Girl Asleep (film)

Last updated

Girl Asleep
Girl Asleep film poster Oct 2015.jpg
Australian release poster
Directed byRosemary Myers
Screenplay byMatthew Whittet
Based onGirl Asleep (play)
by Matthew Whittet
Produced by Jo Dyer
Starring Bethany Whitmore
Harrison Feldman
Imogen Archer
Tilda Cobham-Hervey
Eamon Farren
Matthew Whittet
Amber McMahon
Maiah Stewardson
CinematographyAndrew Commis ACS
Edited byKarryn de Cinque
Music byLuke Smiles
Harry Covill
Distributed byKojo Group
Release date
Running time
77 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
BudgetAU$1,500,000 [1]
Box office$211,637 [2]

Girl Asleep is a 2015 Australian surrealist coming-of-age drama film written by Matthew Whittet and directed by Rosemary Myers. [3] [4] [5] The film has been described as an extroverted fantasy dreamscape of an introverted teenage girl. [6] The film is an adaptation of the successful theatre production, also written by Matthew Whittet, [7] by Windmill Theatre in 2014 of the same name, that premiered at the Adelaide Festival. [8] The cast includes: Bethany Whitmore, [9] Tilda Cobham-Hervey, [10] [11] Imogen Archer, [8] Harrison Feldman, Amber McMahon, Eamon Farren, scriptwriter Matthew Whittet [8] and Maiah Stewardson.

Contents

Girl Asleep showed at the 2016 Berlin International Film Festival to critical acclaim,[ citation needed ] and garnered the top prize at CinefestOZ, the richest film prize in Australia. [12]

Plot

In the late 1970s, 14-year old Greta Driscoll arrives at a new school. She is immediately befriended by the overenthusiastic Elliott, whom she likes, and is also approached by a group of sophisticated girls, Jade, Sapphire and Amber, who pressure her into friendship even though she doesn't like them.

Greta's mother worries that she has no friends and decides to invite her whole school to her fifteenth birthday party. Though Greta is extremely reluctant to have the party she eventually allows her mother to proceed with her plan. The day of the party Greta is surprised to find herself having fun but is yanked away from the party by Amber and her friends who give her a song they have recorded where they mock her body. Running away crying Greta is approached by Elliott who confesses he has a crush on her. Greta cruelly shuts him down.

Shortly afterwards Greta notices a strange creature in her room who has stolen her music box. Chasing it she finds herself lured into the forest behind her house where menacing creatures lurk. As she is about to be attacked she meets the Huldra who rescues her. After being separated from the Huldra, Greta tries to find her music box and is instead frozen by a woman smashing various music boxes. She is once again rescued by the Huldra who throws her back into her world. After fighting off evil versions of Amber, Jade and Sapphire, Greta finds the creature who stole her music box and discovers the creature is actually her child self.

Awakening in her bedroom, Greta is met by her older sister who comforts her and tells her that while her current age is an awkward one she is not alone. Greta returns to the party where she apologises to Elliott and she asks him to switch clothes so that she can abandon the uncomfortable dress her mother forced her to wear. Decked out in Elliot's suit, Greta blows out her candles and celebrates her 15th birthday.

Cast

Production

The film received funding from Windmill Theatre, South Australian Film Corporation, The Ian Potter Foundation and The Hive Production Fund, a unique initiative of the Adelaide Film Festival in partnership with the Australia Council for the Arts, Screen Australia and ABC Arts. [3]

The film was primarily shot in Adelaide, South Australia, with most of the interior and forest shots filmed at Anomaly Studios. [8] Other locations include Findon High School, Blackwood Forest, Bonython Park and a private house in the suburb of Panorama. [5]

Reception

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, which categorizes reviews only as positive or negative, 82% of 38 reviews of the film are positive; the average rating is 6.70/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Girl Asleep takes a singularly quirky look at adolescence with a distinctive visual style and a refreshing perspective that belies the story's period setting." [13] According to Metacritic, which compiled 12 reviews and calculated a weighted average score of 67 out of 100, the film received "generally favorable reviews". [14]

