You like them and so do we: a sampler of favourite Screenhub stories

Between Covid and the government's determination to back the free enterprise media, the sector has had its toughest year in living memory. Here are some of the stories we enjoyed writing in dark times.
The most clickable stories for Screenhub during the year have been film and television reviews. Turns out you want objective feedback and good viewing guides to our local content. Former film critic Rochelle Siemienowicz developed a deliberate strategy in 2019 to create a strand of reviews by experienced writers who bring their own taste and sense of fun, but also understand the real talent and decisions behind our national screen content. We strive to see production as a contribution to our culture, sharing and learning stories with Australian audiences. There’s nothing mysterious about this – classy reviews and cultural commentary always play between these strands, though sadly, there are now few paying gigs for reviews anymore. (Treasure your film critics, even if they hate your work; they mostly write about it for love and they’re a dying breed.) The strategy seems to be working and we are getting better at combining honesty with empathy. This year has seen us bringing in new critical voices, in association with Ana Tiwary and Diversity in Australian Media, bringing other perspectives on local content, especially and crucially from First Nations reviewers. Reviews  Here are ten reviews around the top of our readers’ list:

TV: Mystery Road S2 is genre done just right – Anthony Morris

Relic is an assured cinematic exercise in dread  – Mel Campbell

TV Review: The Beach is gorgeous but deeply puzzling –  Chris Boyd

TV Review: Operation Buffalo – a darkly comedic take on dubious historical moment – Anthony Morris

TV Review: Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky is Unapologetically Black – Vika Mana

Film Review: Babyteeth is a complex portrait of youth –  Mel Campbell

TV Review: Aunty Donna’s Big Ol’ House of Fun shines on Netflix – Anthony Morris

Film Review: Brazen Hussies celebrates the living history of Australian feminism –  Mel Campbell

The Distorting Mirror: Adrian Martin’s MIFF Highlights – Adrian Martin

Film Review: High Ground delivers its own reckoning –  Sarah Ward

Film Review: Combat Wombat is fresh, fun and inspiring – Naavikaran

Robust, Relevant and Diverse: Documentaries at Sydney Film Festival –  Glenn Dunks

Interviews  We live for interviews. We hunt for the creative joy behind screen work, delve into career paths and range widely around the sector’s varied crafts. Here are some favourites:

Be bold, be real, be rigorous: Samantha Lang on creativity and change in this weird moment – Rochelle Siemienowicz

Bruce Miller talks about the inner workings of The Handmaid’s Tale  – David Tiley

Warwick Thornton’s big time-out at The Beach – Rochelle Siemienowicz

From playwright to screenwriter, Suzie Miller reflects on her journey – David Tiley

Moving incredibly fast, it’s Family Rules for Karla Hart  – Rochelle Siemienowicz

Jennifer Collins: ringside in the arena of ABC change – David Tiley

Glendyn Ivin’s Hotel Quarantine: a strange sense of freedom  – Rochelle Siemienowicz

Steve Jaggi Company: we make the wrong movies and the industry is a scam -– David Tiley

Madeline Miller: from Screen Australia to production attorney on the new Bond film – Rochelle Siemienowicz

Huge project, small company – how Phoria uses AR to help repair the world – David Tiley

Games Over the last 18 months we have taken the opportunity to add writer and creative producer Jini Maxwell to our team. They are an expert in games and new media work, and enable us to engage with the increasing fusion of linear and non-linear storytelling, both on the imaginative and production level. It turns out our philosophy of combining creative, financial and cultural discussion works very well as games become art, artisanal production goes mainstream, and the VR/AR/XR domain turns out to be fantastically fertile. Here are some of Maxwell’s favourite articles across the year.

Best videogames from Australia and Aotearoa

Policy
Screenhub unashamedly articulates the producers’ point of view because they create and shape the opportunities for everyone else. This means we talk about finance and policy; indeed, we are often told that we are the one publication writing about this in any depth. We are also the only source of discussion which is independent, as all the other sources are providing strategic information. Which is not to say they are untrustworthy, just that we can add a wider perspective. Most of this writing falls to David Tiley, as the resident policy geek, bolstered by a lot of background conversations across the sector. We tracked COVID-19 through its nooks and crannies as it poured across the sector, affecting everything from solitary writers to exhibitors, teaching to the share market. Beneath this tidal flood, we found the ugly climax of the battle to eliminate quotas in television, taken up by an ambitious Federal Minister of Communications determined to shed blood, leave the bodies on the beach and march on. Again, we never let up – and we won’t in 2021 either. Here’s a few articles which went beyond the gruesome story of tax and pandemic, though one end-of-year taster can only hint at the scale of these stories.

Inside Screen Australia’s strangest annual drama report ever

Screen composers speak for wider sector as they confront a new future  

The Nitram controversy – some wider implications 

Feds launch entire new TV reform package

Australian Ads are still made by white people for white people – Annie Thiele

Screen Australia is a pesky bunch of fanatics. True or false? 

$50 Million Screen Package to Address Insurance Woes

Best Halloween Films from Australian Women in Horror – Rochelle Siemienowicz

Screen Australia/ACMA options document sets up battle over TV changes 

David Tiley was the Editor of Screenhub from 2005 until he became Content Lead for Film in 2021 with a special interest in policy. He is a writer in screen media with a long career in educational programs, documentary, and government funding, with a side order in script editing. He values curiosity, humour and objectivity in support of Australian visions and the art of storytelling.