enough for them to quietly consider the cultural value of individual projects or a group of projects in the same application round. The world has changed. It is time that they very seriously reviewed all programs and initiatives through the lens of cultural value, bearing in mind that ‘Australianness’ is the key to it.

The agency needs to put aside the notion that if an Australian production company is making content, then the content is Australian and automatically has cultural value. Just another cop show shouldn’t cut it. Screen Australia’s direct taxpayer funding must go to projects with exceptional potential local cultural value — and, yes, what that means exactly will have to be thrashed out, and it isn’t straightforward.

Creative freedom is implicit in the other kind of financial assistance available, the Producer Offset, and it is available to all eligible projects. A truck can be driven through the SAC [significant Australian content] test; no-one is exercising granular discretion. There is no cap on what individual projects can claim, and there is no cap on total annual claims. Plus the PO was recently held at 40 per cent for features and increased to 30 per cent for television (although there are fears that the networks will reduce their content contribution). The PO keeps pace with rising costs and rising production levels whereas the taxpayer funding through Screen Australian doesn’t. It’s time to be very clear that Screen Australia is there for culture.

Dare I say it, but I feel a bit sorry for Screen Australia at times because it is too relied upon, entitlement in the industry is rife, and it is often in a no-win situation because the supply of funding doesn’t meet demand for it. Some of its problems are of its own making, however. It has its fingers in too many pies. It needs to stop thinking it can and should control everything and decide what it can do best in service of the Australian public. Traditionally, there has been the notion that each FTA platform deserves some of Screen Australia’s money. Stop that. There should be just the one determinant.

There are many matters to carefully consider, of course. For example, what attitude to adopt towards talent escalation; that is, what funding to provide for projects made by inexperienced filmmakers perceived as having talent. It would be a good audience-facing discipline for them to know that the only possibility of getting money is if their projects have the kind of Australianness that delivers exceptional cultural value. And history tells us that those kinds of projects flush out support for people who become Baz Luhrmanns and George Millers (Mad Max)—and more of them is good because more benefits flow from them making mega-budget productions in Australia than flows from non-Australians making them. Another approach is for the individual states to take more responsibility for new talent, given they are closer to the ground. States too have considerable resources. More understanding of how the federal-state relationships work would not go astray.

When Screen Australia overlooks Australianness it should make clear why in its communications – it always announces what projects are getting its funding. In recent years, Screen Australia executives drank the Kool-Aid of their old political bosses. The media release about the appearance of the 2020/21 drama report (which its research department does an exemplary job of publishing each year) demonstrates this. It trumpeted: ‘Aussie drama production reaches record-breaking $1.9 billion expenditure’. It’s misleading because it’s not Aussie drama production. It is Aussie drama produced in Australia plus foreign drama filmed in Australia. Economic value and cultural value, foreign and Australian, should be treated separately in such reports, and total expenditure certainly shouldn’t be talked about breathlessly for all the reasons this paper raises. Stop pretending everything is OK. Depending on economics to deliver cultural value is arse about.

Screen Australia is a highly influential body. Where it puts its development support is a thumbs-up signal that others heed: partners on the other side of the world, overseas broadcasters, state government agencies, and private investors. It never wholly funds major projects, but very often its decisions determine which dramas gets the green light. In 2020/21 it invested in about 40 per cent of all the Australian features that went into production, in just over 70 per cent of mini-series for the FTAs, in just under 70 per cent of dramas for the SVODs and in 30 per cent of all FTA series and serials. (Under Screen Australia’s rules it can’t continually back new seasons of existing series.)

Screen Australia often says it can only fund what comes across its desk. True. But just as it guides the media’s thinking, it also guides practitioners’ thinking. Filmmakers constantly try to second guess its priorities. A few well-chosen words about exceptional local cultural value being a priority would have a big impact on what the industry chooses to develop.

Public Film Funding at a Crossroads lists the values that public film agencies in Europe aim to safeguard: cultural/artistic idiosyncrasies with specific territorial references; film as an cultural/artistic form; diversity in all its senses; European ownership; independent production companies that own underlying IP rights, and have artistic freedom and creative control along with the filmmakers; IP rights handled territory by territory; and cinemas as a central place for shared experiences.

