Home

Browse titles

How it works

Join Now

Sign in

Help


Genres

World Cinema

UK Premier

US Premier

Indie-Arthouse Cinema

Film Noir

UK Classics

US Classics

Australian

All genres


showcase

Now Available

Kino Hot Picks

Directors

Actors


collections

Kino All-time Top 100 rental titles

Christmas Movies

Blu-Ray High Definition

Featured Genre

Director's Cut

Actors' Studio

AACTA - AFI Winners . . . Best  Picture

Oscar Winners . . . Best  Picture

Cannes Classics

Members' Top 100 requested Titles


Service

Send a Gift

Contact Us



Titles

Free Trial

The Bold, The Brave, The Best Of Australian Animated Shorts (2 disc set) (2008)

<<back  


Genres:

Animation, Audio-Visual, Australian, Media

Origin:

Australia

Certificate:

M

Languages:

English

Running Time:

213 min

The Bold, The Brave, The Best Of Australian Animated Shorts (2 disc set)

synopsis


See the Best in Aussie Animation!

Leisure:
A fast-paced, humorous and thought-provoking film using animation by Australian newspaper cartoonist Bruce Petty. The film emphasizes the use of leisure time as an important aspect of life in our society today. Planning for recreation and leisure time should be undertaken both on a personal and on a public level.

Crust:
Crust follows on from Germ of An Idea (1984). This mad and bad story unravels a situation where two half made, half-baked protagonist Ropeshair and Evanrude engage in a battle of ill will to be the most polite. The film is a gradual build up of tension and psychic status as hallucination takes on hallucination.

Union Street:
Union Street tells the story of a typical inner-city street, opposite the train line and underneath the flight path. None of the residents see eye-to-eye, but when the Armstrong-Taylors decide to renovate it sets off an unexpected chain of events, which changes the face of Union Street forever.

Tiga:
A stunning animation about the now extinct Tasmanian Tiger, based on documentary footage shot in Hobart in the 1930's. The soundtrack is both whimsical music and a voice over of various people recalling sightings of the Tiger.

One Man's Instrument:
One Man's Instrument deals with the way a farmer lives with his bananas and copes with a changing environment... a man attempting to reclaim a world that has gone forever.

Redback:
A man with a compulsive cleaning disorder discovers a redback spider inside his home. His attempts to kill the spider result in the redback undertaking a course of revenge.

Cousin:
Cousin is the childhood remembrance of a little boy born with cerebral palsy. Being of the same age, the narrator tells of their antics together as children; their attempts to fly off the chicken shed roof, out of control shopping trolley rides and games of violent cricket in the backyard. We meet his newest pets and visit the graveyard of the old ones, as well as glancing his many assorted collections of tee shirts, pet rocks and toenails. We observe how he copes with his disability using safety pins and finger breaking, and follow him to the depths of the ocean where he contemplates his world.

Love Song:
A small rat tries his luck in the great game of love.

Slim Pickings:
On a hungry planet a friendship is tested. Elastic clay animation, expressionistic lighting and "Little Prince" pathos tells the story of Snork and his best friend, a little green plant.

Ward 13:
What price would you put on your health? Ben is about to find out... Ward 13's newest admission faces medical attention of an unwanted kind and no amount of apples will keep those doctors away...

Cane Toads: Cane-Toad: What Happened to Baz? takes us on a four minute journey into the lives (and deaths) of two cane toad mates. Soaking in a dog's bowl with a cold beer in his hand, the overweight, uncouth Dazza ponders the possible fate of his adventurous but naïve friend Bazza, in a land where man versus toad presents an ongoing sporting challenge. Various fatal scenarios are played out in glorious technicolour as the unsuspecting Baz wanders into human territory.

Democracy Leunig:
Rest assured, your vote really does count...

Darra Dogs:
Using his own voice and without rotoscoping from live-action, Dennis Tupicoff animates his memories of the dogs of his childhood.

Birthday Boy:
Korean War, 1951 Little Manuk is playing on the streets of his village and dreaming of life at the front where his father is a soldier. He returns home to find a parcel on the doorstep and, thinking it is a birthday present, he opens it. But its contents will change his life.

Special Features:


* TISM "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me" video clip

 
 

Privacy

FAQs

Terms & Conditions

Plans & Prices

About Us

Facebook

© Copyright Kino 2024. All rights reserved.