Any Questions for Ben – Starring Josh Lawson, Rachael Taylor and Daniel Henshall. Directed by Rob Sitch. Rated M. Originally published February 9, 2012. By Simon Miraudo. Any Questions for Ben arrives on DVD and Blu-ray in Australia July 19, 2012. Any Questions for Ben seeks to solve the very conundrum pondered since the advent of […]
Continue readingMan up – Any Questions for Ben review
Any Questions for Ben – Starring Josh Lawson, Rachael Taylor and Daniel Henshall. Directed by Rob Sitch. Rated M. By Simon Miraudo. Any Questions for Ben seeks to solve the very conundrum pondered since the advent of cinema, if not art and human communication itself: what are handsome, wealthy, young men really supposed to do […]
Continue readingTrailer Debut: Any Questions for Ben
The first official trailer for Working Dog’s newie Any Questions for Ben? has arrived online. It’s their first film since The Dish in 2000. Josh Lawson stars as 27-year-old commitment-phobe Ben, who becomes enchanted by a young woman (Rachael Taylor) amidst something of a quarter-life crisis. Watch it here! Written by Santo Cilauro, Tom Gleisner and Sitch, Any Questions […]
Continue readingPoster Debut: Any Questions For Ben?
It’s been more than 10 years since the crew at Working Dog delivered a film, despite the immense success of their hits The Castle and The Dish. Thankfully, the wait for their long-delayed new project – Any Questions for Ben? – is almost over, indicated by the release of the official poster. Any Questions for Ben? […]
Continue readingRed Dog cracks top 10 Aussie films of all time
Proving that you can’t keep a good dog down, Film Ink reports that Aussie family flick Red Dog has become the 10th highest grossing Australian film of all time. Directed by Kriv Stenders and starring the ultra talented Koko as Red Dog, the film sits comfortably next to the likes of Crocodile Dundee and Babe. Red […]
Continue readingInterview: Richard Gray; writer/director of Summer Coda.
Interview: Richard Gray; writer/director of Summer Coda. By Simon Miraudo. Richard Gray may not yet realise it, but he’s living the dream. He’s fulfilling one of the oldest Hollywood fantasies, akin to a 1930s mail-room clerk working his way up to become the president of MGM studios (well, maybe not exactly). A former cinema usher […]
Continue reading
You must be logged in to post a comment.