Australia take note: they lean more to the cultural than the economic – and they value the cinema experience. Everyone needs to work together to fortify the big screen experience for those times when an Australian film can justify the high cost and high risk of a cinema release.

Eliza Scanlen and Hunter-Page Lochard in ‘Fires’. (Photo: Ben King)

Drama should tackle topics of national importance

“Tony Ayres came to us, just after the fires happened, and said ‘We need to talk about this. The community needs a cathartic moment.’ And we said ‘yes’ straight away.”

This is ABC TV’s Sally Riley explaining how the 2019/20 Black Summer bushfires gave rise to the six-part drama Fires. Ayres and Belinda Chayko created the show, which is available free on the streaming platform ABC iview.

The anthology series is cleverly conceived: the two young volunteer firefighters (Eliza Scanlen and Hunter Page-Lochard) at the core of the first episode, are linking characters across all episodes, each of which focusses on different people. In the second episode, only the most cold-hearted viewer would not feel grief and anger at the fate of dairy farmers Kath and Duncan (Miranda Otto and Richard Roxburgh). In the third, Mark Winter’s portrayal of a methadone addict reverses every prejudice a viewing public might have about drug addiction.

I had to see Fires for work and otherwise would not have done so because in horror and shock I had watched the Australian countryside burn over and over on the nightly news in 2019. Others felt the same way. Sure enough, it reawakened my feelings of despair. But the experience also left behind the sensation that I’d sat holding hands with the people who lived through the trauma, listening intently to them while they told their confronting stories.

Screen Australia can do almost anything under its enabling legislation, which suggests, among other things, making programs ‘that deal with matters of national interest or importance to Australians’. Shake things up! Ask filmmakers aged 14 to 35 years to pitch projects. The agency’s new head of content Grainne Brunsdon says the aim is to cater for this audience. Shake it up further by saying the pitches have to be comedy! Even further by asking in the public! Revel in what’s possible.

There is so much else that needs to be talked about

I worked at Screen Australia for three years part-time up to mid-2018 and felt crushed when the realisation hit that there was rarely talk of brilliant projects coming in the door. When I recently asked Screen Australia’s chief executive Graeme Mason publicly if enough good projects came in, he said ‘no’.

This raises so many questions.

Cultural value flows from shows that are great, so what can be done about getting better applications? What’s discouraging the truly talented? Do they not have the contacts to gain entry to the citadel? Should there be more digging for new talent, including in the tertiary environment? Are filmmakers born or bred? Why do the same production companies get repeat funding?

There are so many more matters that could be explored: the remarkable popularity of local films at festivals and what lessons can be learned there; the craving for Indigenous films among non-indigenous audiences, built from nothing over decades; how diversity and inclusion and addressing gender imbalance has done wonders for Australianness and there’s so much more of that to do. Maybe time limits should be imposed on Screen Australia jobs so different views of Australia cycle through the building and different networks gain access.

Sandy George’s full New Platform Paper ‘Nobody talks about Australianness on our Screens‘ is available now free on www.currencyhouse.org.au. Following industry feedback, an updated hard copy will published by Currency House in December

Australia’s Steve Jaggi Company Hatches Film and TV Slate Deal With Nicely Entertainment (EXCLUSIVE)

By Patrick Frater Variety 16 June 2022

Steve Jaggi Company and Nicely Entertainment
Steve Jaggi Company, Nicely Entertainment

Australia’s The Steve Jaggi Company and the Los Angeles-based Nicely Entertainment have hatched a pact to develop and produce a significant slate of film and TV series.

A Royal in Paradise,” the third movie collaboration between the two partners and the first under the new deal, started production this week in Australia’s Queensland.

Previously, the two collaborated on young adult series “Dive Club” and romantic feature “This Little Love of Mine,” which claimed to be the first Australian film into production during the global pandemic. Both productions were sold to Netflix.

The new deal calls for them to develop a minimum of six new TV projects, including both dramas and YA series, and two to three new movies per year.

Lazy loaded image
Rhiannon FishSteve Jaggi Company

Starring Rhiannon Fish (“The 100,” “Home and Away”) and Mitchell Bourke (“The Family Law”), “A Royal in Paradise” is directed by Adrian Powers (“Forbidden Ground”) from a script by Powers and Caera Bradshaw (“Dive Club”).

