SHARKO is a feature documentary about enigmatic New Zealand Rugby League legend Mark “SHARKO” Graham, and his filmmaker son, Luke. In his prime, Mark was the best rugby league player in the world.
We couldn t have made the film without them, he said. He said as a film maker he liked to see his movies played in cinemas, however changes with COVID-19 had made that more difficult. That s all sadly changing, he said. We were lucky Broke came out in 2016; it had its run in cinema. It s been on broadcast TV and SBS. It s good for it to find its final home on Netflix. The addition to the streaming service also gives great exposure to Gladstone, which Mr Graham said was all part of filming there in the first place. I think Broke certainly highlights Gladstone as a character in the film, he said.
The Butterfly, at the Capricorn Film Festival early next year.
The 23-year-old Bundaberg girl is an emerging contemporary pop vocalist, composer and producer, who just completed her Honours year of a Bachelor of Music at the University of Sydney.
Her performance, appropriately titled Butterfly in a Cave, will take place in the beautiful cathedral caves at Capricorn Caves, north of Rockhampton.
The performance will feature the live debut of her single,
The Butterfly, which was written about the years after the loss of her grandfather.
“Feeling the person is still there, like a butterfly that never flies away,” Chelsea said.