“Mystery Road: Origin” dominated the television section of the Australian Academy of Cinema Television Arts (Aacta) Industry Awards, which were presented on Monday. The Baz Luhrmann-directed “Elvis” dominated in the film section of the Australian craft awards.
The main Aacta awards with a focus on performance and talent will be presented on Wednesday.
“Mystery Road: Origin” claimed four awards including best cinematography in television, best editing, best direction in television and best sound in television. The Bunya-abc production is nominated for six more awards in the performance section.
Internationally successful children’s program “Bluey” won the Aacta award for best children’s program for a fourth consecutive year.
The Bazmark-produced musical biopic “Elvis” claimed seven Aacta craft prizes: including best costume design and best production design, both going to Catherine Martin, while Mandy Walker, became the first woman to take home the best cinematography award for feature film in Australia.
The main Aacta awards with a focus on performance and talent will be presented on Wednesday.
“Mystery Road: Origin” claimed four awards including best cinematography in television, best editing, best direction in television and best sound in television. The Bunya-abc production is nominated for six more awards in the performance section.
Internationally successful children’s program “Bluey” won the Aacta award for best children’s program for a fourth consecutive year.
The Bazmark-produced musical biopic “Elvis” claimed seven Aacta craft prizes: including best costume design and best production design, both going to Catherine Martin, while Mandy Walker, became the first woman to take home the best cinematography award for feature film in Australia.
- 12/5/2022
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
ABC science commentator Dr Karl Kruszelnicki, July 5:
“A Higgs boson walks into a church. The priest says ‘Get out of here’. The higgs boson says ‘But without me you can’t have any mass’.”
Peter FitzSimons, Sun-Herald, July 8:
“A Higgs boson walks into a church. ”We don’t allow Higgs bosons in here!” the priest shouts. ”But without me, how can you have mass?” asks the particle.
Christian Kerr, The Australian, July 10:
“Higgs boson walks into a Catholic church. “You’re not welcome here!” the priest exclaims. “Why not?” Higgs asks. “Without me you can’t have mass.”
Can we stop now?...
“A Higgs boson walks into a church. The priest says ‘Get out of here’. The higgs boson says ‘But without me you can’t have any mass’.”
Peter FitzSimons, Sun-Herald, July 8:
“A Higgs boson walks into a church. ”We don’t allow Higgs bosons in here!” the priest shouts. ”But without me, how can you have mass?” asks the particle.
Christian Kerr, The Australian, July 10:
“Higgs boson walks into a Catholic church. “You’re not welcome here!” the priest exclaims. “Why not?” Higgs asks. “Without me you can’t have mass.”
Can we stop now?...
- 7/9/2012
- by mumbrella
- Encore Magazine
The first day of Qantas’ major brand repositioning has got off to a disapppointing start with the airline’s check-in system crashing, leading to major delays nationwide as staff manually check-in customers.
The glitch came on the same day as the launch of the new “You’re the reason we fly” campaign with print ads in the Sunday newspapers telling passengers Qantas knows they now expect more.
Passengers took to Twitter to share their frustrations. Comedian Adam Hills – who has 73,000 followers – was among those to wade in. And the ABC’s science broadcaster Dr Karl Kruszelnicki – who has 143,000 followers – triggered speculation that the crash was because the bookings system had been unable to cope with the addition of a leap second to the length of the day today at about the time the system went down. Several passengers shared images of lengthy queues at various terminals.
During the problem, the...
The glitch came on the same day as the launch of the new “You’re the reason we fly” campaign with print ads in the Sunday newspapers telling passengers Qantas knows they now expect more.
Passengers took to Twitter to share their frustrations. Comedian Adam Hills – who has 73,000 followers – was among those to wade in. And the ABC’s science broadcaster Dr Karl Kruszelnicki – who has 143,000 followers – triggered speculation that the crash was because the bookings system had been unable to cope with the addition of a leap second to the length of the day today at about the time the system went down. Several passengers shared images of lengthy queues at various terminals.
During the problem, the...
- 7/1/2012
- by mumbrella
- Encore Magazine
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.