Rubbing shoulders with Kiwi cinematic history


Hidden inside one of the New Zealand International Film Festival’s smallest venues is a secret chamber filled with the faded grandeur of cinema’s glory days.

Built in 1930, Masterton’s Regent 3 Cinemas is one of the stalwarts on the festival’s provincial circuit, taking part in its various incarnations for the past 38 years – making it one of the longest-running regional venues, festival director Bill Gosden said.

On Friday, the Regent announces its festival lineup and owner Brent Goodwin said: “Masterton has a sophistication that many people would miss and it’s because it is, really, a suburb of Wellington.”

Goodwin sells about 100,000 tickets annually, impressive in a town of 23,500 and in a cinema that closed as sales plummeted, just before Goodwin bought it and turned it around 25 years ago.

The cinema once seated 1180 in a huge, two-tier auditorium. Goodwin built two new cinemas seating 75 and 97 on the bottom tier, and a third, seating 160, above. He left room in between for an ambitious live-theatre project which, had it come to fruition, would have used the massive original stage and a new floor seating hundreds.

The meagre lighting inside the cavernous space reveals ornate plasterwork overhead, variously described as arabesque, Spanish-style and art deco. Famous performers such as the Royal New Zealand Ballet’s Sir Jon Trimmer once appeared beneath, reputedly, the country’s widest proscenium arch.

The same stage was the scene of legendary staff parties involving some 35 ushers and other workers – now there are just two fulltime staff. The soaring chamber is eventhought to house a ghost or two, Goodwin says.

Gosden said that, with 87 per cent of the festival’s income last year coming from the box office, regional support was vital. “Which is what we have in Masterton – we’re completely dependent on local commitment, really.”

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– The Dominion Post

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Robin Williams brought brutal honesty to his best roles


Robin Williams was too much.

For much of his career, the irrepressible Williams, who was found dead in a suspected suicide yesterday at the age of 63, forswore subtlety.

Ever since bursting into the public consciousness as the manic, rainbow-suspender-wearing TV alien in the sitcom Mork & Mindy, he seemed to be permanently toggling between two points on the emotional dial: wild, hyperkinetic looniness or unabashed sincerity.

In more recent years, he seemed to have discovered different, darker corners that allowed him to exhibit some of his most compelling work, not as the one-man purveyor of over-the-top joie de vivre but as a gifted actor unafraid of his own shadows.

For audiences of a certain age, Williams was best known as the man with the motormouth persona and constantly shifting alter egos who would jump effortlessly into impersonations during his breathless, scene-stealing appearances on The Tonight Show and other late-night talk programs.

Whether he was channeling Popeye with note-perfect malapropisms in the eponymous 1980 movie or portraying the loud, loquacious disc jockey in Good Morning, Vietnam, Williams could be counted on to bring unbridled energy and a near-bottomless supply of ad libs to roles that felt tailored to his singular gifts.

Williams received his first Oscar nomination for his performance in Good Morning, Vietnam. But when Peter Weir cast him as the inspirational English teacher John Keating in the drama Dead Poets Society, some observers were still sceptical that he could tamp down his natural-born mania long enough to be convincing.

But his performance in that film, a turn that Washington Post critic Rita Kempley described as “serenely eccentric” in 1989, launched a chapter in Williams’s career that swung – sometimes too easily – from broad comedy and family fare (Mrs. Doubtfire, Aladdin, Happy Feet) to films that, while capitalizing on his eccentricity, made sure not to stint on sensitivity and uplift. After receiving two more Academy Award nominations – for Dead Poets Society and the 1991 Terry Gilliam movie The Fisher King, Williams finally won in 1998, for his turn as a sympathetic therapist in the Ben Affleck-Matt Damon collaboration Good Will Hunting.

