ArtView September 2015 | Page 26

Sydney August 2015, in conversation with Jessica Khoury for ArtView Distribution is incredibly difficult, and it's still really up in the air about ways of seeing films. There is an increasing situation at the moment where some small, niche films are not getting a regular release at all, but they're being shown in special screenings, maybe with a Q&A, and in that way they hope they might get a big crowd along, and maybe they'll only show it twice like that in Sydney and twice in Melbourne, and that's all it's going to get, without a normal release. More people might see it like that than if it went into a cinema for a week or two. So it's a very difficult time for distributors. Do you watch any television series? I don't. I would like to in principle, because people tell me there's a lot of good things happening in television at the moment, but I really don't have time. Because I have to pretty much keep up with the new films, and then working on lectures as I tend to do most weekends, I'm re-watching all the films that I'm about to discuss in the lecture. With all of that I don't have time - however, because I like Jane Campion, I did watch Top of the Lake - and I was deeply disappointed, deeply disappointed... I'm sure all television series are not like that, but Top of the Lake seemed to be a film of let's say roughly an hour and three-quarters stretched out to six hours... I couldn't believe it! I mean Jane Campion is a terrific filmmaker, and this was so sluggish, and so boring, and so... incredibly disappointing. I have no real desire to watch, because I think they're just padded out to stretch out to... but maybe they're not, I don't know. That's the only one I've seen. There are some TV series that have had a lot of critical success, including a personal favourite of mine, Breaking Bad... So they tell me. I've got it sitting on my shelf at home, and I haven't watched it. One of these days, when I have time... Do you think it's still important for people to view films in the cinema, rather than at home? I do, because films are made to be seen by an audience. I think nothing beats seeing a film with an attentive audience projected in the way it's meant to