Haven't we all at some point in time fantasized about stepping through a cinema/TV screen and into the world of our favourite movies and television shows? I certainly have!

With its modern, urban setting and stunning harbour, it is easy to see why Sydney leads the way as an ideal and versatile shooting destination. Movies shot here have been set in New York (Godzilla: Final Wars, Kangaroo Jack), Chicago (The Matrix and sequels), London (Birthday Girl), Seville (Mission Impossible 2), Bombay (Holy Smoke), Darwin (Australia), Myanmar (Stealth), Mars (Red Planet) and the fictitious city of Metropolis (Superman Returns, Babe: Pig in the City).

Whether popular landmarks or off the beaten track locations that are often hard to find, you can now explore Sydney in a fun and unique way with the SYDNEY ON SCREEN walking guides. Catering to Sydneysiders as much as visitors, the guides have something to offer everyone, from history, architecture and movie buffs to nature lovers.

See where productions such as Superman Returns, The Matrix and sequels, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Candy, Mission Impossible 2, Mao's Last Dancer, Babe: Pig in the City, Kangaroo Jack, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Muriel's Wedding, The Bold and the Beautiful, Oprah's Ultimate Australian Adventure and many more were filmed.

Maps and up-to-date information on Sydney's attractions are provided to help you plan your walk. Pick and choose from the suggested itinerary to see as little or as much of the city as you like.

So, come and discover the landscapes and locations that draw filmmakers to magical Sydney, and walk in the footsteps of the stars!

A GREAT ALTERNATIVE TO EXPENSIVE TOURS, YOU CAN NOW ENJOY EXPLORING SYDNEY FOR UNDER $10 WITH THE SYDNEY ON SCREEN WALKING GUIDES. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT US AT SYDNEYONSCREEN@HOTMAIL.COM

Subscribe to the blog and keep up with all the latest Aussie film and entertainment news. Read about what the stars are up to, who's in town, what movies are currently filming or being promoted. Locate us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/sydneyonscreen and "like" our page!

Sydney on Screen walking guides now on sale!

Click on the picture above to see a preview of all four walking guides and on the picture below to see larger stills of Sydney movie and television locations featured in the slideshow!

Copyright © 2011 by Luke Brighty / Unless otherwise specified, all photographs on this blog copyright © 2011 by Luke Brighty


Sydney on Screen guides are now available for purchase at the following outlets:

Travel Concierge, Sydney International Airport, Terminal 1 Arrivals Hall (between gates A/B and C/D), Mascot - Ph: 1300 40 20 60

The Museum of Sydney shop, corner of Bridge & Phillip Streets, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9251 4678

The Justice & Police Museum shop, corner of Albert & Phillip Streets, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9252 1144

The Mint shop, 10 Macquarie Street, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8239 2416

Hyde Park Barracks shop, Queen Square, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8239 2311

Travel Up! (travel counter) c/o Wake Up Sydney Central, 509 Pitt Street, Sydney - Ph (02) 9288 7888

The Shangri-La Hotel (concierge desk), 176 Cumberland Street, The Rocks, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9250 6018

The Sebel Pier One (concierge desk), 11 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8298 9901

The Radisson Plaza Hotel Sydney (concierge desk), 27 O'Connell Street, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8214 0000

The Sydney Marriott Circular Quay (concierge desk), 30 Pitt Street, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9259 7000

Boobook on Owen, 1/68 Owen Street, Huskisson - Ph: (02) 4441 8585


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Kylie Minogue may join The Voice UK

X Factor judge Dannii Minogue has been joined by sister Kylie as a mentor.
Kylie Minogue, right, could be following in her sister Dannii into reality TV mentoring. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
 
 
 
The Daily Telegraph reports

Kylie Minogue could be following in sister Dannii's footsteps on reality TV after emerging as a frontrunner to join the British version of "The Voice".

Minogue is in talks to star in the third series of the BBC reality TV singing contest, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The publication cites an insider as saying the pop princess has been shortlisted to appear on the show, although she has yet to officially sign on.

If confirmed, the pop star will join Black Eyed Peas frontman will.i.am and crooner Tom Jones on the judging panel.

Minogue joined sister Dannii on Sunday's episode of The X Factor Australia in the mentoring chair, delivering a ratings hit for the Seven Network.

In 2012, the pop princess was rumoured to have been in talks with producers of Britain's X Factor to appear as a judge.

At the time, Minogue didn't rule out tackling a reality TV role in the future.

"It may only be a matter of time, who knows? Those shows are going to keep happening every year for the foreseeable future. I'm a fan of those shows," she told Britain's Sunday Express.

Bert Newton back at work for Grease musical after heart scare

Bert Newton wth the cast of Grease. Picture: Annette Dew
Bert Newton with the cast of Grease. Picture: Annette Dew Source: News Limited
 


News Limited Network reports

A rejuvenated Bert Newton has bounced back from heart surgery to embark on a gruelling national tour in the Grease musical.

The 75-year-old TV legend underwent a quadruple heart bypass in Melbourne in November 2012 after complaining of chest pains.

After six months of rehab at home, Newton is now back in the spotlight, playing Vince Fontaine in the Australian tour of the hit musical.

