Australian film and television has been an excellent
ambassador for Australia by promoting international awareness of, and interest
in, our country. Local film and television programs have stimulated tourism and
made a significant contribution to Australia's export earnings. Many Australian
films have achieved international acclaim at film festivals around the world,
winning prestigious awards and representing Australia at important cultural
forums. In the financial year 1987-88, a total of 255 Australian films were
successfully submitted to 59 international film festivals, a number of which
received awards, including feature films such as Travelling North, High Tide,
The Tale of Ruby Rose and The Umbrella Woman (also known as The Good Wife).
In 1987, 23 Australian-made feature films secured a
theatrical release in Australia, while 10 and 8 features were released in the
United States and the United Kingdom respectively. The major theatrical success
of both 1986 and 1987 was Crocodile Dundee, which surpassed all other films at
the box office both nationally and internationally. Crocodile Dundee was the
most successful film ever released in Australia and it ranks as one of the most
successful films in world-wide cinema history. Crocodile Dundee 11 released in
1988, enjoyed one of the largest-attended cinema openings ever recorded in the
United States, while creating an opening-day record in the United Kingdom.
In Australia, the film's release surpassed all previous
Australian box office openers - including the forerunner Crocodile Dundee and
other success stories such as Star Wars and ET.
Crocodile Dundee and Crocodile Dundee 11 have not been the
only Australian films to achieve critical and financial success both at home
and overseas. Rikki and Pete, High Tide, The Man from Snowy River II and The
Lighthorsemen have secured theatrical releases and acclaim around the world. In
addition to success on the mainstream feature film circuit, several Australian
documentary films received impressive theatrical release in 1988 - in
particular Cane Toads: An Unnatural History, South of the Border and Cannibal
Tours.
Australian films made for television, notably mini-series
and drama serials, are in high demand overseas. Television channels in the
United Kingdom, for example, regularly screen the television serials Home and
Away, The Flying Doctors, Richmond Hill and Neighbours. Neighbours has become
one of the top rating shows on United Kingdom television, rating consistently
as one of the Top 10 programs. In all, 15 Australian feature films and 12
mini-series were screened on United Kingdom television in 1987. In 1988 viewers
saw the telemovie The First Kangaroo (an Anglo-Australian co-production), and
mini-series My Brother Tom, Land of Hope and Winners.
British cable and satellite services also screened a wide
range of programs, including 18 Australian feature films broadcast as special
programs in 1988. Meanwhile European satellite services are also broadening the
reach of Australian film and television programs. Drama series and serials are
especially popular in Europe. For example, the series Sons and Daughters has
been broadcast across Europe and in the Bahamas, Egypt, Trinidad and Ireland.
On United States cable television an average of 2 Australian
feature films are broadcast weekly. There is a preferred demand for feature
films and telemovies for television broadcasting, however the mini-series The
Last Frontier rated impressively when shown and the documentary Suzi's Storywas
extremely well received. In 1988 an 18 week special series of Australian
telemovies called Australian Movie This Week screened on WYNC to good reviews,
as well as the Mother and Son comedy series.
EARLY DAYS
The first decades of the twentieth century saw a flourishing
period of feature film production in Australia. Film makers were involved as
early as 1886 in making documentaries of daily life, producing combination film
and slide shows, and creating background films for stage plays. The highlight
of this period was The Story of the Kelly Gang made in 1906 and believed to be
the first feature-length film to be made in the world.
The 'Silent Era' of the Australian film industry, circa
1907-1928. produced well over 150 feature films. By 1929 a combination of
forces - the introduction of sound films from overseas, an increasing
stranglehold on the local market by American and British distributors, and the
economic devastation caused by the Depression - signalled a serious downturn in
Australian film production from which it would take decades to recover.
The transition to sound motion picture technology in the
early 1930s was costly and difficult. However. a few directors adapted to the
new technology and produced commercially successful films dealing with
Australian subjects, often located in the Australian bush.
During the war years, feature film production dropped off as
film makers became preoccupied with producing newsreels and documentaries which
screened in the large number of cinemas. Whilst film production was down.
attendances reached an all time peak in 1944-45, with 151 million admissions
that year.
Local feature film production in the post-war period was
marked by an influx of British and American film companies attracted to
Australia by its exotic locations, resulting in productions such as the Ealing
Studio's The Overlanders, Stanley Kramer's On the Beach and Fred Zinnemann's
The Sundowners.
But there were few indigenous films being made, with the
notable exception of Charles Chauvel's feature film Jedda, which was the first
Australian-made colour feature film. Jedda's theme was also uniquely Australian
- it explored the issue of Aboriginal and white relations.