The story involves a New York writer (Fish) and a prince (Bourke) finding friendship and more at a marine conservation fundraiser in Australia’s Haven Isles.

In addition to the new deal, Nicely Entertainment will also be handling global sales and distribution of the Giant Screen 8k HDR family friendly documentary “Beyond the Reef,” produced by The Steve Jaggi Company and In Three Production. The picture showcases Australia’s Great Barrier Reef and its biodiversity in a fun and pacy presentation aimed at tween audiences. It is hosted and narrated by actor and social media influencer Shuang Hu and will be released to the international market later this year.

“The Steve Jaggi Company has found its sweet spot working across both the young adult and romance genres, and it has been rewarding to see our projects reach Netflix’s top 10 in so many territories around the world,” said founder Stave Jaggi. “We are spoilt for choice here in Australia when it comes to talent and locations, and we’re looking forward to continuing our successful working relationship with the team at Nicely.”

Nicely was founded in 2020 and is headed by Vanessa Shapiro, previous president of worldwide TV distribution & co-productions at Gaumont. Her company brings to market more than 15 new movies each year and has delivered a dozen new movies on Lifetime, including “A Very Charming Christmas Town,” “Lonestar Christmas,” “The Christmas Listing” and “Christmas on the Menu.”

Nicely is also the worldwide distributor on a new 2022 Australian-made Netflix family series “Gymnastics Academy: A Second Chance!,” created by Clay Glenn.

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Network 10 orders Helium’s pop group drama ‘Paper Dolls’

by Jackie Keast IF magazine April 4, 2022

L-R: Ainslie Clouston, Belinda Chapple.

Network 10 has commissioned eight-part drama Paper Dolls, which is set in 2000 and follows a manufactured girl group born out of one of the first reality TV shows.

The Helium produced series, created by Ainslie Clouston, appears to be loosely inspired by Bardot – who emerged from Seven’s 1999 program Popstars, the precursor to Australian Idol.

Belinda Chapple, one of the original members of Bardot with Sophie Monk, Sally Polihronas, Katie Underwood and Chantelle Barry, serves as co-executive producer.

Paper Dolls follows five hopeful women desperate to escape their ordinary reality and with aspirations of pop stardom. However, after stepping into the spotlight as band Indigo, they find their dream of fame is compromised by what it takes to achieve it.

Desperate to escape their ordinary reality and with aspirations of pop-stardom, five hopeful women step into the spotlight only to find that their dream of fame is compromised by what it takes to achieve it. 

The girls’ connection with each other evolves from competition to confidants, but their secrets threaten to tear the band apart, especially the machinations of one extra ambitious member who re-enters the music industry for a specific reason – to implode the group and seek vengeance on the record label that wronged her.  

Helium founder and chief creative officer Mark Fennessy produces. Clouston, whose recent credits include Darby and JoanAmazing Grace and Playing for Keeps, has written the series, developed with Claire Phillips.

Fennessy said: “Paper Dolls is a deeply fascinating, female-driven drama with a female-led creative team. This dramatic and compelling series is defined by its unique mix of fun and edge – equal parts gritty and aspirational, whilst shining a light on some of this generation’s freshest and most creative voices.”

Paper Dolls is one of a number of projects that the recently-launched Helium is working on with Network 10 parent Paramount ANZ.

Production is soon to begin on its Paramount+ drama Last King of the Cross, the story of Sydney nightclub mogel John Ibrahim, starring Lincoln Younes and Ian McShane.

With Invisible Republic and Hype Republic, Helium is also producing upcoming Paramount+ feature 6 Festivals, written and directed by Macario de Souza. It is also set within the music world, following three best friends who bucket list six festivals in six months after one of them is diagnosed with brain cancer. It features cameos from acts such as G Flip, Dune Rats, Alison Wonderland, Bliss n Eso, Peking Duk, PNAU, Example, Hooligan Hefs, The Amity Affliction, JessB, B Wise and Running Touch.

Paramount ANZ EVP and chief content officer Beverley McGarvey said: “We are thrilled to have commissioned another premium, entertaining, and distinctive Australian drama from Helium. Paper Dolls is set to be a captivating and engaging series. With a sensational cast and an experienced creative team, this story will enthral audiences.”