Keeping up with the young cast has been an inspiration to him, he told Fairfax newspapers.

"The average age of the cast in the show, if you take me out of it, is about 22. The energy and excitement is quite contagious," he said.

"I like people of my vintage but it's important to have a few young people around you too. And that's why I'm liking this show."

Newton started his career as a 15-year-old junior announcer on Melbourne radio station 3XY and began his association with the Nine Network in 1959, striking up a partnership with Graham Kennedy on In Melbourne Tonight.

He has been a fixture of Australian television and stage ever since.

Newton said he cherished the early years of his career and is glad he is not entering show business today.

"The sort of television I did with Graham (Kennedy) and Don (Lane) is not around anymore, because there's not much live television. I miss doing that sort of thing.

"I'm just happy I'm not a young person coming into the industry now. I think it was easier at the start because we all learned together, even the audience."

Newton has four gold Logies and was inducted into the Logies Hall of Fame in 1988.

* Grease had its Australian premiere in Brisbane tonight, before moving to Sydney and Melbourne.

Aussie actors like Sam Worthington, Chris Hemsworth, Hugh Jackman and Jai Courtney could have been the new Batman

Chris Hemsworth has the action credentials to take on the role of Batman. Picture: AP
Chris Hemsworth has the action credentials to take on the role of Batman. Picture: AP Source: AP
 


Jonathon Moran, The Sunday Telegraph, reports

As outrage continues online over the announcement of Ben Affleck's casting as Batman in the next superhero flick, Confidential feels our Aussie actors have been overlooked for the role of the caped crusader.

So we've put together a list of locals who would have been perfect for the Gotham City job.

There's the obvious Sam Worthington, who is one of the most in-demand actors thanks to roles in Avatar and Terminator Salvation.

Chris Hemsworth has the commanding presence and proved he's got the superhero x factor as Thor in The Avengers. And then there's Hugh Jackman, who would easily pull off the gig.

Jai Courtney may not yet be a household name but he could also be a contender, given his recent run in Jack Reacher and A Good Day To Die Hard.

A dark horse would have been Josh Lawson, who has forged an impressive career in Hollywood with roles in films including The Campaign and Anchorman.

Russell Crowe didn't make our list. That would be strange given he played Superman's dad in the most recent blockbuster, Man of Steel.

Affleck's casting in the yet-to-be titled film, to be directed by Zack Snyder, was announced on Friday and instantly caused ripples across social media with critics calling for Warner Bros to revoke the decision.

Delta Goodrem's latest fling with hot young director Ryan Pallotta is fine it's time for a mature man

Delta Goodrem deserves a mature man. Picture: Chris Pavlich
Delta Goodrem deserves a mature man. Picture: Chris Pavlich Source: News Limited
  
 
Ros Reines, The Sunday Telegraph, reports

There have been alarm bells ringing out across town ever since steamy shots of Delta Goodrem cavorting in a Mexican resort swimming pool with a new man surfaced.

There she was with baby-faced Canadian director Ryan Pallotta in the pool of the Las Ventanas al Paraiso resort at Los Cabos, splashed across various tabloid magazines.

You could almost hear the sharp intake of breath among her fans. Oh no, is Delta set to dive into another potentially doomed relationship?

You can't blame people for getting a bit twitchy because the singing star has an interesting default position when it comes to romance - most of her men are unsuitable for one reason or another.

You don't agree? Let's just run a through a few of the highlights from Goodrem's dating history. The Poo - Mark Philippoussis - who was rumoured to have cheated on her with Paris Hilton, of all people, and has changed beautiful girlfriends since then with monotonous regularity.

Her engagement with former fiance Brian McFadden lasted for seven years with no wedding date in sight.

Straight-laced American pop star Nick Jonas was nearly a decade younger than her.

And lovable ladies man Darren McMullen stopped short of having a committed relationship.

If Goodrem, 28, has a typical man, they should all come under the category Proceed With Caution - Rocky Road to Love Ahead.

However her team is quick to deny there's any new love interest. ``

"Delta and Ryan are not dating, they did spend time in Mexico recently for a vacation with a group of friends," insists Goodrem's Sydney rep Jennifer Fontaine, of Private Idaho.

She points out that singer Goodrem is back in town now for the recording of a 10-year anniversary package of album Innocent Eyes that is set to be released shortly.

However she is soon to return to the US to continue working on new music.

Whatever really is going on between them, it has taken a little while to develop. Pallotta, who is definitely hot, directed the video for her single Wish You Were Here last September and the two kept in touch.

But Pallotta has a frenetic career and no shortage of sexy singers' videos to direct, including Demi Lovato's Made In The USA.

On paper Pallotta looks fine but I think maybe it's time for Goodrem to find a partner who is more substantial - more mature man than boy toy.

The thing is that Goodrem is in danger of falling into the Kylie Minogue dating trap.

Minogue, 45, who has made no secret of the fact that she would have loved to settle down and have a baby, has dated a series of emotionally unavailable men, including the late Michael Hutchence, James Gooding, Lenny Kravitz and of course Olivier Martinez, who is now set to become a parent with partner Halle Berry.

Like Minogue, Goodrem has had her share of serious health challenges, successfully battling Hodgkin's lymphoma.

