Monster 20m robot mural by UK artist Phlegm moves with AR app
CLIENT: CHAPEL STREET PRECINCT ASSOCIATION
OUTLET: HERALD SUN
A HUGE robot has invaded an Australian suburban shopping strip and is coming to life with augmented reality technology.
The 20m street art mural was painted over seven wet and windy days by “introverted*” UK artist Phlegm and brought to life by a team of local AR developers in Melbourne.
Chapel Street Precinct Association President John Lotton said he found Phlegm’s intricate works on social media and wanted the community to experience it.
'Brain fog' explained
Chapel Street Precinct Association launches Chapel St VIP chopper taxi service to Flemington
CLIENT: CHAPEL STREET
OUTLET: HERALD SUN
IMPRESSIONS mean everything and if you’re going to the races you want to arrive in style.
And if you’re not one to sit in traffic, then Chapel Street Precinct Association could have just the ticket.
They’ve launched a helicopter service that will ferry racegoers between Flemington and Chapel St in five minutes flat throughout Melbourne’s Spring Racing Carnival.
'Chasing Asylum' and 'Embrace' help to drive Demand Film's expansion
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: IF.COM.AU
Now active in the US, Canada, the UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, Demand Film is on a fast growth track.
Documentaries are generating 90 per cent of the cinema-on-demand platform’s revenues but founder and MD David Doepel expects that to drop to 75 per cent next year as narrative films become more popular.
The Pink House
CLIENT: THE PINK HOUSE
OUTLET: FILMINK
Carmel Galvin is extremely houseproud. Every morning, she diligently dusts all the fixtures of her abode in anticipation of guests arriving. The fact that her home is a brothel, her fixtures are sex toys and her guests are johns looking for a good time may sound surreal, but it’s all in a day’s work for Carmel in The Pink House, a documentary from Sascha Ettinger-Epstein.
The Pink House will be screening in cinemas from November 1, pre-purchase tickets at Demand.Film.
Blood clot breakthrough
Meet the owner of Australia's oldest brothel
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: CHANNEL 7 - THE MORNING SHOW
Madam Carmel runs the 103-year-old Questa Casa in Kalgoorlie. Carmel’s extraordinary life is now the basis of a feature-length documentary that will be shown in cinemas across Australia from November 1 on Demand.film. The Pink House gives unprecedented access to the inner workings of this unique brothel.
Is this NSW's most important debate?
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: THE COFFS COAST ADVOCATE
AHEAD of State Parliament debate on a bill allowing terminally ill people to voluntarily end their lives, it has been revealed about 60% of the Coffs Coast population may one day require palliative care.
Statistics suggest one in seven of us may face the prospect of living with intolerable pain and suffering at the end of our lives, however debate on assisted dying this week has also been met with strong public opposition.
Dying with Dignity NSW this week heralded the move towards the Voluntary Assisted Dying Bill 2017 proceeding before State Parliament next month.
Local assisted dying advocate Mark Benson said ahead of the bill's passage in to the Upper House, a screening of the documentary Fade to Black would be screened at Sawtell's Majestic Cinema on Tuesday, September 12. Pre-purchase tickets can be bought at demand.film.
Euthanasia documentary Fade to Black to screen in Canberra
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: CANBERRA TIMES
After receiving a terminal cancer diagnosis in early 2014, Peter Short spent his final months campaigning for law reform to allow him to die on his own terms. The film's release coincides with voluntary euthanasia laws being presented to Victorian parliament by Daniel Andrews, which are set for debate in coming weeks.
Fade to Black, which centres on the final six months of Mr Short's life, will be shown at Dendy Cinemas on August 15, and Australia world via Demand.Film.