With theatrical production and distribution dominated by
foreign companies, a whole generation of Australians were growing up and going
to the movies but possibly never seeing an Australian film.
A RENAISSANCE
Then in the late 1960s and early 1970s. a period
characterised by social change, political protest and cultural re-examination,
an underground film culture began to develop, based primarily in Melbourne and
Sydney. This time of questioning and change created an environment conducive to
lobbying the government to stimulate a national film industry and provide the
requested financial support. Australia's cultural heritage was under question
and a film industry was promoted as an essential vehicle for a necessary
cultural and national exploration of that heritage.
The government accepted the cultural arguments and. with its
assistance, the film ' renaissance ' began.
At first, films that emerged were primarily engaged in
exploring facets of Australian humour, resulting in such films as Stork, The
Adventures of Barry Mackenzie, and Alvin Purple. These films were financially
successful both in Australia and overseas for there was a familiarity about the
'ocker' character which audiences found endearing. However, some audiences
found this essential rawness embarrassing and wanted a more refined and
sophisticated Australia to be reflected in its cinema.
Films such as Sunday Too Far Away and Picnic at Hanging Rock
met with those requirements for a quality cinema rooted in the intrinsic
'Australian' experience and local literary traditions. The unique Australian
landscape, good quality film production values and a stylised narrative
simplicity became symbols of the Australian cinema, combining to capture the
imagination of local and international audiences alike and generating pride in
these filmic explorations of the Australian identity.
Documentary film making also attracted similar attention in
the late 1970s as film makers expanded their range of subject matter toward
more socio-politically oriented films covering such issues as Aboriginals,
feminism, the environment, Asian, Pacific and Latin American politics, and
communism.
GOVERNMENT ASSISTANCE
Towards the end of the decade, escalating production costs
and the film industry's desire to consolidate the economic bases for production
were prime factors in the Federal Government's introduction of a tax incentive
scheme aimed at enhancing private investment in film. This scheme, known as
Division 10BA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 was introduced in June 1981
to encourage private investment (via a tax deduction incentive) in feature
films, documentaries, telemovies and television mini-series.
Investors could write off up to 150 per cent of capital
expenditure on an acceptable project and be tax exempt for up to 50 per cent of
net earnings from that investment.
The films produced in the first few years of the tax
incentive scheme introduced the work of some of Australia's most respected film
makers to the world, such as Bruce Beresford (Puberty Blues), Gillian Armstrong
(Starstruck), George Miller (Mad Max) and Peter Weir (The Year of Living Dangerously).
Whilst historical-drama and literary adaptations remained
popular film themes, film makers began to tackle more contemporary issues such
as adolescence in Puberty Blues, new wave music in Starstruck, Asian politics
in Far East and The Year of Living Dangerously, environmental issues inHeatwave
and The Killing of Angel Street, socio-ethnic problems in Moving Out and the
drug culture in Monkey Grip and Winter of our Dreams.
The films of the early 1980s continued the success stories
of the 1970s and were acclaimed overseas by becoming box office hits. Films
from this period include Breaker Morant, Mad Max 2, Gallipoli, The Man from
Snowy River and Phar Lap.
At this time film makers began to explore the dramatic
possibilities of television mini-series. The national and intentional success
of the mini-series A Town Like Alice in 1980 stimulated television network
demand, and in the next two years, no less than ten mini-series were produced.
Initially, historical themes predominated ranging from the
portrayal of life in the penal colonies in For the Term of His Natural Life,
Sara Dane andUnder Capricorn, bushranging in The Last Outlaw, the pioneering
spirit in All the Rivers Run, the rise of nationalism in Eureka Stockade,
treatment of Aboriginals in Women of the Sun, and industrial unrest in the
1920s in The Waterfront.
Funding for short drama, documentaries and experimental
works, provided primarily through the Australian Film Commission, also created
opportunities for upcoming directors to explore innovative ideas and techniques
in film and to acquire practical film making skills. Many resulting films were
adventurous and inventive, drawing upon European and American film models for
their cinematic modes, then remodelling to reflect Australian cultural and
social moods and trends. Some of today's best-known feature film directors,
such as Peter Weir and Gillian Armstrong, made documentaries and short dramas
during this period.
However, it became evident in 1983 that Australian film
production was facing some serious problems as well as substantial cost
increases which threatened the underlying economics of film production despite
the generous film tax incentive scheme. Australian cinema, originally
stimulated by the desire for cultural and social exploration through film, was
becoming an industry predominantly predicated upon business concerns.