Jane Howard of The Guardian praises the film giving it 4 out of 5 stars and said that "It’s remarkable how comfortable the oddities we might associate with theatre sit on the screen". [15] and further stating "The rich colours popping from cinematographer Andrew Commis’s 4:3 aspect ratio draw us back into an Australia of the past. Production and costume designer Jonathon Oxlade also embraces the 70s in all of its oddities and excess. And yet Myers always grounds her characters and their stories in a recognisable reality, drawing out delicate and nuanced performances. Even when the fantasy and magic reaches a peak, we still feel passionately engaged with the humanity." [15] Simon Foster of Screen-Space gave the film 4.5 out of 5 stars and said "As Greta embraces her blossoming self, so to does Australian cinema welcome another memorable movie heroine." [16] Cat Kusmuk-Dodd of The Upside News states "Both Greta’s journey through her everyday life and into her imaginary world make for a visually pleasing experience, the latter enchanting us with the appearance of creatures similar to those in The Mighty Boosh. The excessive timber décor and brightly coloured wallpaper in the Driscoll’s family home would not seem out of place in Napoleon Dynamite." [17]

Accolades

AwardCategorySubjectResult
Adelaide Film Festival Audience Award for Most Popular FeatureRosemary MyersWon
Jo Dyer Won
AACTA Awards
(6th)
Best Film Nominated
Best Direction Rosemary MeyersNominated
Best Adapted Screenplay Matthew WhittetNominated
Best Cinematography Andrew CommisNominated
Best Editing Karryn de CinqueNominated
Best Production Design Jonathon OxladeNominated
Best Costume Design Won
AFCA Awards Best FilmJo DyerWon
Best DirectorRosemary MeyersNominated
Best ScreenplayMatthew WhittetNominated
Best Actress Bethany Whitmore Nominated
Best Supporting ActorHarrison FeldmanNominated
Best Supporting ActressAmber McMahonNominated
ASE Award Best Editing in a Feature FilmKarryn de CinqueNominated
BAFICI Film Festival Best FilmRosemary MyersNominated
Berlin International Film Festival Crystal Bear for Best Feature FilmNominated
CinefestOZ Best FilmWon
FCCA Award Best FilmJo DyerNominated
Melbourne International Film Festival Age Critics Prize for Best Australian Feature FilmWon
Rosemary MeyersWon
Neuchâtel International Fantastic Film Festival Best FilmNominated
Seattle International Film Festival Grand Jury PrizeWon
Jo DyerWon
Futurewave Youth Jury AwardWon
Rosemary MeyersWon

Related Research Articles

Tilda Swinton British actress

Katherine Matilda Swinton is a British actress. Known for her roles in independent films and blockbusters, she has received various accolades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award and a European Film Award, in addition to nominations for three Golden Globe Awards.

Greta Scacchi Italian-Australian actress

Greta Scacchi, OMRI is an Italian-Australian actress. She holds dual Italian and Australian citizenship. She is best known for her roles in the films White Mischief (1987), Presumed Innocent (1990), The Player (1992), Emma (1996), and Looking for Alibrandi (2000).

Adelaide Film Festival Film festival in Adelaide, South Australia

The Adelaide Film Festival is an international film festival usually held for two weeks in mid-October in cinemas in Adelaide, South Australia. Originally presented biennially in March from 2003, since 2013 AFF has been held in October. Subject to funding, the festival stages full or briefer events in alternating years; some form of event has taken place every year since 2015. It has a strong focus on local South Australian and Australian produced content, with the Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund (AFFIF) established to fund investment in Australian films.

Marryatville High School Public school in Kensington Road, Marryatville, South Australia, Australia

Marryatville High School (MHS) is a public state secondary school in Adelaide, South Australia. The school is situated on a large area of land in the eastern suburb of Marryatville, part of the City of Norwood Payneham and St Peters. First Creek cuts through the school grounds and large gum trees line the property. The school was founded in 1976 during the Dunstan era, from the amalgamation of the Norwood Boys' Technical High School and the Kensington & Norwood Girls' High School.

