[blindwoodworker] Snowy River

  • From: "John Sherrer" <john@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:28:02 -0500

Hi John
While we are talking about rivers, one of my favorites is the "Man from Snowy 
River".  Is there any basis of truth for the legend?

John
http://WhiteCane.org
http://BlindWoodWorker.com
http://HolyTeaClub.comcom\whitecane
http://anellos.ws

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: JDM 
  To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 11:46 PM
  Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: 54Eucalyptus?


  G'day Larry,

  I've not seen, nor listened to, the movie "Australia." But, I did hear that 
it got a very cool disinterested response at the box office here in Australia. 
Most folk regarded it as a very corny set of out of date cliche's, that have no 
relevance to modern day Australia. After all, more than90% of Australia's 22 
million people live in a major, highly urbanised city, with little  contact to 
rural farm life. Most Australians recognised the movie for what it was, which 
is basically a Tourism advertisement, which hoped to attract international 
visitors. The basic story line was also heavily criticised here as a shallow 
cliche.

  But, as i've not seen the movie, i'm not really in a position to make any 
comment. So, below, i've copied and pasted 2 reviews of the movie, reviews 
which were made shortly after the movie's release here.  The first review is 
from "The Age" a very conservative newspaper here, while the second review is 
from a radio station JJJ, marketed to the under 25's audience.

  OK, hope you enjoy the following 2 reviews.

  John

  Melbourne Australia.
    
  Review#1: 
  "The Age" Newspaper: Jim Schembri, reviewer
  December 2, 2008

    
      "Australia" the Movie.

  stars-2half 
  There are moments while watching Baz Luhrmann's over-sized, over-long Outback 
weepie Australia when one wonders if there are any tablecloth cliches about 
Australia that have been missed.

  No, it all seems to be there. The horses. The cattle. The dust. The rugged 
Aussie loner. The Aborigine standing on one leg in a loincloth. The beer. The 
Kangaroos. About the only thing missing is a bloke named Bruce.

  It may not be the stuff from which classic films are typically born but such 
cliches provide a great featherbed of easy-to-digest references for the type of 
sweeping melodramatic saga designed to appeal to the lucrative "chick flick" 
market and to foreign audiences eager for an attractive holiday destination.

  By these measures Australia cannot be seriously faulted. With its open links 
to the Australian tourism industry, the film is a great advertisement.

  As entertainment, the saga, cringe-inducing as it often is, eventually 
delivers the type of big, crowd-pleasing, teary emotional pay-off that makes 
its many long hours and overcooked characters worth enduring, even if the film 
is 30 minutes too long.

  Set in the Northern Territory in 1939 on a remote cattle station with the 
fairytale name of Faraway Downs, Australia tells of the forging of a family. 
Lady Sarah Ashley (Nicole Kidman) is the prissy English aristocrat who arrives 
to make a go of the station after the murder of her husband, allegedly by a 
blackfella called King George (David Gulpilil).

  Helping her take her cattle to Darwin is the enigmatic Drover (Hugh Jackman), 
a no-nonsense piece of calender-worthy, girl-baiting Aussie beefcake.

  Glueing the story together is Nullah (Brandon Walters), a sweet-faced little 
boy of mixed blood whose stateless status and dubious parentage serves as the 
lightning rod for the film's over-arching themes of racism, responsibility, 
love and reconciliation."



  Review#2:

                          "Australia" the Movie.
                          


                          review by Radio JJJ's, marc fennell 28 November 2008


                          It's here!                   The movie that’s 
supposed to save the Australian film 
                          industry, rescue Nicole Kidman's career, justify Baz 
                          Luhrmans monolithic ego, heal the Stolen Generation, 
                          cure cancer, slice bread, place man on the moon and 
                          improve upon the basic orgasm.

                          it is....
                          AUSTRALIA…

                          Gurd thy loins - The story of a british aristocrat 
                          (Kidman), her drover man (Jackman), her indigenous 
                          adopted child (Walters) and a shitload of cows 
traveling 
                          across the country has landed, and I believe if you 
read 
                          the fine print on your birth Certificate or passport 
you'll find that we're 
                          all legally required to go see it.

                          But is Australia all its cracked up to be…

                          Well….. kinda.