She truly deserves to find a partner who is nurturing and protective. Maybe it's time for her to look beyond a Mexican holiday romance for that.

Second act

Stylish: Nicole Kidman in <i>Stoker</i>.
Stylish: Nicole Kidman in Stoker.
               


Stephanie Bunbury, The Sydney Morning Herald, reports

Stoker star Nicole Kidman has no intention of resting on her laurels for the remainder of her career.
Finally, Nicole Kidman says, she feels she is exactly where she belongs, professionally speaking. She may have been rated one of the most powerful celebrities in Hollywood just a few years ago; she may still be one of the most instantly recognised and photographed faces on any red carpet; she may be – and, indeed, is – one of Australia's richest women, worth $320 million, according to Business Review Weekly's last count.

But here she is promoting Stoker, a strange thriller directed by a South Korean art-house king of weird, Park Chan-wook. At 46, Kidman is becoming an art-house actor. "In the second half of my life, I don't want to succumb to any complacency," she says. "I want to push myself and keep pushing myself to places of discomfort and discovery. I am still very curious."

In a sense, this is nothing new. It has been easy to forget, in the midst of the stories about her marriages and divorce, her surrogate pregnancy and her Oscar, her frocks and her Botox – the heartbreak and the glamour of being Nicole Kidman, as it were, served up on full-gloss paper – how many films she has made and how very good she can be.

Of course, there are the bloated Hollywood turkeys, but the best of her 57-odd roles – the killer newsreader Suzanne Stone in To Die For, the Russian mail-order bride in Birthday Girl or the bereaved mother in Rabbit Hole – roll right out of left field. As Stanley Kubrick told her when he directed her with Tom Cruise in Eyes Wide Shut, she didn't look like a character actor, but that was why she was hired.

Stoker fits that picture. It is a stylised, chilling gothic story of a cloistered widow whose husband's handsome long-lost brother, Charlie (Matthew Goode), turns up and moves in. For the brittle, lonely Evelyn, this certainly spices up an empty life. The same goes for her sullen teenage daughter, India, played by a quite brilliant Mia Wasikowska. The house itself is bathed in luxurious gloom: wine glasses tinkle and the grand piano beckons those whose fingers might well become entangled. But this is not a love story: the place rather reeks of death.

Park Chan-wook sought her out for the role, Kidman says; she responded because she had seen and admired his cult horror Old Boy. Director Park, as she calls him in true Korean style, speaks no English. That concerned her, obviously. "But when I met with him, he had such a strong vision of the film already, which was fantastic," she says. "He just said he wanted to make a film about bad blood. It sounded very Korean! How that is passed on through a family, whether that actually happens, nature versus nurture; all that was really fascinating to me."

Is she enjoying work now she has settled into this groove? "Only if the people are good," she says. "I have less patience for mediocrity." Home has a stronger pull, too. When Kidman and Cruise divorced in 2001 and their two adopted children stayed with him, she slid into depression. She and second husband Keith Urban, she once said, met in 2005 as "two lonely people"; they married the following year. Only four months later, he checked into rehab for alcohol and cocaine addiction after Kidman and friends "staged an intervention".

It was hardly an easy start to a new life, but it worked; Urban said later it bonded them. "To see love in action to that degree . . . I'd never experienced anything like that," Urban told Oprah Winfrey.

Their daughter Sunday, named after art patron Sunday Reed, was born in 2008; a second daughter, Faith, was delivered early in 2011 by a surrogate. Kidman was 43 and, as she told a magazine, had many failed attempts at pregnancy behind her; a second natural birth was not going to happen.

Work has to fit around home life now. "It's not even balance," she says. "I say, 'Is this going to work for our family?' And Keith and I sort of talk about it, and there are times when he's said no and then I don't do it. And I'm absolutely fine with that because I want my marriage and want my family more than I want anything else." They have a house in Sydney and a farm in Sutton Forest in the southern highlands, but most of the time they are in Nashville. She is fine with that, too. "I love music and beyond that, I love the nature; we can go to the Smoky Mountains and rent a cabin, you know. We have a very quiet life there, which is great."

Does all this mean that, more than a decade since her crushing divorce, she is happy? There is a moment's hesitation. "Yes," she agrees, finally. "Happy in the sense that I have my girls and my husband and I have a very, very strong real life to counter-balance my fantasy life now. My fantasy life used to outweigh that more and now I've kind of balanced it, which is a lot healthier." As she speaks, the PR minder is shuffling her out of the door. "I smile now!" she adds quickly, proving the point with a grin. It's the last we see of her.

Stoker


Stars Mia Wasikowska, Nicole Kidman, Matthew Goode, Jacki Weaver
Directed by
Park Chan-wook
Genre
Hitchcockian chiller
Buzz Opinions run the gamut from those infuriated by the director's studied stylisation and the predictability of the genre plot to the totally convinced, who describe it as "exquisite filmmaking".
Opens
August 29
Rated
MA15+

WA mines for movie gold and delivers the nuggets in spades

Zak Hilditch's movie These Final Hours.
Top honours: These Final Hours, an apocalyptic road movie. Photo: Supplied

 

Garry Maddox, The Sydney Morning Herald, reports

So why are so many good films coming out of Western Australia?