Production on Paper Dolls will begin in Sydney later this year, with the series to premiere on 10 in 2023.

Streamer deals go under the microscope at Screen Forever

by Sean Slatter IF magazine March 31, 2022

Stuart Menzies, Emma Fitzsimons, Ben Grant, and Felicity Harrison at Screen Forever on Wednesday.

Dealmaking with streamers was once again on the agenda at Screen Forever on Wednesday, as a selection of prominent Australian producers recounted their experiences of negotiating with various platforms.

For the second consecutive year, Werner Film Productions’ Stuart Menzies, Matchbox Pictures’ Felicity Harrison, and Princess Pictures’ Emma Fitzsimons sat together on a panel exploring the many considerations for producers, with the trio this time joined by Goalpost Pictures’ Ben Grant.

While details from a variety of different deals were laid bare, none of the services were mentioned by name due to the live nature of the projects concerned.

At the beginning of the session, Screen Producers Australia moderator Owen Johnston recapped the conclusions made from the previous panel, most notably that the traditional TV model of financing and rights was breaking down with the rise of the streamers, who often finance projects entirely and want to take all rights – reducing the ‘long tail’ or opportunity for producers to exploit IP through secondary windows.

The industry was thus in a period of transition, with deals becoming “more complex” and questions arising about the long-term sustainability of some production companies.

Speaking on the panel, Harrison detailed how Matchbox had recently signed a co-production agreement with an international streamer, allowing both to co-own the IP. That involved a license fee, and being paid a flat rate premium, rather than a percentage of budget. She said it was important for producers to do their homework prior to entering negotiations in order to get an idea of what outcome would suit them best.

With regards to negotiating a flat rate, Harrison said producers needed to work out what the right price was to make sure they were making money.

“I think the interesting part of a co-production model, because there’s that split ownership, we retain some rights. We can take a distribution fee and then from the revenue that’s split from those rights, we share that then with the streaming partner. So there is that ability to maximise,” she said, noting Matchbox was able to retain almost all rights except SVOD, with a holdback for run of series plus four years.

Werner Film Productions has recently signed two streaming deals: one was a co-production agreement, where a distributor had put money against a second window with a three year holdback, and on the other, the SVOD service “owned everything”.

Menzies said his experience had demonstrated it was a mistake to view any of the large streaming organisations as “homogenous”.

“It’s opaque where these other doors are, let alone how to knock on them,” he said.

“But in this instance, there was a co-production door. We went in through that, and there was a whole bunch of things that allowed us to do. There are a whole lot different rules in that as well, but it allowed us to retain the IP.”

Grant, who admitted to being a relatively new participant to streaming rights negotiations, said discussions should not be simplified into what is possible with single source funding as opposed to multi-source funding.

“It’s about access to the long tail that traditionally equity has provided us, and that we’re trying to reimagine that going forward,” he said.

“I don’t really think equity is the issue – it’s actually what it would bring. You could still have those things without equity. It’s just a commercial negotiation.”

According to the panel, an ongoing point of difference when working to streamers comes with residual payments to cast members.

Under the Australian Television Repeats And Residuals Agreement 2004 (ATTRA), last updated in 2016, a license period of three years applies to the use of broadcast and digital work from performers.

However, Fitzsimons said the streamers she had dealt with had consistently asked for a longer period.

“We find ourselves negotiating a lot of specific deals with MEAA to try and work out what we do after the three years,” she said.

“Generally, I have been finding MEAA’s quite happy to switch to a SAG-style residual after that three-year period.

“It’s complicated, but hopefully a model is emerging. I wonder if that could then be used as a template for a more complete solution that everybody could access rather than having to individually negotiate every single time, which is exhausting.”

Her comments were backed up by Menzies, who said while opening up the agreement for change “could take years”, it wasn’t a bridge too far.

“I don’t think any of us pretends ATTRA is fit for purpose under any of these sorts of deals – it’s just not.

“All of us have had to do bespoke deals with MEAA and it must be exhausting for them as well.

“There was a 2016 amendment, which allowed for domestic SVOD – essentially the Stan amendment – and I think there has now got to be something like that done.”

