The Independent (2007 film)

The Independent is an Australian independent mockumentary film released in 2007, produced by Apocalypse Films. It chronicles the story of Marty Browning (Lee Mason), a man who runs for state parliament in a Victorian by-election to save his family farm, backed by a shady businessman (Tony Nikolakopoulos). He runs as an independent, but under the banner of "The Independent Party"; his plan is to form policies by asking members of the public for their opinions, thereby providing a direct public voice in parliament. (A similar purpose is held by the real-life Australian party Senator On-Line.)

The Independent
Directed byAndrew O'Keefe
John Studley
Produced byJim Xyga
Written byAndrew O'Keefe
John Studley
StarringLee Mason
Tony Nikolakopoulos
Sylvie De Crespigny
Chris Bunworth
Georgia Bolton
Grant Piro
Jonathon Auf Der Heide
Jim Daly
Music byNick Batterham
CinematographyWayne Aistrope
Release date
  • 8 November 2007 (2007-11-08)
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

The film was shot in 2006, and released to a small number of cinemas on 8 November 2007 in the lead up to the 2007 Australian federal election. A national cinema launch is planned for April/May 2008.[1]

Critical response

Critical reception to the film was positive, with good reviews from many high-profile Australian film critics and an average rating of around three stars. A frequent criticism was that the film seems uncertain of its tone, wavering between comedy and drama,[2] but overall the film was considered successfully endearing, with some reviewers praising the filmmakers' decision not to merely go for laughs.[3] Margaret Pomeranz found the ending "problematic",[4] but along with most other reviewers singled out Mason for his "outstanding" performance; James Brown of FILMINK Magazine described Marty as "the most charming protagonist since Kenny".[5]

gollark: ...
gollark: Not really. I mean, they're expecting to just magically moderate stuff outside the subreddit or servers they control (which I strongly disagree with), and did not explain how the possibility of fake screenshots or whatever could be handled.
gollark: The whole "trust us it will be enforced sanely even though we won't explain ~~why~~ how" thing, centralizing meme picking power...
gollark: I agree. To some extent. Ish.
gollark: Firm discords *did* presumably ping people with memes people in the firm liked, or you wouldn't be banning that...

See also

References

  1. "Official web site". Apocalypse Films. Retrieved 4 January 2008.
  2. Andrew L. Urban. "The Independent". Urban Cinefile. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  3. Leigh Paatsch (16 November 2007). "Out for the count". Herald Sun. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  4. Margaret Pomeranz (with David Stratton). "At the Movies: The Independent". At the Movies. Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  5. James Brown. "...a rare gem..." FILMINK Magazine. Retrieved 27 November 2007.


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