Southern International Productions

Southern International Productions was an Australian film production company established in the 1950s by Lee Robinson and Chips Rafferty.[1] For a few years it was the most prolific film production company in Australia, pioneering international co-productions with France, but a series of box office failures starting with Dust in the Sun caused it to be liquidated.[2] Rafferty left producing but Lee Robinson later formed another company, Fauna, with actor John McCallum.

Robinson and Rafferty later formed another company, Australian Television Enterprises, to make films for TV. This was valued at £250,000.[3][4]

Credits

gollark: This has been done.
gollark: Not sure if that went anywhere.
gollark: GPT-3 apparently was able to generate valid code if prompted properly.
gollark: I don't think "what if we autogenerated programs" is a hugely original idea. It's just very hard.
gollark: There's a neat easy thing to train GPT-2 instances. I did that with my discord messages.

References

  1. Stephen Vagg, 'King of the Coral Sea: A Royal Achievement', Metro Magazine 158 Sept 2008 p88
  2. Tim Read, 'An Idea That Leapt Borders', Sydney Morning Herald, 8 Oct 2003
  3. "To make films for TV". The Argus. Melbourne. 14 March 1956. p. 10. Retrieved 31 August 2012 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "Advertising". The Argus. Melbourne. 22 August 1956. p. 5. Retrieved 31 August 2012 via National Library of Australia.


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