Of more immediate concern for Menzies in relation to future negotiations between streamers and producers was a “massive” increase in crew costs which could lead to the Australian industry being priced out of the competitive market.

“Why are the streamers going to come here with those blow in shows when we’re having 30 per cent year-on-year price rises?” he said.

“We’re getting seriously expensive on the world stage. I think we’re unsustainable.”

Adding to the comments, Harrison said it was also worth keeping an eye on how the activities of SVOD services were shaping deals of more traditional broadcasters.

“I think we’re going to look at our commissioning partners at the ABC; they are going to want SVOD-style rights too. They are naturally going to need to grow iview because that’s what consumers are looking for,” she said.

“But at the moment how those rights are valued through our guild arrangements is different. That has to change as well.

“So I think whilst there is going to be a lot of change in the streaming deals as those businesses mature, we’re going to have a lot of change in traditional models too. And as Stuart says, crew rates are expensive, everything is expensive. Licence fees are not going up; they need to, otherwise partners are going to have to take more equity.

“It’s tough. There is a lot of opportunity because there are more choices, but everything is getting much more expensive.”

Ashley Zukerman and Talia Zucker topline ‘In Vitro’

by Jackie Keast IF magazine March 3, 2022

Ashley Zukerman and Talia Zucker.

Ashley Zukerman has returned to Australia to star in sci-fi In Vitro, directed by Will Howarth and Tom McKeith.

Cast opposite the Succession and The Lost Symbol star is Talia Zucker, who co-wrote the script with the directors.

Set in regional Australia of the near feature, on a remote cattle farm, In Vitro sees Zukerman and Zucker play a husband and wife who have been experimenting with biotechnology and developing new farming methods.

The couple live a mostly isolated existence, but when a series of unsettling occurrences take place, they soon discover a disturbing presence on the farm that threatens to upend their lives.

Howarth also stars in the project, which has just wrapped production in regional NSW across Cooma and Goulburn. Post will take place in Orange, where it is expected to create 127 local jobs.  

McKeith and Howarth wrote the 2015 Philippines-set boxing drama Beast together, which McKeith directed with his brother, Sam. It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival where it was nominated for Best First Feature.

In Vitro was selected for the Sundance Screenwriters Lab in 2016. Zucker and Howarth met in Los Angeles where they both moved after being nominated for the Heath Ledger Scholarship.

The film is produced by Arcadia, who boarded the project after last year’s MIFF 37ºSouth Market and Fictious, Howarth’s production and talent management outfit with partner Matilda Comers.

Arcadia’s Lisa Shaunessy and Bec Janek produce alongside Howarth for Fictious and Rachael Fung.

Comers, Zukerman, Alexandra Burke, Anna Dadic, Michael Agar and Clement Dunn serve as executive producers. Screen Australia has provided major production funding, with support from Screen NSW, Mind the Gap, Fictious, and Arcadia.

“Our goal with In Vitro is to create a bold sci-fi with compelling characters that expresses something important about the times we live in,” said Howarth and McKeith in a joint statement.

“We’re so excited to be working on this project with such a great team and are thrilled to be supported by Screen Australia, Screen NSW, and the Sundance Institute.”

Arcadia’s Shaunessy said: “In Vitro is a dark love story that sent chills down my spine the first time I read it. Teaming with Will and Matilda at Fictious; and with Tom, Talia and Ashley rounding out the dynamic creative team alongside Arcadia – it’s exciting to be collaborating with such experienced and talented storytellers. Combined with the incredible locations like the majestic Snowy-Monaro and our super talented heads of department, we really look forward to bringing In Vitro to the screen.”

Netflix commissions Brouhaha Entertainment’s ‘Boy Swallows Universe’ adaptation

by Sean Slatter IF magazine March 4, 2022

Trent Dalton (Image: Russell Shakespeare)

Netflix has ordered Brouhaha Entertainment’s adaptation of Trent Dalton’s Boy Swallows Universe, more than two years after publisher HarperCollins announced it had sold the screen rights to the author’s debut novel.

Happy Feet scribe John Collee will write an eight-part series based on the semi-autobiographical book, which has gone on to sell more than 500,000 copies since its release in 2018.

