TikTok series Scattered to launch 17 May
May 13, 2021 4:34
Funded by both Screen Australia and Film Victoria, TikTok series Scattered will launch 17 May 2021.
The announcement:
The first ever web series to be funded by both Screen Australia and Film Victoria for TikTok, will launch on May 17.
Produced by Hayley Adams and Michelle Melky, and directed by Logan Mucha, Scattered is a new queer drama comprised of 38 x 1-minute daily eps. It follows three best friends, Jules, Sami and Bo, the day after their friend Wil’s funeral, when they wake up with brutal hangovers and one less person, Wil…well, his ashes that is. Over the series, the friends retrace their steps to find his ashes and give him the send-off he deserves.
We die in disproportionate numbers: disabled people on disasters
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In moves to address climate change, many of us make assumptions about how to make a difference. Stop using straws, get rid of packaging, use less air-conditioning. But what if that straw makes the difference between being able to drink or not, you rely on packaged, pre-cut fruit because you’re unable to cut it yourself, if air-con is essential for your ability to function.
Sarah Firth is a graphic recorder, pictured here in her home studio.
Credit:Jason South
The way climate change affects people with a disability is different, and complex. That’s where The Other Film Festival comes in, Australia’s first international disability film festival, funded by Arts Access Victoria.
Enter a fantasy world at the Immigration Museum’s Summer Courtyard: Metamorphosis Bigoa with Fan , 2020 by Atong Atem
Words by Arielle Richards
Live music, art, food and nostalgic meditations on identity, what more could you need?
This special event at the Immigration Museum showcases intersections between art forms, with the debut of two new exhibitions:
Atong Atem’s To Be Real, a large-scale set of photographic works which meditate on “mythology and fantasy, belonging and truth”, and
Becoming You: An Incomplete Guide, presenting 71 Australian coming-of-age stories as told by 72 Australian storytellers.
The two features come together to explore the many complexities of identity and growing up, through both digital and physical mediums.