| Funding + Support |
| Filmmakers |
| First Break |
| Breakout |
| Production Subsidies |
| Indigenous Support |
| Out-There + Deadly |
| Indigenous Breakthrough |
| ArtStart Young Screenwriters Program |
"In providing opportunities and support to new and emerging filmmakers from culturally diverse backgrounds, I think Metro Screen's Multicultural Mentorship Scheme [MMS] represents a commitment to changing the monocultural and monolingual state of film in Australia. The MMS has the potential both to create the seedbeds for tomorrow's filmmakers as well as to respond to and sustain diversity in all its complexities. I have found this scheme to be an excellent model in terms of both training and practical application."
Paula Abood made Of Middle Eastern Appearance
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Old War What do you do if you begin to fall for someone you’re meant to hate? Filmmaker: Danielle McCarthy Mentor: Rebecca Barry |
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Amanecer Juan struggles to build a new life for his wife and daughter in Australia but his education and experience doesn’t count for much. Filmmaker: Alvaro D. Ruiz Mentor: Claudia Karvan |
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Encyclopaedia Britannica A Palestinian refugee’s memories of the past, the family home in Jerusalem, and a gift from his father – an Encyclopedia Britannica. Filmmaker: Sohail Dahdal Mentor: Magot Nash |
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Sent Beyond An insight into the live of fifty-eight French-Canadian political prisoners deported to Australia in 1840 for taking part in an uprising against British rule. Based on the journal of Francois-Maurice Lepailleur. Filmmaker: Pierre Thibaudeau Mentor: Martha Ansara |
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2007 Works |
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Olga's Granddaughters Sonia and her sister Leah pass their days by spying on their old reclusive neighbour, Olga. Filmmaker: Mila Gisbert Mentor: Alec Morgan |
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Pigeon Men A group of men obsesses with the sport of pigeon-flying take us into their world. Filmmaker: Marryanne Christodoulou Mentor: Melissa Anastasi |
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A Little Dream A young ethnic child struggling between the expectations of her dysfunctional family and her own identity. Filmmaker: Maria Tran M Mentor: Khoa Do |
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Aunty Betelnut A diverse group of Papua New Guinean women gather to partake in a timeless ritual and share memories of their homeland. Filmmaker: Natasha Henry Mentor: Liz Watts |
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Selected 2006 Works |
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Up-Ba [Father] Donovan likes basketball. His deceased father liked fishing. But there is something deeper that drove them apart. Up-Ba is about that conversation you always wanted to have, but never got the chance to. It is a story about connection and family. Filmmaker: Michael Chang Song Park Mentor: Bridget Ikin |
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Selected 2005 Works |
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Black Rain Twenty years after the Chernobyl disaster Marsha is still suffering from traumatising recollections, which the catastrophe and its aftermath have seared into her memory. Pain and fear are materialised in the form of rain for Marsha, as it unlocks the most dramatic and horrifying images of her childhood. Filmmaker: George Barbakadze Mentor: Greg Woodland |
| Black Rain has been selected for screening in: 21st European
Film Festival Alpinale, Nenzing, Austria and
International Panorama of Independent Film and Video Makers, Athens, Greece. |
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| "You have made a beautiful film. It is my personal honor to have your film at our festival"Chionidis Panagiotis, Festival Art Director. | |
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Selected 2004 Works |
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Too Sunny, Too Cold A brief snapshot in time of two strangers in some city, sometime, somewhere in the world. One day Jorge joins Yumi on a park bench uninvited, disrupting the stillness of her world. And won't leave. View Video Filmmaker: Tania Yuki Mentor: Bill Miller |
"Had I not had the chance to explore my style of storytelling through the MMS, and made the mistakes I needed to make in order to learn and do better next time, I would not have had the level of understanding, hindsight and preparation as a writer-director that was so important to the success of my second film, Deluge. Funded by the Young Filmmakers Fund, Deluge has been well-received by the international festival circuit, it screened at the Clermont-Ferrand Short Film Festival where it won the Special Jury Prize for International Competition, and was awarded the Best Director's Prize at the Granada Short Film Festival in Spain. It has been invited to dozens more festivals around the world, and sold to Arte for France and Germany, with further sales offered. So, for me, the Multicultural Mentorship Scheme was a springboard to bigger and better things." |
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Selected 2002 Works |
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Fish Sauce Breath A young Vietnamese Australian man is in love with an Anglo Australian girl and it is time to meet the parents. However, there is one problem: Fish sauce breath. The film details his desperate quest to rid himself of his fish sauce breath before the meeting. What results, is a comedy of cultural conflict and a drama of stereotypes. Filmmaker: Thao Nguyen Van |
| Thao Nguyen is a young Vietnamese Australian, born in a Thai refugee camp in 1980. She co-curated the first art exhibition on second generation Vietnamese Australians and was given a grant to co-produce a photography and writing anthology. Since the MMS scheme, she has initiated and is coordinating the ethnic youth film festival in Australia. | |