Animation Shorts: Poetic Encounters 1970 Ages 12+

Production still from The Orchestra 2018 / Director: Mikey Hill / Image courtesy: Autour de Minuit / View full image
When
12.00pm, Sun 12 Dec 2021 (57 mins)
Where
Gallery of Modern Art & Cinema A
About
A series of poetic encounters engaging with the human experience,from an aching coming of age encounter through to finding love in life’s twilight years.
Barn Owl 2011 dir. Anna Spencer (4:30 mins)
"Barn Owl is an animated adaptation of the poem by the late Gwen Harwood. In the frosty dawn air, a girl awakens and follows a sleepy barn owl into an old timber stable. Set in 1930s Australia, Barn Owl is a coming of age story about a child who makes a decision that will affect her for the rest of her life." Anna Spencer
Two Little People 2020 dir. Xin Li (3 mins)
"A woman deeply longs for a man after he left their life working in a wheat field." St Kilda Film Festival
Prelude 1996 dir. Chris Backhouse (4 mins)
“An oil painting animation consisting of a series of metamorphoses of strange characters improvised without a storyboard in rhythm with the strong slow beat of "Air on a G String" by J.S. Bach. This method gave Chris Backhouse the freedom to discover "moving pictures" in experimental play.” National Film and Sound Archive, Canberra
The Orchestra 2015 dir. Mikey Hill (15 mins)
"Imagine a world where a band of tiny musicians follow you and play a soundtrack for your life – communicating your emotions, fears and hopes. In this beautifully harmonious world lives elderly Vernon; a lonely man whose crippling shyness causes his orchestral musicians to perform terribly out of tune. When Vernon and his little band fall for their new next door neighbour and her classical ensemble, they find themselves presented with perhaps their last chance at happiness - a chance to strike a chord and play in harmony. But first they must confront their stage fright." Mikey Hill
The Missing Key 2011 dir. Jonathan Nix (30 mins)
"In an alternate 1920s Venice, gramophone-head composer Hero Wasabi and his faithful oboe-playing cat Jacuzzi must face the evil Count Telefino as they compete for the Abacus Cup, a prize for music composition." Screen Australia
Barn Owl 2011 dir. Anna Spencer (4:30 mins) "Barn Owl is an animated adaptation of the poem by the late Gwen Harwood. In the frosty dawn air, a girl awakens and follows a sleepy barn owl into an old timber stable. Set in 1930s Australia, Barn Owl is a coming of age story about a child who makes a decision that will affect her for the rest of her life." Anna Spencer Two Little People 2020 dir. Xin Li (3 mins) "A woman deeply longs for a man after he left their life working in a wheat field." St Kilda Film Festival Prelude 1996 dir. Chris Backhouse (4 mins) “An oil painting animation consisting of a series of metamorphoses of strange characters improvised without a storyboard in rhythm with the strong slow beat of "Air on a G String" by J.S. Bach. This method gave Chris Backhouse the freedom to discover "moving pictures" in experimental play.” National Film and Sound Archive, Canberra The Orchestra 2015 dir. Mikey Hill (15 mins) "Imagine a world where a band of tiny musicians follow you and play a soundtrack for your life – communicating your emotions, fears and hopes. In this beautifully harmonious world lives elderly Vernon; a lonely man whose crippling shyness causes his orchestral musicians to perform terribly out of tune. When Vernon and his little band fall for their new next door neighbour and her classical ensemble, they find themselves presented with perhaps their last chance at happiness - a chance to strike a chord and play in harmony. But first they must confront their stage fright." Mikey Hill The Missing Key 2011 dir. Jonathan Nix (30 mins) "In an alternate 1920s Venice, gramophone-head composer Hero Wasabi and his faithful oboe-playing cat Jacuzzi must face the evil Count Telefino as they compete for the Abacus Cup, a prize for music composition." Screen Australia
Film Details
- Directors: Anna Spence, Xin L, Chris Backhous, Mikey Hil, Jonathan Nix
- Runtime: 57 minutes