Patch Theatre Company, formerly New Patch Theatre, is an Australian theatre company founded in 1972 and based in Adelaide, South Australia, which performs works for young children.

Windmill Theatre Co, established in 2002 as a South Australian Government initiative, is Australia's flagship professional theatre company for child and young adult audiences. As of 2019 artistic director is Rosemary Myers.

Bethany Whitmore Australian actress (born 1999)

Bethany Sarah Whitmore is an Australian actress, who started her professional acting career starring as Jaden Kagan in the US TV mini-series The Starter Wife. Bethany is also known for her lead voice role of 8-year-old Mary Daisy Dinkle in Adam Elliot's Mary and Max (2009), Jane Moochmore in PJ Hogan's Mental (2012), Greta Driscoll in Girl Asleep (2015), Melissa in The Family Law (2016–19) and Blanche Gifford in the TV series remake of Picnic at Hanging Rock (2017). Bethany was also a finalist for the 10th anniversary Heath Ledger Scholarship in 2018.

Shari Sebbens is an Australian Aboriginal actress and stage director, known for her debut film role in The Sapphires (2012), as well as many stage and television performances. As of 2021 she is a resident director of the Sydney Theatre Company.

<i>52 Tuesdays</i> 2013 coming of age film

52 Tuesdays is a 2013 Australian coming of age drama film directed by Sophie Hyde, with the screenplay written by Matthew Cormack and story by Cormack and Hyde. The film centres on a teenage girl dealing with the gender transition of a parent. The film showed at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, where it was not only nominated for the Grand Jury Prize, but won the Best Director Award. Over the following year it won numerous other awards and garnered global critical acclaim.

The 7th Adelaide Film Festival was held in Adelaide, South Australia, from 15 to 25 October 2015.

Al Clark is an Australian film producer. He is best known for his producer role on TheAdventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert and his executive producer role on the film, Chopper. Clark is also the author of three books. Time Flies is Clark's memoir and third book. It a sometime-hard-to-believe-but-no-its-all-true adventure that merges the early days of punk and New Wave with the truncated British film renaissance of the 1980s and the world of international film finance. Raymond Chandler in Hollywood provides an insight into the work of the writer of detective fiction and includes interviews with many of the Hollywood figures who were associated with Raymond Chandler and his films. Among them Clark interviewed Lauren Bacall, Alfred Hitchcock, Fred MacMurray and Robert Montgomery. His second book was Making Priscilla, also titled The Lavender Bus: How a Hit Movie Was Made and Sold, a behind the scenes tale chronicling the follies of the film making business and how The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert became an international success.

Tilda Cobham-Hervey is an Australian actress from Adelaide, South Australia, with a background in circus and physical theatre. In 2014 Cobham-Hervey made her film debut at the age of 19 in 52 Tuesdays, a critically acclaimed independent film directed by Sophie Hyde, and has also appeared on stage. She appeared in the 2018 film Hotel Mumbai, and starred as feminist icon Helen Reddy in the 2019 biopic I Am Woman.

<i>One Eyed Girl</i> 2015 Australian film

One Eyed Girl is a 2015 Australian psychological thriller film directed by Nick Remy Matthews and starring Mark Leonard Winter, Tilda Cobham-Hervey, and Steve Le Marquand. Winter plays a troubled psychiatrist who joins a cult after one of his patients commits suicide. It premiered at the Austin Film Festival in October 2014 and was released in Australia in April 2015.

<i>Hotel Mumbai</i> 2018 action thriller film directed by Anthony Maras

Hotel Mumbai is a 2018 action thriller film directed by Anthony Maras and co-written by Maras and John Collee. An Indian-Australian-American co-production, it is inspired by the 2009 documentary Surviving Mumbai about the 2008 Mumbai attacks at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel in India. The film stars Dev Patel, Armie Hammer, Nazanin Boniadi, Anupam Kher, Tilda Cobham-Hervey, Jason Isaacs, Suhail Nayyar, Nagesh Bhosle, and Natasha Liu Bordizzo.

