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Submit your short film to win
Weâve selected short fiction âmicrolitâ from some of the best writers from around Australiaâdo you have the vision to turn them into short films?
Our panel of jurists will select finalists and winners in the following categories, to be presented at our film festival in October:
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- Best Adaptation ($500)
- Best Direction ($200 as well as a full script assessment by Screenwriting Scriptease)
- Best Sound ($200)
- Best Writing ($500)
So put a filmmaking team together, or tackle this on your own with your smartphone, and together we can showcase our incredible homegrown talent!
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The deadline is August 1st, 2021.
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PLUS, if you're interested in learning some filmmaking skills for Microflix, the Short Film Hackathon might be for you! Hurry, this weekend only. Get your ticket today.
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Brand new in the Spineless Wonders shop
From KATE LISTON-MILLS, the author of The Waterfowl Are Drunk! comes a pointed and poignant collection of short stories for the present moment. Dear Ibis is a tender yet unflinching meditation on what it means to feel at home, and what it means to have this taken away.
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How to make a short film? Choose your story
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This year, Microflix has chosen some diverse stories touching on themes of belonging, home, family, and loss, as well as a variety that are driven by humour and wit. Which will you adapt?
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Farewell from Little Fictions on Air
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Sadly, the last episode of Little Fictions On Air aired on 22 Feb this year. Find out what our host had to say about her experience on the short story series over the past year.
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Pulped Fiction anthology launch at NWF
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Watch the online launch of Spineless Wonder's Pulped Fiction anthology with special guest Allyson Miller.
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Natura Morta, an exhibition of drawings, mixed media works and installations, explores aspects of humanityâs relationship with nature and the climate crisis, and invites viewers to get active and collect waste in exchange for works on view.
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Artist and designer Bettina Kaiser was born in Hamburg, Germany. She has lived in Australia for over 20 years, currently in Sydneyâs Inner West with her husband and daughter. She loves being out in nature. She acknowledges that the climate emergency might not be solved by what Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack once described as âInner-city raving lunaticsâ or a little art show, but she hopes that together people can at least try to do something about it.
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Natura Morta is open May 26 â June 6 Thursday and Friday 11am-2pm, Saturday and Sunday 11am-4pm, or by appointment at Chrissie Cotter Gallery, Pidcock Street, Camperdown.
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