Feature Video: Tame Impala - End Of Summer
Shot in a place Kevin says was 'even dustier than my drum sounds', the track's mammoth seven-minute long music video is a visual narrative directed by Los Angeles based multi-disciplinary artist Julian Klincewicz, who said via Instagram that the project was 'a true labor of love'. Considering the fifty-plus film layers that went into the project's production we don't doubt it! 'Thank you a million times over to everyone involved' says Julian. 'Thanks Imogene and KP for bringing me on and trusting me to go crazy with the video. Biggest love to Kate and Jodi, to Kavin and Erica and the whole Goodworld team! Hugeee thank you to Manana for going above and beyond to bring the ideas to life! Couldn't have done it without my A1 Dominik!'
Drawing from the deep, rich history of dance music, 'End Of Summer' is a psych-electronic track that harkens back to the acid house summer of '89, to free parties of the mid-90s, to bush doofs in outback paddocks in the long warm twilight. It's still unmistakably Tame Impala, but as Kevin says, 'a new era begins. This is the first thing I want you guys to hear. I give you 'End Of Summer'.'
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News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Forgotten film that launched Margot Robbie's career
Everybody has to start somewhere, and same goes for Margot Robbie. Before the Aussie actress became a big deal in Hollywood, starring opposite the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt and Ryan Gosling, she was a wannabe actress trying to get her foot in the door right here in the Australian entertainment industry. But Robbie's star quality was undeniable, and it wasn't long before she was cast in her first-ever feature film. Aussie filmmaker Aash Aaron was Robbie's acting coach back in the day, who also cast and directed the star in her first two films: Vigilante and I.C.U.. Although the horror thriller I.C.U. was technically her first film, the action drama Vigilante was released first in 2008 – and it's available to stream now for free on Tubi. Speaking to Andrew Bucklow, Aaron recalled the exact moment he met Robbie and immediately knew she was destined for the big screen. 'When I met Margot, I was casting my first movie with acting students of mine that I wrote for them, which is I.C.U. And the main girl who was playing the lead actress in that movie was struggling with her schoolwork and couldn't really commit to the movie. So I was ready to go and I didn't have an actor.' So the director put feelers out and one of the actors on the film brought half a dozen actresses to audition for Aaron, among them was an 'enthusiastic' Robbie, who at the time wanted to be an actress so badly, she was studying events management as a way to hopefully get into the entertainment industry. 'Someone said to me, 'You gotta meet this girl because if anyone's gonna be the first female prime minister of Australia, it's gonna be this girl. She's a go-getter,'' he recalled. 'I talked to all the girls, but I didn't even need to see them act. I'm an acting teacher, and I just said to [Margot], 'If you are prepared to do exactly what I tell you to do, and allow me to train you for six months, you can have the lead role in this movie.' And of course she said yes. She just didn't believe it was ever possible.' In I.C.U., Robbie plays one of three teens who spy on their neighbours, one of which they've uncovered is a sadistic killer. Meanwhile, in Vigilante Robbie plays the girlfriend of a rich young man who goes rogue after her rape and murder, training himself to become a deadly weapon against any wrongdoers who cross his path. 'It's kind of like a realistic take on a Batman character as in, you know, he's got some money, so he's gonna go and learn martial arts and drive around the city at night and basically just take his aggression out on anybody who's doing wrong because he believes in his mind that he'll never be able to find the people that did this to him. So he takes his anger out on bad people he encounters,' Aaron said. Vigilante was such a low-budget film that Aaron revealed 'guerrilla tactics' were used to get the entire movie filmed in two weeks on the Gold Coast. However, it was still a 'do-ability budget', and it helped that Robbie was a class act. 'I've taught a lot of actors and people have asked me what is different about Margot than most actors, and I said to them, 'She is the perfect student where she will do what you tell her to do.' Like, if you had to tell someone that they had to stand on their head in the corner to find a character, most people would go, 'What? Why?' She would just go, 'OK.'' 'Whatever you ask her to do, she would do. So when I trained her in acting, because I was the first person to train her in acting, she would just do exactly what she was told to do. We rehearsed the movie and when we shot all three kids in the first movie, they were just perfect.' It was in I.C.U. that Aaron knew a star was born. 'It was only in the climax of the first movie that I actually turned to my wife – who was on set with me and Sarie [Kessler], Margot's mum – and I just looked at her and said, 'There is a star.' And her mum was like, 'Really?'' 'I said, 'She's like an a young Angelina Jolie. She's amazing.' She flicked at the climax of the scene and that was when I believed that she could actually go for it. Then I cast her in the next movie I did, six months later, Vigilante.' Robbie caught the acting bug and went on the score a role in Neighbours, with a little guidance from Aaron. 'I helped her get her first couple of agents and when she said, 'How do I get onto Neighbours?' I told her what she needed to do and then she was like, 'OK,'' Aaron recalled. 'That was just her. She's like the Terminator. You tell her what to do, and she would just go for it. That's the difference. A lot of people just wait for the phone to ring, but she was just a go-getter.' 'I've always said that I teach actors to be Hollywood-ready rather than just all the rubbish that a lot of acting teachers teach,' he added. 'And she was the one who put everything into practice and proved that my techniques work.'