These Final Hours, the apocalyptic road movie that won the critics prize at the Melbourne International Film Festival this month, has joined a strong list that includes Red Dog, Mad Bastards, Drift, Wasted on the Young and Satellite Boy.

Yet to be released from the state are Julius Avery's drama Son of a Gun, starring Ewan McGregor, John V. Soto's thriller The Reckoning, the Tim Winton adaptation The Turning - six chapters were filmed in WA - Carmelo Musca's thriller Foreshadow and Rachel Ward's World War I telemovie An Accidental Soldier.

And two more promising films are due to start shooting soon - Kriv Stenders' Kill Me Three Times, another thriller starring Abbie Cornish and Simon Pegg, and Robert Connolly's Paper Planes, about a boy who wants to compete in the world paper plane championships.

The west also has what's described as the country's fastest growing ''destination'' film festival, with this week's CinefestOz in Busselton attracting such film identities as David Wenham, Gillian Armstrong, Jack Thompson, Robert Connolly and executives from Screen Australia, Roadshow Films, Hopscotch and Madman Entertainment for screenings and industry workshops.

Perth-based producer Tania Chambers, a former chief executive of both Screen West and Screen NSW, says Western Australia had a long filmmaking slump after producing Fran, Shame, Windrider and Father decades ago, with producers focusing on children's television drama and factual programming.

But a long process of fostering talented directors, state lottery and regional funding, mining industry finance and new sources of private investment have produced results.

''There was a deliberate focus over the last 10 years to try and bring through talent and team people up with experienced executive producers and co-producers,'' she says.

The chairman of CinefestOz, David Barton, says festival attendance has grown from 1800 to an expected 15,000 in six years, with screenings and events expanding from Busselton, a three-hour drive south of Perth, into nearby towns.

As well as the world premiere of Ward's An Accidental Soldier, the program includes Australian films that have only screened at the Sydney or Melbourne film festivals so far, including These Final Hours, The Rocket, Mystery Road, Patrick, Aim High in Creation and the WA chapters of The Turning.

High-profile Australian actor Vince Colosimo facing bankruptcy proceedings

high-profile actor Vince Colosimo.
Vince Colosimo has appeared in top films and TV shows. Source: News Limited
 

Shannon Deery, The Herald Sun, reports

High-profile actor Vince Colosimo is facing bankruptcy proceedings with court documents alleging he owes a Melbourne law firm more than $30,000.

Colosimo has appeared in several recent Hollywood hits after becoming a household name playing gangland boss and standover man Alphonse Gangitano in Underbelly.

In documents filed with the Federal Court last month, Oakleigh based law firm Dandanis & Associates claim Colosimo owes them $36,042.

The documents allege Colosimo, 46, failed to comply with a Melbourne Magistrates Court order in November 2011 to pay the sum.

It is not known why the order was made but Dandanis & Associates have also claimed interest as part of the figure.

A bankruptcy notice was served on Colosimo on May 22.

A hearing was scheduled to take place last week but has been put off until October.

The Herald Sun is trying to reach Colosimo for comment.

As well as a starring role in Underbelly, Colosimo has also appeared in homegrown films including Chopper and Lantana.

Overseas he has appeared in hit TV show The Practice and Body of Lies alongside Leonardo DiCaprio.

He recently appeared alongside DiCaprio again in The Great Gatsby.

He last appeared in his own courtroom drama in 2009 when he went head to head with ex-wife Jane Hall over who were fighting over a house they shared in Northcote.

The pair had an 11-year relationship before splitting in 2007.

They have a daughter, Lucia.

Cate Blanchett to make her first film in Australia in eight years with David Mamet

Cate Blanchett in a scene from Woody Allen's film Blue Jasmine. Hopscotch Entertainment
Cate Blanchett in a scene from Woody Allen's film Blue Jasmine. Hopscotch Entertainment Source: Supplied
  


Vicky Roach, The Daily Telegraph, reports

Cate Blanchett is to film the JFK conspiracy thriller Blackbird in Sydney early next year.

It will be the first feature the Oscar-winning actress has shot in Australia since Cabramatta crime drama Little Fish, with Sam Neill and Hugo Weaving, in 2005.

The harbour city will double as Los Angeles in the film, written and directed by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Mamet, about a woman who discovers some dark family secrets when she attends the funeral of her grandfather, a Hollywood visual effects artist who moonlighted for US special ops agencies.

"We've been talking for a couple of years about doing this, so I'm thrilled it's actually happening,'' said Blanchett on the eve of the Australian premiere of Woody Allen's latest film, Blue Jasmine, for which she is being widely tipped for an Oscar nomination.

Blackbird will be filmed in Sydney so Blanchett can be near her family - the 44-year-old actor has three sons with husband Andrew Upton - although some exteriors might be shot in LA.

"(David Mamet) wouldn't be coming here if the crews weren't magnificent,'' Blanchett said.

Her first major stage role was opposite Geoffrey Rush in the acclaimed 1992 Sydney Theatre production of Mamet's Oleanna, for which she won a critics award for best newcomer.

During her time as co-artistic director of the STC, Blanchett and Upton attracted some of America's leading talent to Australia, including director Steven Soderbergh and Oscar-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman.

