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Nhan Dan Online
–Recent Australian feature films and two short films will be
introduced to Vietnamese audiences through the Australian
Film Roadshow 2008 organised by the Australian Embassy in
Vietnam.
The Roadshow programme includes seven
feature films: Crackerjack, The Home Song Stories,
Look Both Ways, Looking for Alibrandi,
Razzle Dazzle, Ten Canoes, Two Hands and
two short films: Crocodile Dreaming and the Academy
Award-winning Harvie Krumpet.
Between them, the nine films have won 24
Australian Film Industry Awards and have been enjoyed by
audiences in Australia and worldwide.
According to the Australian Ambassador to
Vietnam Allaster Cox, it is so called the Roadshow because
it is just that: a travelling exhibition of Australian films
is to visit seven different Vietnamese cities, including
Hanoi in the north, the central provinces of Thanh Hoa, Nghe
An, Quang Binh and Ha Tinh, and Ho Chi Minh City and An
Giang province in the south in three weeks.
Speaking at a press conference held in
Hanoi yesterday, the Ambassador said “The Film Roadshow is a
highlight of our cultural activities in Vietnam, allowing
Vietnamese audiences to enjoy quality Australian films free
of charge.”

The 2008 Film Roadshow features many
internationally-known Australian actors and directors
including Anthony La Paglia, Geoffrey Rush, Rolf de Heer,
Heath Ledger, Joan Chen, Mick Molloy, David Gulpilil, John
Clarke, Judith Lucy and William McInnes.
Among films on show this year are two
critically-acclaimed Australian films which have received
recent international attention: The Home Song
Stories and Ten Canoes.”
The Home Song Stories,
directed by Tony Ayres, tells the story of Rose, a glamorous
Shanghai nightclub singer, and her struggle to survive in
Australia with her two young children. In 2007, Stories
won 8 Australian Film Industry Awards, including leading
actress and screen play.
Ten Canoes,
which won a special jury prize
at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival, was the first Australian
full-length feature to be made entirely in an Indigenous
Australian language. It follows a story told to
Dayindi, who covets the wives of his
older brother. To teach him the proper way, Dayindi is told
a story from the mythical past, a story of wrong love,
kidnapping, sorcery, bungling mayhem and revenge gone wrong.

The Roadshow will be held in Hanoi from
November 14-20; in Thanh Hoa on
November 17; in Nghe An on November 18, in Ha Tinh on
November 19; Quang Binh on November 20; in Ho Chi Minh City
from November 28 to December 3 and in An Giang province from
December 2-4.
The Film Roadshow will screen at the
National Cinema Centre (87 Lang Ha) in Hanoi and Megastar
Cineplex (126 Hung Vuong) in Ho Chi Minh City. Free tickets
to all screenings are available at the cinemas where the
films are shown and the Australian Embassy in Hanoi from
November 6 and the Australian Consulate-General in Ho Chi
Minh City.
By Ngan Thuy |