The story centres on Eli Bell, a young boy growing up in Brisbane during the 1980s that is forced to navigate a lost father, a mute brother, a junkie mum, a heroin dealer for a stepfather, and a notorious crim for a babysitter.

Executive producing are Troy Lum and Andrew Mason of Brouhaha, alongside Blue-Tongue Films’ Joel Edgerton, Chapter One’s Sophie Gardiner, and Anonymous Content’s Kerry Roberts.

The project has been in the works since 2019 when Lum and Mason were at Hopscotch Pictures, with the pair teaming with UK producer Gabrielle Tana to form Brouhaha Entertainment last year.

In a statement, Dalton said he had always dreamed about what it would be like to see stories on his television screen from the world he knew.

“When I was a boy, television was an escape,” he said.

“You can’t see the holes in the fibro walls when all you see is Winnie Cooper’s face on The Wonder Years.

“I never saw the world I knew in books, in movies, in television. That often brutal suburban Australian world that was just outside my window and the magical world secretly growing inside my head.

Boy Swallows Universe is every aspect of that world. And people across this wild earth are about to step inside that world with their ears and eyes and hearts wide open.”

Netflix director of originals in Australia Que Minh Luu said the commission was a coup for the streamer’s ANZ branch.

Boy Swallows Universe is truly something special, and it’s an enormous privilege to partner with Trent Dalton, Joel Edgerton, and Brouhaha Entertainment in bringing this genuinely iconic Australian story to Netflix,” she said.

“As Australians, we know how much investing in local content matters. Boy Swallows Universe is a major milestone in our mission to unearth uniquely local stories that bring joy and connection in unexpected ways to our audiences here at home, and throughout the world.”

Casting for the series is expected to start next week.

Stan/Nine co-order ‘Bali 2002’ with Claudia Jessie, Rachel Griffiths and Richard Roxburgh

by Sean Slatter IF magazine March 3, 2022

Claudia Jessie, Rachel Griffiths, and Richard Roxburgh.

Nine and Stan have co-commissioned a new four-part series based on the 2002 Bali bombings.

Production has begun in Western Sydney on the Screentime and Endemol Shine Australia drama, which is being developed in consultation with those directly impacted by the tragedy.

It’s been nearly 20 years since the terrorist attack on two of Kuta Beach’s busiest nightclubs killed 202 people, which saw local Balinese and Australian and British tourists scramble to rescue the injured and comfort the dying.

Bali 2002 is set to explore how everyday heroes from Bali, Australia, and beyond defied the odds to bring order from chaos and hope from despair.

Leading the cast are Rachel Griffiths and Richard Roxburgh, alongside Claudia Jessie (Bridgerton), Sean Keenan, Ewen Leslie and Arka Das.

There will also be appearances from a range of Australian and Balinese actors, including Anthony Wong, Paul Ayre, Maleeka Gasbari, Gerwin Widjaja, and Sri Ayu Jati Kartika.

Kerrie Mainwaring is producing for Screentime, with Tim Pye executive producer alongside Sara Richardson for Endemol Shine Australia, Michael Healy and Andy Ryan for the 9Network, and Cailah Scobie and Amanda Duthie for Stan.

Mainwaring said it was an important story for all Australians.

“We have worked hard to bring together this terrific cast and team of creatives to honour the story of all those Australians, Indonesians and others who experienced the terrible tragedy in Bali in 2002,” she said.

The series, which has major production investment from Screen Australia, in association with Screen NSW, marks the first original drama series co-commission between 9Network and Stan.

Healy, Nine director of television, said it would not be the last.

“It is a privilege for the 9Network and Stan to mark the 20th anniversary of the Bali bombings with this landmark drama,” he said.

“The Bali bombings were a turning point in Australian and Indonesian history and we are proud to have such an outstanding multinational cast and creative team on this project.

“Bali 2002 is first of many co-commissions between 9Network and Stan, and we look forward to making more announcements on these collaborations in the coming months.”

Scobie, Stan chief content officer, said the streamer was looking forward to continuing its close collaboration with the teams at the 9Network, Screentime and Endemol Shine Australia on the project.