Blanchett, who deemed Kevin Rudd's 2008 ideas summit so important she attended just days after giving birth to youngest son Ignatius, said she was disappointed climate change wasn't higher on the current election agenda.

"The nature of the 24-hour media cycle means that what we are getting at the moment, what we are being fed, is the gaffes and the slip-ups and the missteps,'' she said.

"And I am not particularly interested in feeding the white noise of that cycle with my own personal views.

"I think what the voting public is interested in, and I am part of that, is access to the policy details and the issues in order to make an informed decision.

"I certainly wish that climate change was on the election agenda because I know there are individuals on both parties that know what a pressing issue climate change is but the problem is it requires great leadership."

Ronan Keating is set to make a decision on his future and could leave Australia

COVER YARN
The X Factor Judges together including Ronan Keating, Natalie Bassingthwaighte, Dannii Minogue and Redfoo but for how much longer? Source: Supplied
 

The Daily Telegraph reports

Ronan Keating has become a popular fixture on Australian TV thanks to his judging role on The X Factor, but the popular Irishman could soon pack his bags and leave.

The former Boyzone star and father-of-three, on Queensland's Hamilton Island for race week, says he's been busy juggling filming duties on the talent show while preparing for his upcoming band tour.

He also has movie plans in the pipeline - and besides his career commitments in the UK, Ireland and Australia, he wants to find more time to devote to his girlfriend Storm Uechtritz and his children, aged 7, 12 and 14.

So his dreams of moving with his family to Australia permanently before his marriage breakup, most definitely have been put on the backburner.

In his first admission that perhaps Australia has lost its lustre for Keating, despite his Aussie model girlfriend, he has started talking wistfully of spending more time in Ireland.

"I want time for my career, my kids and my partner," Keating said.

"Being on this side of the world, as much as I love it, it's so far from home, so far from the kids and so far from my career there.

"I've had to make massive sacrifices for my career back there and be away from my children.

"It's difficult - Storm and I can be together wherever we are in the world, it's difficult with my kids and career, so I need to assess that for next year," says Keating, who is attending Hamilton Island Race Week with Uechtritz and his children as guests of the island's owner, the Oatley family.

Keating, who has been dating the Australian model and TV producer Uechtritz for 12 months, says he's loving being a part of the X Factor.

"I love the show, I love working with the team, the people, all of it is amazing, I don't knock anything. If I can't do it next year it's because of those things no other reason."

Keating said he's looking forward to his Boyzone tour across the UK and Ireland at the end of this year to mark the band's 20-year anniversary, as well as putting out a group album and a solo album next year.

"Music is my heart and soul, that's what I love to do," he said. The Dubliner, who made his acting debut in Australian film Goddess two years ago, also has other film projects in mind.

"I have some offers, but I want to find the right role, that's important."

Keating and Uechtritz found time in their busy schedules to relax on Hamilton Island, taking a boat to Whitehaven Beach and watching some of the sailing action on board the Oatley family's yacht.

"We're having the best time. I've never seen anything as beautiful as this," he said.

"We took the kids to Whitehaven Beach and it blew their minds. We went to the koala park, we had dinner on a boat, we've just had an incredible time.

"I'd love to buy a plot and have a little holiday home here, it really is special."

Ken James skipping into TV history with new ad for mobility scooters

Skipping into TV history
Former Skippy star Ken James at Waratah Park / Pic: Supplied by Prosight. Source: Supplied
 

Jonathon Moran, The Daily Telegraph, reports

Forty years since filming Skippy The Bush Kangaroo, actor Ken James has reprised the role of Mark Hammond.

James returned to Sydney's Waratah Park, where the original Skippy was filmed, this month to film a tongue-in-cheek TV ad campaign for a mobility scooter.

He's joined by Geoff Harvey, former Midday musical maestro, showing off the Prime Mobility Scooters as they fang it around what used to be Skippy's Ranger Headquarters.

James scored the role of Mark Hammond, son of head ranger Matt Hammond (Ed Devereaux) in the series that debuted on Australian television in 1966.

Skippy went on to become one of our most successful international TV exports and is still broadcast in some countries today.

Brooke Satchwell's racy new role on Wonderland takes the actor even further away from her girl next door image

 Wonderland group shot for Switched On use only Picture: Supplied
Wonderland group shot for Switched On use only Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
 

Andrew Fenton, The Daily Telegraph, reports

Tearing off her new lover's shirt and getting hot and heavy against a tree certainly looks racy on screen, but the reality of filming was anything but, says Brooke Satchwell.

"It's pretty hysterical to be honest," the star of Ten's new 22-part comedy-drama Wonderland reveals. "There ain't no romance."

Satchwell explains that what viewers won't realise is that as her uptight lawyer character Grace Barnes gets down to business with hot Brazilian engineering student Carlos dos Santos (Glen McMillan) there's an unseen third corner to their love triangle.

To get into the right position for the camera a "rather generous" production assistant was called into service, and had to bend over in front of McMillan so Satchwell could rest her full body weight on him.

"So that's actually a threesome you see on screen, you just don't know it. I felt very sorry for him as I was doing my up and down gyrations, 'I'm so sorry, I'm so sorry, I've destroyed your innocence!' " she says with a huge grin as she mimes rocking back and forth.