68th Berlin International Film Festival Film festival

The 68th annual Berlin International Film Festival took place from 15 to 25 February 2018. German filmmaker Tom Tykwer served as Jury President. American film director Wes Anderson's animated film Isle of Dogs opened the festival, becoming first animated film to open the fest. The Romanian film Touch Me Not directed by Adina Pintilie won the Golden Bear, which also served as the closing night film.

<i>I Am Mother</i> 2019 Australian science fiction thriller film by Grant Sputore

I Am Mother is a 2019 Australian science fiction thriller film directed by Grant Sputore, from a screenplay by Michael Lloyd Green, based on a story by both. Starring Clara Rugaard, Luke Hawker, Rose Byrne, and Hilary Swank, the film follows Daughter, a girl in a post-apocalyptic bunker, being raised by Mother, a robot aiding the repopulation of Earth. The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on 25 January 2019. Netflix released it in several countries on 7 June 2019.

Sophie Hyde Australian film producer, writer and director

Sophie Hyde is an Australian film director, writer and producer based in Adelaide, South Australia. She is co-founder of Closer Productions and known for her award-winning debut fiction film, 52 Tuesdays (2013) and the comedy drama Animals (2019). She has also made several documentaries, including Life in Movement (2011), a documentary about dancer and choreographer Tanja Liedtke, and television series, such as The Hunting (2019). Her latest film, Good Luck to You, Leo Grande, premiered at the Sundance Festival on 23 January 2022.

Closer Productions is a film and television production company founded by filmmakers Sophie Hyde and Bryan Mason in Adelaide, South Australia, in January 2004. It is known for award-winning feature films such as 52 Tuesdays (2013) and Animals (2019), as well as television series and documentary films.

<i>I Am Woman</i> (film) 2019 biopic about Helen Reddy

I Am Woman is a 2019 Australian biographical film about singer Helen Reddy, directed and produced by Unjoo Moon, from a screenplay by Emma Jensen. Tilda Cobham-Hervey stars as Reddy alongside Evan Peters, as her manager husband Jeff Wald, and Danielle Macdonald as rock writer Lilian Roxon.

References

  1. IMDb pro
  2. "Girl Asleep (2016) - Financial Information".
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Groves, Don (19 December 2014). "52 Tuesdays duo reunites for Girl Asleep". Inside Film Magazine. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  4. Showers, Jessica; Peterson, Tyler. "Rosemary Myer's GIRL ASLEEP to Premiere at Adelaide Film Festival 2015". Broadway World. BWW. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  5. 1 2 "Adelaide awake to Girl Asleep". in-Business. 27 January 2015. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
  6. Debelle, Penny. "Adelaide Film Festival to feature 43 Australian premieres". The Advertiser. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  7. Frost, Vicky (9 March 2014). "Girl Asleep review – 'As inventive and surprising as its audience'". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 McDonald, Patrick. "Tilda Cobham-Hervey and Imogen Archer reunite for new film version of Windmill Theatre's Girl Asleep". The Advertiser. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  9. Keen, Suzie (12 August 2015). "Adelaide Film Festival highlights announced". Daily Review. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  10. Iannella, Antimo (22 January 2015). "Tilda Cobham-Hervey's new role in the screen version of Windmill Theatre's hit play Girl Asleep". The Advertiser. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  11. Marsh, Walter (12 August 2015). "Adelaide Film Festival 2015 highlights revealed". Rip It Up. Archived from the original on 26 September 2015.
  12. Douglas, James Robert (31 August 2016). "Girl Asleep: how an Adelaide theatre company made one of this year's best Australian films". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  13. "Reviews for "Girl Asleep" (2016)". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  14. "Girl Asleep (2015) - Critic Reviews". Metacritic . Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  15. 1 2 Howard, Jane (26 October 2015). "Girl Asleep first look review – the magical realism of being a teenager". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
  16. Foster, Simon. "Girl Asleep". Screen-Sound. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
  17. Kusmuk-Dodd, Cat (21 October 2015). "GIRL ASLEEP, Film Review". The Upside News. Retrieved 4 November 2015.