                          If you’ve ever seen So You Think You Can Dance you 
                          might’ve heard the term "Hot Mess" well Australia is 
a 
                          hot mess. The whole thing smacks of a movie that was 
                          half written, shot, reshot, rewritten, then reshot 
again 
                          then rewritten, reshot, re-edited, rewritten and then 
                          reshot and re-edited a final time.. then they watched 
it 
                          once more and decided to spend $20 million on blowing 
up 
                          Darwin and hearding some CGI cows off a cliff. That 
                          said, there are some truly stunning cinematic moments 
in 
                          Australia - the aforemention stampede, the bombing of 
                          darwin, the heartbreaking scenes of Aboriginal 
Children 
                          being ripped from their homes (well, Kidman's home) 
And 
                          David Gulilpill standing on some rocks peering into 
your 
                          soul is eery to say the least.

                          But almost none of it flows and fits together. Some 
                          parts are large and majestic, then it'll become 
                          a cartoon. A bit of high-camp I can enjoy but, almost 
                          every 30 minutes on the dot the movie will stop to 
show 
                          us a bunch of Tourism Australia landscape shots. I 
kept 
                          expecting Jackman to turn to camera and say "You'll 
                          Never Never Know, If You Never Never Go".

                          The plot's key turning points have either too much or 
                          not enough emphasis and are often in the wrong spot. 
The 
                          whole last half of the movie (The Bombing of Darwin 
and 
                          so on) could easily have been shifted earlier for a 
                          punchier, more wrenching ending. Like I said, this 
movie 
                          wasnt written it was re-written. And nowhere is that 
                          more obvious than in the amount of CGI used. The 
movie 
                          is filled with scenes that were half filmed on 
location, 
                          half on green-screen as reshoots. It's not that Baz 
Loman has 
                          bitten off more than he can chew, it's that he's 
bitten 
                          off more than he SHOULD'VE chewed and then 
pigheadedly 
                          insisted on munching through it all, even if it does 
                          take 2 hours and 45 minutes.

                          Yes, Australia is beautiful, Yes I cried a bit in 
parts. 
                          But lets face it, the outback is awesome and I'm a 
                          pansy. Tell ya what the biggest surprise of this 
movie 
                          was though… Nicole Kidman. I had all of my botox 
jokes 
                          ready to go, but y'know what? That damn woman won me 
                          over. Not for her dramatic performance but for her 
comic 
                          timing. She played the stuck-up English bitch 
                          hillariously. She nails it. And also young Brandon 
                          Walters, found via a nationwide callout, is stunning. 
                          Except for his voice-over narration. Another 
tell-tale 
                          sign of an under-written flick.

                          Finally though, if you want a new drinking game.. 
then try taking a 
                          shot everytime someone says "Crikey." I guarantee 
you'll 
                          be too hammered to notice the movie's glaring flaws, 
and 
                          instead soak up the sheer glory of watching the 
Director, Baz Loman, snort 
                          his own ego through a wide-angle lens."



    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Larry Martin 
    To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 4:46 PM
    Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: 54Eucalyptus?


    My wife and I just enjoyed watching the DVD Australia. What was the local 
reaction to the movie? 




    On Nov 22, 2009, at 9:57 PM, JDM wrote:


      G'day again John,

      OK, I now understand, that 54 really puzzled me.  But, as for Eucalyptus 
being easy to work, there is no single answer.  I know of more than 300 
varieties of the Eucalyptus genus, and each and every one has a different 
hardness, density, colour and grain patterning and so on.
      Here, in the State of Victoria the most commonly used Eucalyptus timber 
is Victorian Mountain Ash, though if the very same timber happens to come from 
the State of Tasmania, then it is called Tasmanian Oak.  The different climatic 
conditions of the 2 States has a major effect on the hardness, density, 
workability and colour. Though Tasmanian Oak is truly a variety of the 
Eucalyptus genus, and completely unrelated to English, European  or American 
Oak, it was called Oak by the early English settler pioneers because of its 
very similar appearance and working characteristics.

      Unlike the USA, where much of your timber seems to be flat sawn, all 
timber that is grown and milled in Australia is quarter sawn, or occasionally 
rift sawn. A consequence of this is that here  we do not see any lumber which 
has the cathedral patterns of the growth rings on the board faces. In quarter 
sawn timber the growth ring cathedrals would appear on the edges of the boards. 
But of course, the thinness of the edges precludes the cathedrals from ever 
being seen. 

      North American furniture makers seem to utilise these cathedral patterns 
as an integral part of their overall design to give their pieces a very 
characteristic American or Canadian look. Australian furniture lumber is all 
very straight grained, and character can only be imparted by the incorporation 
of knot marks, gum veins and shakes into the design.

      Below, after my signature, is a list of 284 varieties of Australian 
Eucalyptus.

      Hope this has been of interest,

      John Milburn

      Melbourne Australia.

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