From the people behind Wentworth and A Moody Christmas, Wonderland is about the lives and loves of a group of young couples living in an apartment block on Sydney's eastern beaches. There's young Romeo Tom (Michael Dorman) who's agreed not to sleep with any more flatmates on pain of losing his beloved Falcon - which is when his perfect woman, Miranda (Anna Bamford) moves in. There's Gen Y PR princess Dani (Jessica Tovey) and her new husband Steve (Tim Ross), restless teacher Colette (Emma Lung) and her all-round good guy hubbie Rob (Ben Mingay), and of course Grace (Satchwell) and her new Latin lover (McMillan).

With two shows in production in different states - Wonderland in Sydney and weekly celeb gossip comedy panel show Dirty Laundry Live down in Melbourne - Satchwell is satisfied with life both professionally and personally, even if she is a little bit busy. Having gone through the media wringer due to her troubled relationship with the abusive Matthew Newton and her close call with the Mumbai terrorists, she knows a few things about the intense focus on celebrities' private lives her panel show looks at.

"As I've learnt from Dirty Laundry, one of the top-selling stories is, 'I've never been happier - life's great,' " Satchwell says.

"That's the next story that everybody wants. And it's true. I just don't need to do a photo spread about it."

The "never been happier" part no doubt has something to do with fiancé David Gross, and if she ever finds a window in her schedule she may even get around to marrying him.

The pair met more than a decade or so ago on a film set, and stayed in touch, thanks to their mutual interest in filmmaking.

One day, about five years ago, he called her up with a job offer. "Do you have a valid passport, can you leave the country in three days? I need an assistant on a job," Satchwell recalls. "That was pretty smooth. And the rest was history."

They fell in love during the Cambodian shoot and he popped the question when they returned to the country for a holiday in October last year.

While Cambodia would seem a likely candidate for the wedding, Satchwell's afraid it might be too big an ask of their families.

"It does feel like there'd be a nice kind of natural progression to do it there, but it's very important for both of us that we share it with the people we love, so I don't know how easy that would be logistically," she says.

And logistics are a big enough problem, anyway.

"It was meant to happen in February and what are we now, in August?" she laughs.

"I'm a little busy in case you hadn't noticed."

Satchwell's current fevered workrate is in stark contrast to her almost four-year break from TV screens, between the short-lived medical drama Canal Road for Nine in 2008 and getting a gig on Packed to the Rafters last year.

It seems no coincidence her decision to shun the limelight came at the height of media interest over the Newton and Mumbai incidents.

"I think those factors absolutely did have an impact and I'm a very straightforward human being and that kind of swirling mass of sh-- storm that was pervading my life is not who I am. It was nice to take a sideways step and be able to fully immerse myself in the creative environment
I love."


She spent the time away learning the ropes behind the scenes, which she believes has made her a better actor.

Even though she only spent a year as Frankie Calasso on Rafters she believes the producers did the right thing calling time while the ratings were still high.

And although her next project, Dirty Laundry Live, hasn't set any ratings records, it's certainly been noticed - mainly for host Lawrence Mooney's use of the "C" word to describe Charles Saatchi after he choked Nigella Lawson.

Choosing her words carefully, Satchwell says she doesn't associate the term with its "logistical connotations" but rather sees it as "expressive".

"Culturally, it is one of the most offensive things you can say and I figure within the context of how it was used it was highly appropriate," Satchwell says.

All this sex and swearing in her life means the nice girl image many still have of Satchwell from her Neighbours days, is no longer a good fit.

"People like to cast me as the girl next door … there is this kind of wholesome, homogenised image they want to attribute to me and that's really flattering but I think there's a little bit more light and shade."

So Satchwell has a dark side?

"Sure," she says.

"Everybody does."

Angelina Jolie to film drama Unbroken in Australia

Australia bound ... Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. (Photo by Ken Ishii/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures)
Australia bound ... Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. (Photo by Ken Ishii/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures) Source: Getty Images
  
 
Amy Harris, The Daily Telegraph, reports

A few days after a top-secret visit to Sydney, movie star-turned-director Angelina Jolie is set to relocate here for several months to shoot her WW2 drama Unbroken.

Angelina Jolie, 39, was slated to shoot most of the flick in Hawaii however Honolulu press have confirmed a small production office at the Waikiki Marriott has been shutdown with the project now set to shoot predominantly in Australia.

And cameras could start rolling as early as September with Jolie likely to travel here with her famed celebrity hubby Brad Pitt and their six children.

It comes after The Sunday Telegraph reported Jolie toured potential film locations in Sydney and on the Gold Coast during a whistlestop visit last week, solving the riddle on her 'mystery visit'.

Unbroken, her second directorial effort following her upcoming debut The Land Of Blood And Honey, is based on the true survival story of American track star Louis Zamperini whose plane crashed in the Pacific Ocean during World War II.

Much of the film is set on a floating life raft in the Pacific Ocean - where Zamperini spent almost two months - and it's understood Jolie could shoot much of this at the Gold Coast's Warner Bros. Studios which has the largest purpose-built film water tank in Australia with a surface area of 1200sqm.

