Simon News, Articles, Info
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Wednesday, 25-Apr-18, 2:00 PM | Message # 211 |
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Messages: 1979
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New article from WENTWORTH COURIER April 25, 2018
http://newslocal.smedia.com.au/wentworth-courier/
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Sunday, 29-Apr-18, 8:16 PM | Message # 212 |
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Messages: 1979
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The Sunday Times Magazine April 29, 2018
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Wand6122360 |
Date: Sunday, 29-Apr-18, 8:39 PM | Message # 213 |
Bee's Knees
Messages: 517
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Great articles, DSP. Thanks. The interviews do irritate me with one factual error, though. I’m quite certain that Simon and Rebecca were dating before E-Street. |
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Sunday, 29-Apr-18, 8:44 PM | Message # 214 |
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Messages: 1979
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Quote Wand6122360 ( ) The interviews do irritate me with one factual error, though. I’m quite certain that Simon and Rebecca were dating before E-Street.
Yep, I think too! Here on the forum, we don't mess with Baker's trivia! |
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Tina |
Date: Monday, 30-Apr-18, 9:18 AM | Message # 215 |
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Thanks a lot for the articles! Yes I think they dated before E Street. I once read they met on a blind date. |
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bee |
Date: Monday, 30-Apr-18, 1:09 PM | Message # 216 |
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Thanks for all the pics and articles DSP. We shall miss him when he goes on his break but I hope he is left alone by the media so he can finally relax with his family. He deserves a rest from the public eye for a while so he can recharge his batteries. We certainly have much to look back on to keep us happy and hopefully the release of Breath in Europe (fingers crossed). |
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Monday, 30-Apr-18, 10:39 PM | Message # 217 |
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'It chose me': Simon Baker on Breath movie
ABC Radio interview, with Rafael Epstein
http://www.abc.net.au/radio....9712292
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Wednesday, 02-May-18, 5:42 PM | Message # 218 |
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Simon Baker Brings Tim Winton’s Surf Novel ‘Breath’ to Life
By Erin Bromhead May 2, 2018
http://www.monsterchildren.com/73749....th-life
Leading up to the screening of Breath, the film adaptation of Tim Winton’s dark coming of age surf novel of the same name, I was a little apprehensive.
A huge plot point in the book is that Eva, the wife of Sando (played by Simon Baker in the film), is really into auto-erotic asphyxiation. She embarks on a physical affair with a local teen nicknamed Pikelet, whom Sando has taken under his wing, and asks him to put a plastic bag over her head while they have sex. And I had invited my dad to the movie with me.
It turns out I needn’t have worried. In the film, the reference is fleeting. In fact, Baker’s adaptation of Winton’s acclaimed novel is a considerably lighter take on a much heavier story. “I still think it’s a reasonably big plot point. Five minutes before, Pikelet has this kind of ‘sexual awakening’ to the music of Fleetwood Mac, and it’s all excitement and thrills and then suddenly he feels like he’s in love and then it goes to a really weird place,” says Baker when we speak on the phone. “I think auto-erotic asphyxiation is a pretty heavy subject, I don’t think on film you need to go to the places that Tim went in his book. That just probably would have repelled an audience. But really, I think it’s more about the loss of his innocence, or youth.”
Speaking of youth—for Baker, making Breath was a way to revisit his own, having spent his childhood and adolescence as a surfer in Lennox Head in the ’70s. “It was just like reliving my youth, and casting these two clowns was sort of like reliving my youth as well, because they just reminded me so much of my mates.” These ‘clowns’ are Ben Spence (Loonie) and Samson Coulter (Pikelet), two young Australian surfers who had no previous acting experience before filming. For them, playing the roles of two eager young surfers discovering the power and draw of the ocean came pretty naturally, considering their lives revolve around surfing offscreen too. “It’s more or less the same. We all just surf and try to surf as much as we can, and go to school, and just try to have a good time, basically,” says Spence.
The film follows Pikelet and Loonie, who discover surfing as 13-years-olds and become enamoured by it. Sando, a much older, local surfer, becomes a mentor to them, driving them around to secret surf spots and teaching them the ropes. Though their relationships become complex, their affinity for the ocean keeps them entwined.
