Dentally Disturbed

Dentally Disturbed is an Australian short film written by Cameron Mitchell and directed by Craig Melville and Cameron Mitchell.[1][2] It first aired on SBS in Australia on 24 December 2004.

Dentally Disturbed
Directed byCraig Melville
Cameron Mitchell
Produced byJodie Crawford-Fish
David Curry
Craig Melville
Written byCameron Mitchell
StarringBen Anderson
Damian Callinan
Kate Gorman
John Safran
CinematographyGermain McMicking
Edited byCraig Melville
Cameron Mitchell
Distributed byMoney Shot
Release date
31 January 2004
Running time
6 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

Plot

The film begins with Ed (Ben Anderson) shopping in the supermarket with his wife, Gina (Kate Gorman). Ed searches the shelves for dental floss, but can't find any. Both Gina and a supermarket employee seem to have never heard of it before: "You mean, toothpicks?" Ed asks his friends, his dentist, Google, and even the local radio station, all of them confused as to the origin of the product and as to why toothpicks would not suffice. Finally, Ed proposes the idea of dental floss to Oral-B. The CEO rejects it, saying "The wheel's already been invented, mate!" The CEO too, has never heard of it. In desperation, Ed purchases some candles, which he begins to strip down in order to use the wax-covered string inside as dental floss. Gina, sensing his maddening fight with this problem, convinces Ed to move on. As she does this, however, she is searching frantically through her bag to find her tampons. Confused, Ed asks, "What the hell are tampons?"

Cast

The film features only four main actors, who have all featured in their own television shows.

Ben Anderson and Damian Callinan are both regular characters on the Australian comedy skitHOUSE. John Safran, who portrays himself, featured on John Safran vs God, and Kate Gorman acted in You and Your Stupid Mate.

Critical acclaim

The National Flossing Council: "Dentally Disturbed" is "a funny, thought provoking story"[3]

Festivals and awards

  • 2005 Flickerfest International Short Film Festival. Winner, "SBS Eastcarpet Award"[4]
  • 2005 Portland International Short Film Festival. Winner, "Audience choice award"[5]
  • 2005 Down Under Film Festival. Winner, "Best Australian Short Comedy"
  • 2005 Sony Tropfest. Winner, "Best of the Rest competition"[6]
  • 2005 London Rushes Soho Short Film Festival. Runner-up for "Best Newcomer".[6]
  • Qantas In-flight Entertainment programme, Licensing deal
  • Angry Film Festival, Runner Up
gollark: You can't talk to anyone who's died to tyrannical dictators. Technically.
gollark: A generally intelligent AI:- could make itself more intelligent much more easily than a human- will probably have a very different set of capabilities to humans even if they "average out" to "equal intelligence" and thus might be really dangerous depending on what they are- is unlikely to share much of our human value system unless explicitly built that way
gollark: That's possibly reasonable but problematic to do.
gollark: Nobody would want AGI if it was just a nice paperweight.
gollark: They could do 3828288382 things, obviously. That's the problem.

References

  1. "St Kilda Film Festival - Info on 11 Shorts". Entertainment Depot. 19 April 2005. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  2. "Screen Australia database, Dentally Disturbed". Screen Australia. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
  3. flossing.org, Retrieved 10-24-2008
  4. "Flickerfest 2005 winners, Retrieved 10-24-2008". Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
  5. zonkerfilms.com Archived 25 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, "PISS FEST 2005 screening details". Retrieved 10-23-2008
  6. flickerfest.com.au Archived 22 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Flickerfest Distribution Catalogue, Retrieved 10-24-2008
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.