“Developed in collaboration with world-class creatives from Australia and Indonesia, and in consultation with those directly impacted, Bali 2002 promises to be a powerful, inspiring, and sensitively told drama series that pays respect to everyday heroes from Australia, Bali, and beyond,” she said.

Endemol Shine Australia CEO Peter Newman said the company was “genuinely delighted to be on board for the project.

“ESA is incredibly proud to produce a series that means so much to so many. Triggered by an event that shocked the world, Bali 2002 is a story of resilience and heroism born from the darkest tragedy,” he said.

“This is a gripping four-part series that is evocative, sensitive and reflective of the stories that have been told directly from those impacted by this event.”

Bali 2002 will premiere later this year. Banijay Rights is responsible for international distribution.

Damage to The Steve Jaggi Company’s Brisbane studio as rain continues to lash east coast

by Sean Slatter IF magazine March 2, 2022

The Steve Jaggi Company’s Brisbane studio following the weekend’s rain.

Queensland’s The Steve Jaggi Company (SJC) has reported flood damage to its Brisbane studio facility from the deluge dumped on the state last weekend, as screen communities in affected areas remain on high alert.

Record-breaking downpours have devastated South East Queensland and Northern NSW across the past few days, flooding thousands of homes and leading to mass evacuations of regional towns.

In Brisbane, 80 per cent of the city’s annual rainfall fell across three days, while 30 suburbs across the wider region received more than 1,000mm.

SJC is among the businesses counting the cost of the weather event, which flooded its 650 square metre studio facility in inner north-eastern suburb of Albion, damaging props and costumes, as well as two cameras.

Founder and chief creative officer Steve Jaggi estimated that about 80 per cent or more of the building’s contents were destroyed, with the overall costs expected to “inch towards $500,000”.

“I’m hoping we can salvage some of the costumes because we have more than 2,000 items but I think the props are probably fully written off,” he said.

“The problem with floodwater is that it’s saltwater that has oil and sewerage, so once it mixes with prop materials such as wood and polystyrene, you pretty much have to write the props off.

Props and costumes in the Steve Jaggi Company Brisbane studio.

“We lost two cameras and two underwater housing systems, so just in terms of camera damage, we are talking more than $200,000.”

As IF reported last week, the company is currently working on its first project for 2022, Rhiannon Bannenberg’s Mistletoe Ranch.

Having wrapped that shoot on Friday, Jaggi said the company would be forced to reconfigure its schedule for the rest of the year as a result of the floods.

“We try to do a movie every two months give or take, so we have two movies we are working on as well as a television program that we are building sets and props for,” he said.

“The movies will probably be pushed back several months because of what we have lost.”

Elsewhere in the state, Screen Queensland says producers have so far not reported “any damage or major delays to their productions”, with CEO Kylie Munnich saying organisation will continue to support projects “to ensure they can continue to film”.

“Our thoughts are with everyone in Queensland and New South Wales who have suffered through this dreadful weather event,” she told IF.

Further south in NSW, Northern Rivers communities have borne the brunt of the damage this week, with Lismore getting more than 700mm of rain across 30 hours on Sunday and Monday, while residents of Ballina, North Ballina, and West Ballina were told to move to higher ground on Tuesday morning.

National not-for-profit organisation Screenworks is among the occupants of Ballina’s business district, operating out of an office on River Street.

The regional screen body was due to have its first webinar of the year – a session about finding pathways to audience with producer/director/writer Rosie Lourde and producer Hayley Adams – on Tuesday but decided to postpone it as a result of the unfolding floods.

CEO Ken Crouch told IF that while all of his staff had so far generally avoided being directly affected by the rising water levels, the wider screen community would take time to recover.

“Our office in Ballina will be closed this week but we expect it will remain above flood levels.

“We are all working from home to minimise travel, although technology like internet and phone is a bit sketchy across the region (a lot of roads are closed or damaged, so many of us couldn’t get to the office anyway).

“We all have friends and loved ones, in addition to Screenworks members and industry people, who have been impacted by what has happened in Lismore and across all of the region, so I expect that the next few days/weeks will be challenging for many as people recover and clean up from this disaster.”

Screenworks is currently raising funds to help screen practitioners and businesses in the Northern Rivers region who have been impacted by the floods. Find out more about how to donate here