SBS Australia
an hour ago
- SBS Australia
I was an NRL player who locked himself in the toilet to read fantasy books in secret
More than 50 years ago, the women's liberation movement reshaped society's expectations of womanhood. As commentary around 'toxic masculinity' persists today, Insight asks if men need to be liberated from traditional masculinity. Watch episode Male Liberation on SBS On Demand . Many people might look at me, a country boy and an ex-NRL player, and think I seem like a 'pretty tough fella'. Something they may not guess about me, though, is that I'm an avid fantasy fiction reader. I grew up on a cattle property in western Queensland, surrounded by hard country men — who themselves were raised by hard country men. I was a sensitive kid with a vivid imagination who loved (and still loves) magic and dragons. I always felt weird being around gruff, straight-edged men who weren't interested in such things. My first memory of buying a book was at age 6 at my school's book fair. I couldn't read yet, but I would sit down, open the book and pretend to; I remember my older brother mocking me for doing so. I felt I didn't belong, but I find a sense of belonging with books. Stories became my sanctuary, and I'd escape to fantasy worlds where I could be me. However, I started to hide this part of myself as I grew older. As a young man, I found myself in cultures — like the NRL — where I felt weakness was a liability, and wonder was for fools. I hid my books in my footy bag, and I would only ever read them in secret — if I could. If we were on an away game — and I was sharing a hotel room with a teammate — I would sit on the toilet for half an hour with the door locked and read my book. That was how I read because I felt there was no way I could pull out a book about magic or fantastical worlds in front of the boys. Luke played for the Canberra Raiders NRL team from 2015 to 2019. Source: Supplied Pretending to be someone else What most people didn't see was that from about 2018 to through to 2021, I had severe depression and a harmful gambling addiction. Gambling was how I silenced the inner parts of me that felt rejected. It came at a cost, however — becoming a vortex of pain and misery that lasted years. I think getting up every day and pretending to be someone I wasn't really contributed to this difficult period. In 2021, I did a month in a rehabilitation clinic for my addiction. This was the catalyst for me that began a journey of positive change in my life. Looking back, I wonder if it was just a coincidence that my darkest season began after I stopped reading. Maybe. Maybe not. I'll never know. But when I finally accepted and sought help, books returned to my life. And believe me when I say, books were a cornerstone of my journey back to stability. When life became too loud and overwhelming during recovery, books were my safe haven. Along with the professional help I received, books gave me the map back to myself. Back to magic. Back to the kid I had cast aside when I felt the world told me I had to. The photo of Luke he has as his phone background to remind himself of his boy self. Source: Supplied Finding role models in fantasy characters I think we currently have a poor definition of what masculinity and strength are. I was given the checklist: money, car, house, status. This is what you do to be successful. I had all of that — earning hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, I drove around in a brand-new car, lived in an amazing house, had renown and status. And yet I was the most broken, shallow, hollow, miserable person or version of myself that I've ever been. I think that boys are starved of stories that teach them how to feel. We give them stories of action and fighting. Rarely do we give them stories of affection and intimacy. We then question why they're emotionally cold. Why they become men who can't cry. Why they don't know how to ask for help. In my eyes, a man worthy of being a role model is someone who takes responsibility for their mistakes and is willing to talk about them — not someone who tries to pretend they're perfect. I've found many of my role models within books. Some of the best role models in the world are made-up characters. Fantasy books let boys journey with characters who are flawed and who doubt themselves. Characters who wrestle with shame and fear but still have the desire to grow and overcome adversity. 'A boy who reads will know better' Books give boys a platform to understand themselves. It keeps magic alive inside them as they grow up. The world is going to challenge them every day. It might try to box them in, define them by what they earn, what car they drive, how much they lift at the gym, tell them that softness is weakness. But I know firsthand that a boy who reads will know better — even if it's not right away. He knows that heroes are flawed and imperfect. He knows that what makes them heroes is that they don't give up when times are tough. He knows that inside him, that same strength waits patiently. Luke has found role models within the pages of his favourite fantasy novels. Source: Supplied Now for the first time at age 30, through BookTok (the TikTok book community), I have other blokes (and women) to speak to about dragons and magic. I believe magic is real and it permeates our world. It's real in the stories that wrap around us and remind us of who we are. It's real in the boy on the cattle property pretending to read. It's real in the man who picked fantasy books back up in his darkest season. It can be real for all boys if they continue to read; I think it's important that they do. I don't want young men and boys to go through what I went through. I want them to pursue magic and wonder — whatever that looks like to them. For gambling addiction support you can visit the National Gambling Helpline or call on 1800 858 858. All services are free, confidential and available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. For crisis and mental health support, contact Lifeline (13 11 14), SANE Australia (1800 187 263) or 13Yarn (139 276), a 24/7 Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islanders crisis support line.

