logo
Wild One: Junipo - Tommy Gunn

Wild One: Junipo - Tommy Gunn

It's a bonafide piss-up for one this week with Eora-based creative Oliver Kirby's new project Junipo and his rager of a debut music video for 'Tommy Gunn'.
Co-directed by Oliver and local rage favourite Charles Buxton-Leslie, the filmmaker behind visuals from Nick Ward, G Flip, Ruel, Monnie, Ashwarya, Memphis LK, and way too many more to mention. The video for 'Tommy Gunn' has a grimy housebound party energy, looking as dishevelled as any sequence from Danny Boyle's Trainspotting (complete with toilet scene), if instead of milk-of-the-poppy Renton went for 12-year-old Scotch Whiskey and cola.
'I thought it would be fun to reverse the big party concept on itself and just have myself alone in a house, rocking out' says Oliver. 'With that in mind and after sitting on my hands for a little while, Charles kindly pushed me to go forth with the video and offered his talents and expertise.'
Taking inspiration in part from the old 1980s Maxell Tape ads (you know the ones; where a super-powerful soundsystem blasts the listener back into their chair), 'Tommy Gunn' is definitely the kind of track to blow wigs back. "Working with limitations can inspire creativity in a really unique way." say Charles Buxton-Leslie. "The process of making this video reminded me of my first videos when I was a teenager with my friends after school. You have really big ideas but no money which leads to some really exciting, crazy DIY concepts and solutions. The limitations led us to think in more of a practical way. The flying scene is just a stool, fishing wire and leaf blowers… simple is sometimes the most effective!"
'Thats how I wanted people to feel when the first riff comes in', adds Oliver. 'It will knock your socks (and remaining clothing) off... The mental and abdominal strength a man needs to hold his back legs up while having a towel ripped off him in nude underwear, for that many takes, cannot be understated. Even with the assistance of a chair for stability and fish wires holding up my legs, my core and pride still hurt.'
And how can we forget the epic piss shot (don't ask, just watch it and you'll see). 'The feeling of going to the bathroom can be otherworldly at a certain point of any good party, and this is how the idea of the floating toilet concept came to life' Oliver explains. 'A simple dolly rig, a second hand toilet from marketplace and the keen eye of [DOP] Jesse really brought that shot and feeling to life… To the disappointment of some, no real nudity or urine was used in the making of this video, just a phallic Ribena bottle and a lot of heart.'
'Simple camera tricks and blocking add a lot to the feeling but are not out of reach to achieve on an indie video" adds Charles. "The location in particular was… inspired. It was a condemned house that had squatters and strange souvenirs throughout. We got super lucky, we had one day to shoot the video after a last minute call and the next day the demolition crew came in and tore the place down!'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gary Shteyngart, Jennifer Mills and Rhett Davis ask what's next
Gary Shteyngart, Jennifer Mills and Rhett Davis ask what's next

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Gary Shteyngart, Jennifer Mills and Rhett Davis ask what's next

Russian born US writer Gary Shteyngart imagines a future America with strong parallels to Russia in Vera, or Faith, Adelaide based author Jennifer Mills' latest novel Salvage rockets into space after ecological collapse, and Geelong author Rhett Davis on Aborescence about people who want to become trees. Gary Shteyngart is the Russian-born, American-based author of novels including Absurdistan, Super Sad True Love Story and Our Country Friends. His latest book Vera, or Faith, is about a precocious child living in near future America, where cars have attitude and equality is under threat. Gary talks about the worrying parallels between the USA and Russia and the precarious state of immigrants in the country. Jennifer Mills (Dyschronia and The Airways) is one of the most exciting experimental writers in Australia. Her latest novel, Salvage, is a propulsive novel about sisterhood, space and what happens after ecological collapse. She also talks about wanting her books to be of use to readers. And staying with the environmental theme, Geelong based author Rhett Davis's second book Arborescence continues his fascination with trees that featured in his debut, Hovering. Arborescence is about a movement of people who want to grow roots and become trees (and they do, in their billions)! It's also about the absurdity of modern-day life.

Sydney Sweeney's new movie tanks at box office
Sydney Sweeney's new movie tanks at box office

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Sydney Sweeney's new movie tanks at box office