There’s a scene in the film where Sando unfolds a map and traces his finger along the coast of Indonesia, pointing out spots he’s surfed and breaks he’s heard about but never seen. Surfing Indo seems like such an enchanting, mysterious concept back then. Now, you can check the swell anywhere in the world from your phone. “Instagram has ruined everything,” says Simon, before Ben interjects, “That’s such an old person thing to say.” “It’s an old person thing to say, but I’m telling you, when you’re surfing the point at Lennox and it’s pumping in the morning, and someone posts a shot of like, six foot barrels all the way through, by the afternoon there’s 200 people in the water,” Simon continues. “It used to be on the radio at 8 pm on 2LM, which was the Lismore radio station, a guy called Biggles would fly in a light aircraft up and down the coast and he would do a surf report and unless you got up in the morning and drove there yourself, that’s where you got the surf report. You figured out where you were going to go based on that and which way the wind was gonna swing.”
There’s another part in the film where Sando takes Pikelet and Loonie to a secret spot, only to divulge it’s inhabited by a Great White seconds before they hit the water. Hungry for it, they paddle out anyway. In real life, the guys mightn’t be so keen. “I think it depends what sharks, and how big they are. In Western Australia, if I knew there was a shark out there, I probably wouldn’t go near it. I have surfed waves where there’s been a shark spotting that morning, but when you’re dealing with Great Whites, it’s best to steer clear,” says Samson.
So much of Breath—both Winton’s novel and Baker’s film—revolves around fear, adrenaline, pressure, and the male ego. Bravado, and this notion of toxic masculinity, have long been a problem in the water. But Baker believes the tides are starting to shift. “Being a bit older, I’ve seen a change in it. It used to be a lot harder—you weren’t allowed to show vulnerability at all. It was never something that was accepted so you kind of conformed to those masculine ideals all the time. Now, I’ll go for a surf in places where I grew up and I’m outnumbered in the water by women. In that whole area of Lennox, Ballina, and Byron, there were about four women that surfed when I was a kid and now you go out any given day and you’re sometimes the minority—which I find phenomenal, and just the energy that that brings to the line up alone.”
“The ’80s was intense, it was really aggressive and there was a lot of heavy localism and a lot of fighting and stuff in the surf,” Baker reminisces. “Then, in the 90’s it felt like professional surfing really took off and there was a very corporate feeling into the early 2000’s. And I think now, because there is a bit more history and people surf boards from different eras that have different approaches, there’s professional surfers that don’t have to compete. That stuff wasn’t accepted before. Now guys get paid just to travel around and surf waves and they don’t have to do 500 turns on a wave and do an air-rev at the end of it.” |
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Friday, 04-May-18, 12:59 PM | Message # 219 |
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Messages: 1979
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Excellent news Ladies & Gentlemen!
The ADG Awards were established in order to celebrate the outstanding achievements and contributions by Australian Directors, and are the only peer-judged awards for directors in Australia. Held in Melbourne, the awards celebrate excellence in the craft and art of directing across film, television, documentary, animation and interactive media.
Simon Baker Wins Australian Directors’ Guild Award for Breath
by Dov Kornits May 4, 2018
And it could not have been more timely, with the Tim Winton adaptation just released in cinemas.
Held in Melbourne, the Australian Directors’ Guild (ADG) Awards celebrate excellence in the craft and art of directing across film, television, documentary, animation and interactive media.
Presenters included Kat Stewart, Xavier Samuel, Adam Elliot and Michala Banas, and along with Baker, the big winner was Fiona Banks, who picked up 2 trophies. And the winners were…
Best Direction of a Feature Film Simon Baker for Breath …
https://www.filmink.com.au/simon-b....-breath
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bee |
Date: Friday, 04-May-18, 1:23 PM | Message # 220 |
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Congratulations to Simon so well deserved. It's heartwarming to know that all his hard work and dedication in making this film, which means so much to him personally, has been recognized in this way. I hope Simon directs more films in the future as he obviously has a passion for directing and a director's eye for detail, although I hope he doesn't give up the acting side altogether. |
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Wand6122360 |
Date: Friday, 04-May-18, 2:13 PM | Message # 221 |
Bee's Knees
Messages: 517
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Great news!!!!! |
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Deedee |
Date: Friday, 04-May-18, 2:54 PM | Message # 222 |
Bee's Knees
Messages: 704
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Such fantastic news!!! and so well deserved. |
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DS_Pallas |
Date: Friday, 04-May-18, 3:42 PM | Message # 223 |
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Messages: 1979
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Tassie |
Date: Friday, 04-May-18, 3:45 PM | Message # 224 |
Bee's Knees
Messages: 517
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I couldn't be more happy for him-well done. |
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Tina |
Date: Saturday, 05-May-18, 10:05 AM | Message # 225 |
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Hopefully more awards to come! He so deserves it! I'm very happy for him! |
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