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Waterfall used for Netflix film at centre of Aussie controversy
A waterfall near Canberra used a shooting location for an upcoming Netflix film with Charlize Theron and Taron Egerton has returned to the spotlight after insiders revealed the ACT government had expressed no plans of buying the site, currently up for sale. The once popular tourist attraction known as Gininderra Falls had been publicly accessible until 2004, when the land became closed off. The closure has been a source of contention among locals ever since, who have argued it is a significant natural site that should not be private. Locals had been hopeful that government would snap up the land, but an agent involved in the ongoing sale told The Daily Telegraph that the ACT Government had confirmed it had no intention to buy Gininderra Falls. Once one of the Canberra region's most prominent tourist attractions, Ginninderra Falls was a shooting location for upcoming film Apex, starring Charlize Theron, Taron Egerton and Eric Bana. Ray White Rural Canberra/Yass said Tuesday that it seems likely that the site will now fall into private ownership. The property has been up for sale since October. 'The ACT Government (on Monday) confirmed that they are not interested in the site at all,' he said. 'There's been a lot of questioning and petitioning around that through a number of politicians ... It looks like it'll be going into private hands.' Located on the borders of the ACT and NSW in Wallaroo, Ginninderra Falls is known for its picturesque scenery and namesake waterfall. Upcoming Netflix thriller Apex was filmed at the falls, with Mr Southwell saying it was an economic boon for the area and a 'proud moment' for the owners and marketing team. Stars arrived in the country for the filming of Apex in late January, with Theron spotted leaving in May. No release date for the film has been confirmed. Gininderra Falls has been closed to the public since 2004, a decision which has frustrated locals for two decades. The site was closed due to reported public liability concerns, and even while closed, several injuries were alleged to have occurred there. An injured woman was rescued from the site by the ACT Fire and Rescue Vertical Rescue Crew after a fall in February 2019, and a teenage boy sustained a broken arm and an injured pelvis after he fell from Ginninderra Falls in December 2015. The 56-hectare property has been privately owned by the local Hyles family for over 40 years. Mr Southwell said the owners would prefer to see the site reopened to the public. 'They would like to see the asset they have enjoyed as a private family property for a long time be opened up to the public,' he said. ACT Greens MLA for Ginninderra Jo Clay has supported local petitions calling for Ginninderra Falls to be reopened to the public. Ms Clay said the community has been pushing for support of ecological conservation and the First Nations heritage of the site. 'When it was opened it was truly a spectacular place to visit,' she said. 'Surprisingly, the ACT Government has not considered the potential tourism benefits from reopening Ginninderra Falls, nor have they discussed public access with the NSW Government and Yass Valley Council. 'Many people in Canberra have no idea this gorgeous spot even exists because they … have never been able to access it.' Two petitions have been launched to get the NSW and ACT Governments to work with the Federal Government to establish the falls as part of a national park. Chief Minister Andrew Barr first told press last October that the ACT Government was unlikely to purchase the property, with the government confirming this decision this week. While he could not disclose a price guide, Mr Southwell said larger holdings nearby have sold to the ACT Government for $10-12 million. These two sales, he said, were based on agricultural value, and do not possess the commercial or development potential of Gininderra Falls. According to Mr Southwell, interest in the falls has come from far and wide. 'We've received over 350 enquiries from right around the world including Canada, the Middle East and America as well,' he said. Expressions of interest for the property close on November 28.