Jolie also toured several sites in NSW last week including Fox Studios at Moore Park and parts of Sydney's surrounding hinterland.

Universal Pictures this morning confirmed Jolie was scouting locations last week but was unable to add any further information.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the Screen Actor's Guild in Hawaii expressed his disappointment at the film's switch of location.

"It is disappointing that a film of that credibility and that magnitude is at least drawing back from its full involvement with Hawaii. But we'll hope that they still will be able to salvage some work for our people," local SAG president David Farmer told Hawaii News Now.

Aussie outback to be the real star of Tracks, The Rover and Wolf Creek 2

John Jarratt in Wolf Creek 2. Picture: Supplied
John Jarratt in Wolf Creek 2. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
 


Vicky Roach, The Daily Telegraph, reports

Forget the quirky comedies and gritty urban dramas - Australia's leading filmmakers are heading back to the bush.

The Outback is the star of four high profile films scheduled to hit our cinemas next year, including Tracks and Wolf Creek 2.

Although targeted at very different demographics, the extraordinary true story of author Robyn Davidson's 2,700km camel trek from Alice Springs to the ocean and the bloodthirsty sequel to Greg Mclean's 2005 horror hit have both been selected to make their world premieres at the Venice Film Festival later this month.

A Sundance Film Festival launch is a strong possibility for The Rover, director David Michod's hotly-anticipated follow-up to Animal Kingdom, the internationally-acclaimed film about a Melbourne crime family that bagged Jacki Weaver an Oscar nomination.

Starring Robert Pattinson and Guy Pearce, the apocalyptic thriller was shot on location in South Australia about the same time as Tracks and Wolf Creek 2, competing for locations and crew.

And while Mad Max 4: Fury Road was eventually forced to relocate to Namibia, due to the uncharacteristic greening of Broken Hill, George Miller's groundbreaking franchise rewrote the rule book on creative, genre-bending uses of our iconic interior.

Scale is one factor contributing to the current Outback revival, which continues with Jocelyn Moorhouse's The Dressmaker, a gothic tale of love, hate and haute couture starring Kate Winslet and Judy Davis. Filming is scheduled to begin early next year in the Wimmera or Mallee regions of Victoria.

"You have to have something distinctive to go up against the big blockbusters,'' observes Oscar-winning producer Emile Sherman (The King's Speech), who is working with director John Curran on Tracks.

"And people, particularly the 30-plus audience who are getting a bit sick of endless franchises about superheroes, are looking for other journeys they can go on in the cinema that will take them to places they have never experienced."

The distinctive, naturally photogenic landscapes of Australia's jaw-dropping interior offer a very real alternative to Hollywood's spectacular, CGI-generated backdrops.

"You look at those big, glossy Hollywood movies, which I love incidentally, but it doesn't matter where they are filmed,'' says associate professor Jane Mills, of the Journalism and Media Research Centre at UNSW.

"We have all had that experience of going to any city in the world and there is another McDonalds or another Subway. Cities are a bit samey. The Outback is special. It gives you a sense of veracity; the sense that you are really there."

Supporting Mills' theory is Tracks' decision to shoot on film using an anamorphic, wide-screen format (a technique embraced by movie studios in the 1950s to compete with the popularity of television.)

"It feels like big cinema,'' says Sherman.

"And then there are the camels, which are such a key part of the film. There is this small girl (Mia Wasikowska) and these enormous camels with incredible, bellowing growls. It's a very visceral experience."

Michod and producer Liz Watts also chose to go against the current digital orthodoxy, again shooting The Rover on film.

The wide open spaces of the Australian Outback also give filmmakers plenty of creative elbow room.

Australia filmmakers have been mining the distinctive landscape for its imaginary possibilities since the 1950s, when John Heyer and Charles Chauvel set an extraordinarily high benchmark with The Back of Beyond and Jedda respectively.

Since then, whitefella directors have periodically returned to the bush for inspiration in films as diverse as Walkabout, Wake in Fright, Picnic at Hanging Rock and Priscilla: Queen of the Desert.

"It's certainly an Australian dreaming in a sense," says Sherman, acknowledging that the undomesticated landscape allows filmmakers more opportunity to take creative risks.

For someone like Michod, who is under intense pressure to deliver on his hotly-anticipated follow-up to Animal Kingdom, the Outback must have seemed like a chance to keep Hollywood at arm's length.

Marree, a one-pub town 650km north of Adelaide, is about as far from LA as a filmmaker can get.

"I was always concerned that if I made my second film in America, the freedom to make the film I wanted to make might not be the same as if I made the film here," he says.

Producer Al Clark (The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert) sees Michod's choice of location as significant.

"It's interesting that David, who I would assume would have been offered a lot of prospective films, ended up writing his own and writing something that was set in the antithesis of (Animal Kingdom's) confined space, which was an endless space.''

Mills says the effect of Baz Luhrmann's Australia on the current wave of Outback films should not be underestimated, either.

"His film drew upon so much history of Australian cinema and I think began to show a way of reconciliation between black and white, that both black and white Australians can feel a sense of belonging,'' she says.