As impressive as Williams was in those roles – and as much fun as it was to watch him later channel not one but two presidents, in the Night at the Museum movies (Teddy Roosevelt) and last year’s Lee Daniels’ The Butler (Dwight D. Eisenhower) – it was the smaller films Williams did along the way that seemed to extract his most interesting qualities, the ones he labored so mightily to keep hidden, whether with hysterically pitched comedy, super-sincere drama or too-cute, begging-to-be-liked turns in such creatively bereft paydays as Patch Adams and Old Dogs.

He never shied from subversive material: He has a cameo in Bobcat Goldthwait’s poisonously funny satire Shakes the Clown, and he went out of his way to dismantle his own sunnily unthreatening public persona as a washed-up, foul-mouthed kids performer in Danny DeVito’s scabrous showbiz parody Death to Smoochy. But it wasn’t until 2002’s psychological thriller One Hour Photo that Williams seemed to shed the mannerisms and self-conscious quirk completely.

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In that quiet, unsettling drama, exquisitely directed by Mark Romanek, Williams played a photo-booth clerk who becomes obsessed with a prosperous suburban family whose lives he witnesses through a succession of happy portraits. Williams’s finely calibrated performance was utterly free of the tics and affectations that are so tempting to someone who has come to count on and crave the audience’s love. Rather than seek his fans’ approval with the actorly equivalent of ingratiating winks, Williams was willing to completely inhabit a character who was somehow terrifying, pathetic, creepy and vulnerable all at once.

Although Williams had delivered his share of bravura performances throughout his career, One Hour Photo revealed something new about an actor who could no longer be confined to rainbow suspenders, giddy talk-show appearances or dewy-eyed sentiment. And he managed to find a role of similar complexity several years later, in Goldthwait’s World’s Greatest Dad, in which Williams again played a high school poetry teacher, this time in the service of a comedy as fraught with nihilistic cruelty as it was with tough, mordant humanism.

Not as many people saw One Hour Photo or World’s Greatest Dad as did Good Will Hunting or Mrs. Doubtfire – or maybe even Death to Smoochy. But those who did saw a side of Williams that went beyond light or dark. They saw something brutally, transparently honest in an actor who may have made a career out of being too much, but who at his best was capable of knowing what was just enough.

-The Washington Post

– AP

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Robin Williams’ daughter responds to her father’s final tweet


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Robin Williams tributes from the web


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Robin Williams and the curse of the clown


There is a common belief that comedians are funny to escape their sadness; that often, behind the jokes, pratfalls and silly voices, there hides a depressed, tortured clown, squeezing laughs from audiences in an attempt to evade crippling melancholia.

This stereotype, which may have its roots in commedia dell’arte’s tear-faced Pierrot, is not, of course, true of every comic. And not every comic who identifies as having some form of mental illness is a tortured artist.

But ask a comedian if mental illness can play a role in their work and the answer is ”yes”. Or ”yes” put in a much funnier way.

Rhys Nicholson, a Sydney-based comedian who is outspoken about his depression and eating disorder, believes mental health issues are widespread in the comedy community.

”It’s a pretty big generalisation, but I’ve definitely found it to have some truth,” he says. ”Anxiety and depression are big ones. Substance problems are big, whether they know it or not. There’s a running joke that, well, we’re all broken people.

Pic of Fiona O'Loughlin in The Irish in Australia for Thursday's pay TV

Beyond a joke: Fiona O’Loughlin has suffered from bouts of depression.

”Of course, I know a great many funny people who are very well-rounded, particularly fine people. It’s like saying that all lawyers are d—s. There are some nice lawyers. But, on the whole, most of them are bad people.”

Nicholson’s comedy, which has garnered widespread critical acclaim since he began performing five years ago, is explicit, dark, confessional stuff.

His graphic insights into sex, religion, politics and mental health issues make arrestingly frank comedy. His last show,

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You gotta know to understand

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The genius of Robin Williams


In 1999, Robin Williams toured downunder to promote his sci-fi movie Bicentennial Man. In light of the tragic news of the actor’s death, The TV Guide’s Keith Sharp recalls the interview in an Auckland hotel room.