That year the government, responsive to these problems, and
concerned with the overall quality of production and the influx of speculative
promoters, introduced legislative amendments which reduced the allowable tax
deduction under 10BA from 150 per cent to 130 per cent with a corresponding 33
per cent tax exemption on net returns from the investment. In addition a
special fund of $5,000,000 was allocated to the Australian Film Commission. The
fund, called 'The Special Production Fund', was designed to encourage
production of high quality film and television drama and documentaries which
carried the potential for commercial success.
By 1983, the nature of the Australian film industry had
begun to change. The heavy reliance by producers on direct government
investment was being replaced by private investors who were seeking viable
investment properties, for the financial market had started to drive
production. Investors were interested in recouping their investment and
fulfilling the film's potential for profit.
Producers were obliged to guarantee investors some revenue
and in order to do that they had to sell distribution rights prior to the film
or television project being made. In order to attract the sort of money
required, producers had to look toward the United States and Europe for
distribution deals.
As a result of this, in 1984 and 1985, there emerged an
increasing reliance on a number of international distributors who were able to
pay up-front advances for a program. These advances comprised the bulk of the
film's overall budget.
With such a dependence on the international market, there
was an inherent tension between the objectives of developing an Australian
cinema and the need to meet the supply needs of distributors.
For many producers this posed a challenge: how to make films
which had an Australian character and flavour, but which also appealed to an
international audience, beyond the historical-drama genre which had already
proved so popular.
Film makers rose to this challenge by developing diverse
styles and narratives as they explored different genres of film making and new
presentations of the Australian character, landscape and mythologies. This
diversity was reflected in such films as Australian Dream, Emoh Ruo - comedies,
A Street to Die, Fran, A Test of Love - quasi-documentaries, Empty Beach, Fair
Game, Mad Max; Beyond Thunderdome - action dramas, Cactus and The More Things
Change - human relationship films.
With this increasing pressure to work primarily within a
business context, to make largely entertaining and commercially successful
films, some critics felt that a certain integrity and commitment to the art of
film making had been lost. Film makers were being asked to be up-front
businessmen and women, to divert energies away from the creative process into
the entrepreneurial and to make creative compromises in order to satisfy purely
commercial demands.
In a creative context, this was undoubtedly true. On the
other hand, Australia could not afford to sustain its film and television
output from domestic box office receipts and television sales alone.
Revenue had to be obtained from overseas, and it was clear
that in the business context, Australian programs were capable of obtaining
wide international distribution.
In November 1985 a co-production scheme was introduced to
assist local producers in collaborating with foreign partners on officially
approved co-ventures while still receiving the benefits of the 10BA tax
incentive scheme. Administered by the Australian Film Commission, arrangements
have been made with CNC in France, the BBC and Channel Four in the United
Kingdom, the New Zealand Film Commission, and the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting in the United States.
GOVERNMENT ORGANISATIONS
By mid 1985 it had again become clear that the tax incentive
scheme was pushing producers to obtain extremely high pre-sales and that the
costs associated with attracting film investment were rising significantly.
There was an increasing uncertainty about the level of available finance when
the 10B tax deduction/exemption was further reduced to 120/20 per cent. The
industry's financial base was shaky.
It was at this time that the Australian Film Commission
proposed the creation of an independent Australian Film Finance Corporation to
replace the 10BA tax concessions. The proposed Corporation would operate like a
bank and loans would be secured against the rights of the program or against
sales agreements already in place. In 1988, the Federal Government established
the Australian Film Finance Corporation with a first year funding of $70
million, while further reducing 10BA tax concession to a 100 per cent deduction
with all returns from the investment being treated as taxable income.
In addition to the Film Finance Corporation, other
Commonwealth and State funded government organisations play an important role
in providing financial assistance for the development of an indigenous film
culture.
The Australian Film Commission is the Commonwealth statutory
film authority established in 1975. The Australian Film Commission's principal
functions are to provide development funding and equity investment for film and
television, encourage innovative and experimental film making, provide support
and advice to developing film makers, assist in the marketing, distribution,
exhibition and broadcasting of Australian programs, provide a central information
resource. advise government on film matters and monitor developments in the
industry.
Independent film bodies also operate in New South Wales,
Queensland, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia and are funded by
the respective State governments. These bodies contribute toward encouraging
local film making by providing marketing and production expertise and liaising
with government on film policy.
With the establishment of the Australian Film Finance
Corporation there is now a new financial climate for production in Australia,
with an optimism and invigorated energy in the industry.
Australia can enter the 1990s with the knowledge that
audiences the world over have a window into the country that reveals a
sophisticated and culturally mature society - something that is possible in
large part because of the vision, creative energy and expertise of the
Australian film and television industry.
http://www.abs.gov.au/
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