InReview InReview

SA QLD
Support independent journalism

Festivals

Entertaining showcase of SA film talent

Festivals

Comments
Comments Print article

Adelaide Film Festival celebrates its home state on screen with Made in SA, a selection of locally produced shorts.

There are nine films, four of them funded by the South Australian Film Corporation, and it’s an impressive collection with a little bit of everything from humour to horror.

Upside Down Feeling (directed by Eddie White) opens the show with a sweet tale of a young boy overcoming his fears. He’s struggling to understand the death of a classmate but when he buys a second-hand book he also gains an empathetic sidekick and a new way of looking at the world.

Exploring a similar theme, My Little Sumo (Ana Maria Mendez Salgado and Carlos A Manrique Clavijo) uses charming, cut-paper-style animation to depict the bond between a small girl and her grandmother. It’s a bittersweet tale with a unique look and strong writing.

Mood Machine (Gary Stewart) and Enfilade ( David Coyle) push the most boundaries. Each film offers striking visuals with limited colour palettes and maximum energy on screen.

Mood Machine is a glorious trip – a rhythmic, kaleidoscopic ride through abstract patterns created from hair, skin, teeth and assorted body parts. It got my vote for best short of the night. In Enfilade, a lone man has only a red ball and a gun as tools to break him out of the hopeless situation in which he finds himself. This one’s a hypnotic journey through a white-roomed hell, and compelling from start to finish.

Being pursued through the forest by a homicidal maniac wielding a large machete? Don’t worry, the situation might not be as hopeless as you think. Too Dark (Sean Lahiff) subverts the genre in a way that’s both smart and hilarious when the chasee ends up coaching her chaser.

There’s darkness at the heart of both What We Know (Marion Pilowsky) and Criticism (Ryder Grindle) as well. In What We Know, a new love interest stirs dangerous passions at an uncomfortable dinner party. A theatre critic ends up hosting a party of a very different kind in Criticism, when he brings home a rent boy and his thug of a friend from the beat. These two works have high production values and exceptional performances but are let down in both cases by endings that are obvious and somewhat unsatisfying.

The Film You Wrote, with a narrative crowd-sourced from the public in the months leading up to the festival, is the weakest link in the suite. Tilda Cobham-Hervey is the face of the ADLFF but in this piece does little more than smile as she’s posed in front of a series of scenarios which flash past at breakneck speed.

Made-in-SA-My-Best-Friend-Is-Stuck-on-Ceiling

My Best Friend is Stuck on the Ceiling.

The program’s closing film seems to inspire the strongest audience response, with My Best Friend is Stuck on the Ceiling (Matt Vesely) winning some well-deserved laughs for its portrayal of what must be one of the most unusual coffee dates ever depicted on screen. It’s awkward, endearing and very funny – an accomplished end to an entertaining showcase of SA talent.

Made in SA will screen again on Friday, October 30, at Middleback Theatre in Whyalla as part of the Adelaide Film Festival’s regional program.

More Adelaide Film Festival coverage

Reviews

Carol
Girl Asleep

Tanna
Freeheld
The Witch
Sherpa
Peggy Guggenheim – Art Addict
Desert Migration
Office
Highly Strung
Our Little Sister
The Dressmaker 

Stories

Amanda Duthie’s Film Festival picks
When Romeo met Romeo: Remembering the Man
Michelle’s Story of resilience
Star-studded line-up for Adelaide Film Festival

Make a comment View comment guidelines

Support local arts journalism

Your support will help us continue the important work of InReview in publishing free professional journalism that celebrates, interrogates and amplifies arts and culture in South Australia.

Donate Here

Comments

Show comments Hide comments
Will my comment be published? Read the guidelines.

. You are free to republish the text and graphics contained in this article online and in print, on the condition that you follow our republishing guidelines.

You must attribute the author and note prominently that the article was originally published by InReview.  You must also inlude a link to InReview. Please note that images are not generally included in this creative commons licence as in most cases we are not the copyright owner. However, if the image has an InReview photographer credit or is marked as “supplied”, you are free to republish it with the appropriate credits.

We recommend you set the canonical link of this content to https://inreview.com.au/inreview/festivals/2015/10/21/entertaining-showcase-of-sa-film-talent/ to insure that your SEO is not penalised.

Copied to Clipboard

More Festivals stories

Loading next article