‘A kick in the head we all needed’: beloved satirist John Clarke celebrated in new film by his daughter

Lorin Clarke’s documentary But Also John Clarke examines the forces that created Fred Dagg – and the reinvention that came with his move from New Zealand to Australia Get our weekend culture and lifestyle email In a career that spanned close to 40 years, the late satirist and comedian John Clarke played thousands of people. In his native New Zealand he was Fred Dagg, sheep farmer and gumboot philosopher . In Australia he was best known as one half of Clarke and Dawe – the voice of an endless parade of risible politicians, shonky businessmen and overconfident idiots. His magic trick was to play them all as himself. His eldest daughter, Lorin Clarke, explains it in her father’s own words. “He used to say to me, ‘If you ask some actors to play Hamlet, they will become a Danish prince, and they will research Danish princes. If you ask me to play Hamlet, Hamlet comes from Palmerston North.’” Continue reading... from Film | The Guardian https://ift.tt/BOyg9Di via IFTTT

One More Shot review – what if you could turn back time … via a magical tequila?

This Australian time-loop comedy starring Emily Browning, Aisha Dee and Ashley Zukerman is pleasingly derivative

Ah, the pleasures of the time loop comedy! This wacky sub-genre could easily have been a novelty deployed once or twice then heard of no more, but the genius of Groundhog Day almost single-handedly entrenched it in the zeitgeist. Harold Ramis’ 1993 classic spawned an ever-expanding array of stories involving protagonists who find themselves doomed to repeat the same time period – be it day, night, wedding ceremony or alien invasion– again and again.

Or could that be “blessed” to repeat it? While Bill Murray’s grouchy weatherman found himself trapped in a small town with crappy weather, Emily Browning’s protagonist Minnie in One More Shot can choose whether she wants to rewind time or keep moving forward. The narrative of Nick Clifford’s modestly enjoyable Australian film takes place at a New Year’s Eve party in 1999, attended by Minnie and several of her friends including Pia (Pallavi Sharda), who believes that pandemonium will erupt after midnight.

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