There’s a scene in the 1999 Robin Williams film, Bicentennial Man, in which the robot at the centre of the story stands and delivers a fusillade of bad jokes he has learnt from his owner. Naturally, the performance is totally lacking in timing and delivery and the robot doesn’t even understand why the jokes are funny. But the fact that they are was due entirely to the person confined in the robot costume.

It’s the closest we come in the film to seeing Robin Williams the veteran stand-up comedian as opposed to Robin Williams the actor, and is a clear reminder that the man’s unique and original stand-up comedy instincts were never far below the surface.

“It was always very free-form,” said Williams of the style which first gained him wider attention in the TV comedy Mork and Mindy some three and a half decades ago. “It was more of an evolutionary thing because, working in a club with people who were slightly hammered, the idea was to not present a moving target.”

He was certainly moving when he arrived in New Zealand with his family before Christmas 1999 on a joint holiday and promotional tour for Bicentennial Man; the whirlwind of proceedings commencing with a Maori welcome at Auckland airport. Williams had been advised in advance of the traditional honour, but he still couldn’t fail to see the funny side of being confronted by “a guy with a spear” as soon as he stepped from his private jet.

“But it was very touching,” he said of the ceremony. “Especially when they talked about remembering the living and the dead – and I was thinking about my father and remembering that he loved to fly-fish, and I thought ‘I’ve got to go and hit a stream for Pop’.”

Before he could do that, however, Williams had movie promotional duties to perform. Co-starring Sam Neill, the film was set in a not-too-distant future, and spanned 200 years in the evolution of a robot and the family which owns him. Although one of thousands, this robot proves to be unique when it displays signs of inquisitiveness and sensitivity, and begins to question its place in the order of things.

Isaac Asimov’s original story of a human creation that seeks to become human itself may seem futuristic, but it is in many ways an old-fashioned theme, echoing fantasy figures as Pinocchio, and the Tin Man from The Wizard Of Oz. Williams – long a science-fiction fan himself – was fascinated by the concept.

“It’s the idea of: would robots be the ultimate minority because we would treat them as not humans, even though they start to exhibit human characteristics” he said. “In a lot of science-fiction, when the robot gains a certain intelligence it finds us as either a threat, or redundant, and tries to kill us. Asimov went the other way and said why not find the idea that they may be benign, and they may be a positive step forward

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“The premise is that robots can be very moral creatures – and maybe even more moral than humans. And the idea of the rapid evolution of a creature going from machine to man, and looking for acceptance as man, and asking what are the boundaries of what is human, is quite interesting to talk about in a movie.”

It also questions our response to machines that talk to us – from office building lifts to car computers – and once on that subject, Williams’ innate sense of the absurd suddenly broke surface.

Without missing a beat, he became the voice of a Mercedes car computer and, in a comic mix of English and fluent German, the computer’s polite admonishment of a driver’s error grew into a Teutonic tirade against the occupant’s whole performance. Seconds later, the theme had leapt to New York, where a car objected to its driver’s dress sense and ordered him from the vehicle.

It’s a performance which most comedians would be proud to deliver to an audience at any time, let alone off the cuff in an Auckland hotel room. I don’t know if it ever made it into a stage routine but, for this interviewer, it seemed like I was being treated to a private show by the master himself and the fact that the stream-of-consciousness performance came so easily and naturally to Robin Williams was the main reason for his huge success as actor and comedian.

Because, like the robot’s humanity in Bicentennial Man, Williams’ genius for comedy was always just below the surface. One could only wonder at what else was going on down there.

– Stuff

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Top 10 Robin Williams movies


The world lost one of it funniest and most versatile actors today with the death of Robin Williams.

For more than 30 years he graced the big screen with roles ranging from an animated Genie to a serial killer.

Williams had the poise and talent to be successful across a wide range of genres. From animated classics and kids movies to gritty, dark dramas.

Here is our top 10 list of his best movies, although notable mentions must go to Patch Adams, Awakenings and countless other films – such was Williams’ acting talent.

1. Good Will Hunting (1997):

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