Also informing the contemporary, whitefella perspective is a growing canon of work directed by internationally-acclaimed indigenous filmmakers, many of whom are right at home in the country's dramatic interior.

From The Sapphires and Bran Nue Dae to Beneath Clouds, Mystery Road and Samson and Delilah, indigenous filmmakers have been slowly remapping the Australian cinematic landscape from an alternative, Aboriginal point of view.

Challenging the accepted co-ordinates still further are films such as Ten Canoes, which Rolf De Heer co-directed with Peter Djigirr, and the upcoming Charlie's Country, on which he is collaborating with David Gulpilil.

Historically, white filmmakers have portrayed Australia's interior as a harsh and dangerous place in which they are extremely uneasy.

"It's a very particular view of the Outback that comes up a lot because it's the white settlers' experience of this foreign place where they weren't at home'' says Karen Pearlman, Head of Screen Studies at the Australian Film, Television and Radio School.

Wolf Creek 2, The Rover, and Mad Max 4 would seem to follow in this tradition - perhaps revisiting our troubled colonial past in the wake of the intervention and Parliament's 2008 apology to the stolen generations.

Tracks, however, appears to stand apart in this cinematic landscape, traditionally inhabited by men.

"Not only is she an explorer as opposed to an antagonist in the landscape, but (the protagonist) is a woman. That's really important in differentiating (Tracks) from the other films - seeing a woman take leadership and move fearlessly, with benign intent, into this landscape," says Pearlman.

A film adaptation of Davidson's autobiographical novel has been in the works since 1987, when Julia Roberts was to play the lead role. Why is it finally about to hit the big screen now?

"When we take on films at See-Saw, our question is always: 'what makes them relevant today.'

"That drive Robyn had to escape the chatter of urban life, and the 20s political conversations she was having, and to get out there alone and see what comes of her away from everything, that fantasy seems to me to be even more relevant today as we are bombarded by so much technology and social media,'' says Sherman.

The experience of the younger cast members on Wolf Creek 2, many of whom were more intimidated by the lack of internet access they experienced on location in the Flinders Ranges than they were of Mick Taylor, underscores Sherman's point.

Melissa Doyle in tears as she leaves Sunrise for new Channel Seven role on 4pm and 7pm bulletins

 Melissa Doyle's last day at Sunrise. Picture: Media Mode
Melissa Doyle’s last day at Sunrise. Picture: Media Mode Source: Supplied
 

Annette Sharp, The Daily Telegraph, reports

After 11 years rising at 3.30am to wake-up the nation on television, Melissa Doyle signed off for the last time from the Sunrise show - turning the page on a remarkable career and bringing to a partial close what will surely go down as the television PR balls-up of the year.

The Seven Network, seeking to recover from the poorly orchestrated announcement made in June that Doyle was leaving the program that made her a household name, slobbered on its star during three hours of laboured and sentimental live television.

Even Chairman of the Seven Network Kerry Stokes turned up to bid farewell to the woman who has became known as "Our Mel" during the protracted seven week period that has lapsed since she announced on June 20 she was "so sad" to be leaving the show.

Stokes, as reported by The Daily Telegraph, is said to have been part of the executive team at Seven that chose to keep Doyle's on-air offsider, David Koch, at Doyle's expense after audience research showed Doyle's popularity was waning.

"I can tell you at the boardroom, everybody supports this program and you in particular," Stokes said.

"Your extension after Sunrise gives us the opportunity to expand our entire news product and the whole network is behind you and we think that this is a new platform for you."

Seven has worked diligently to play-down reports that Doyle was shunted from Sunrise after taking a forced $150,000 pay cut.

Also among guests farewelling Doyle from breakfast television was network CEO Tim Worner, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, Olivia Newton-John, Hugh Jackman and Delta Goodrem.

Today Show co-host Lisa Wilkinson, and a raft of other celebrities and fans also tweeted their well-wishes.

"We've waited a long time to make the move," Worner said, before going close to confirming the news personality was removed from the role. "We're very pleased that you agreed to do it, Mel. The way the ratings have been for Sunrise this week we're going to lose one of you a week for the next few weeks!".

If the guest list looked a little heavy for the presenter of the frothy breakfast TV show who is simply moving to an afternoon timeslot, it was.

Doyle's departure, finally, was gracious and emotional.

Joined by her children on the lounge and a studio full of Sunrise guests, Doyle wiped away tears while embracing co-host Koch and newsreader Natalie Barr.

"As a working mum I've had nothing but support from everybody," she said. "From the very top to of the network right down to the people who have sat alongside me and it's been the most extraordinary opportunity to have been involved in a program such as Sunrise and we've had the best time ever and I've loved every second of it.

"I can't wait for what's ahead. I will miss every single person on the team but I will see you at other times of the day and I won't have bags under my eyes!

"I never ever imagined the ride would come what it has become. Thankyou."

Her husband John had the last word.

"The kids are looking forward to mum tucking them in instead of them tucking mum in at night ... and I'm looking forward to being the only person to wake up with her in the morning," he said.

On Sunday Doyle will co-host Seven's coverage of the election debate and on Monday she moves to her new role at the helm of a 4pm news bulletin and a 7pm bulletin alongside former Today Tonight presenter Matt White on Seven's second digital channel 7 TWO.