Sydney Sweeney's new movie has tanked at the box office. The 27-year-old actress is on the big screen starring in Americana, which opened nationwide across the United States last weekend, but the Tony Tost-directed crime thriller, which also stars Paul Walter Hauser, 37, and singer Halsey, 29, made only $840,000 after making its US cinema debut in 1,100 cinemas. Its opening placed it 16th at the US box office, averaging $460 per screen, according to the Hollywood Reporter. The weak debut comes in the wake of weeks of criticism surrounding Sydney's involvement in an American Eagle advertising campaign. The actress, who rose to prominence in Euphoria and Immaculate, became the subject of fierce online debate after fans accused the denim brand's advert of promoting 'Nazi propaganda'. In the campaign video, Sydney, who has blond hair and blue eyes, said: 'Genes that are passed from parent to offspring often determine traits such as hair colour, personality and even eye colour.' She concluded the segment by looking into the camera and stating: 'My jeans are blue.' The advert was widely shared online, with celebrities including Doja Cat, 28, and Lizzo, 36, ridiculing the message. American Eagle later issued a statement defending its campaign, saying: 'We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone.' But US president Donald Trump, 79, was among those who praised the advert, calling it 'fantastic.' Sydney, who plays aspiring singer Penny Jo Poplin in Americana, had promoted the film on Instagram, writing alongside photographs from the set: 'A few years ago I filmed this little movie with some friends and now you get to meet Penny Jo (red heart emoji).' Public records show that Sydney has been registered with the Republican Party of Florida in Monroe County since June 2024. Critics have linked her Americana ad to eugenics and fascism due to its play on the word 'genes' in the context of Sydney's Aryan looks. In Americana she plays Penny Jo Poplin, a waitress at the local diner who dreams of becoming a country singer – and its characters get into a conflict while trying to gain possession of a rare Native American artefact. Sydney promoted her new project on social media with the message: 'A few years ago I filmed this little movie with some friends and now you get to meet penny jo (red heart emoji).' She made the statement in a caption for an Instagram carousel of behind-the-scenes snaps from the film. But trolls replied saying they would 'not be watching'.

Cyber City's owner Andrew Knox is laughing all the way to the bank with $15,000 collect for $200 bet
Cyber City's owner Andrew Knox is laughing all the way to the bank with $15,000 collect for $200 bet

News.com.au

time11 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Cyber City's owner Andrew Knox is laughing all the way to the bank with $15,000 collect for $200 bet

Cyber City's owner Andrew Knox is laughing all the way to the bank after he collected more than $15,000 for a $200 outlay when his roughie caused a huge upset at Doomben on Saturday. The David Murphy -trained gelding paid $51 when he crossed the finishing post a whopping seven lengths ahead of the fourth-placed $3 favourite Idyllic Affair in a 3YO Handicap over 1350m. 'The (2.1) multiplier on the Queensland TAB app gave me odds of 102/1 for a $100 bet,' a cashed-up Knox said on Sunday. 'Then I had $100 on at Ladbrokes for $51. Ladbrokes offered me an owner's bet – for up to $2000 you get your money back if the horse runs second or third. 'The night before when it came through on my phone it was $61 so I was kicking myself I didn't get on at that price. 'I picked up $15,000 for $200. I went and bought a carton of beer, I've got it in the fridge now. 'When he turned into the corner, I knew he had them because I was watching all the horses behind him and they just weren't progressing forward. 'I thought 'we've got this' and then when he started to kick around the 200m mark I thought 'this is over'.' 🗣ï¸� | "Cyber City by 5..." ðŸ�‡ CYBER CITY (3g) puts 5Ls on his rivals to win today's metro QTIS 3YO Handicap at Doomben over 1350m for trainer David Murphy. Raced and bred by Mr A Knox, the gelding is by Telemon Thoroughbreds SUN CITY. More â'¹ï¸� — Thoroughbred Breeders Queensland (@QldBreeders) August 16, 2025 Knox said he wasn't surprised at Cyber City's victory, believing the gelding should have won his previous race after being caught wide in a Maiden Plate (1100m) at Ipswich on July 31. Before that, Cyber City finished sixth to the Paul Shailer -trained filly Ha'penny Hatch, who went on to run in the $1m Group 2 BRC Sires Produce Stakes (1400m) at Eagle Farm in late May. 'If you go back and watch the replay, my horse could've beaten him that day or at least it would've been a fight at the end,' the 61-year-old Knox said. 'Cyber City got caught in a bunch of horses and got boxed in. He pulled up a little bit sore after the race so we put him in the paddock. 'He comes from a really good family. I've had the mare (Star Council) since about 2003 – I bought her as a yearling from the Brisbane Bloodstock sales.' • Concussed jockey 'should never have been allowed to go home' After saluting at Doomben on Saturday at 52kg, jockey Taylor Marshall said Cyber City had 'plenty of potential, he's very untapped and raw'. Murphy was worried that the 'aggressive' galloper would go too hard early but Marshall did well to get him into a nice rhythm. 'Once he gets a bit of experience then he'll settle down because he's like a bull at a gate at the moment,' said Knox, who was born and raised in Longreach and now flies between Brisbane and Western Australia as a FIFO mines worker driving road-trains. 'I know he'll get to a mile because the whole family have been really good milers. ' Longshoreman (whose dam was Star Council) was a very good horse over a mile, he won a Balaklava Cup (in 2014). 'Next year he'll be a really good winter carnival horse, that's what David's opinion was.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store