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Fresh Air (film)

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Fresh Air
Directed byNeil Mansfield
Written byNeil Mansfield
Produced byRosemary Blight
StarringNadine Garner
Bridie Carter
Production
company
RB Films
Release date
  • 1999 (1999)
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1 million
Box officeA$10.050 (Australia)[1]

Fresh Air is a 1999 Australian film directed by Neil Mansfield and produced by Rosemary Blight, starring Marin Mimica, Nadine Garner and Bridie Carter. Set over one week in July 1998, the film tells the story of Jack, Kit and E, three housemates who live together in the Sydney suburb of Marrickville. The narrative is presented non-chronologically in a disorienting editing style that Mansfield called "zinema." It was one of a series of "million dollar movies" financed by the Australian Film Commission and SBS Independent.[2]

The film was released on VHS in 1999 and has never been reissued on DVD or streaming platforms since. In 2020, during the COVID-19 lockdowns, Mansfield re-edited the film and created a new cut under the title Static Electricity. Mansfield has held occasional public screenings of this version, but it has not been publicly released either.[3]

Plot summary

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The film takes place over one week in July 1998, but does not consistently present the narrative chronologically. This is an approximation of events.

As Fresh Air begins, Kit (Nadine Garner) and Jack (Marin Mimica) are a couple in their late 20s living in Marrickville. Jack has just lost his job and has a week remaining at the office. Their friend, E (Bridie Carter), is about to move in with them. E is making the latest issue of her zine, Pretty Ugly, which chronicles "a week in Marrickville... everyday life is art." Scenes of E making the zine and Jack photocopying it at work are interspersed throughout the film, including pages titled with days of the week, but these do not necessarily signify what day it is within the narrative.

On Sunday, Kit suggests to Jack that he should be a filmmaker but he reacts cynically. They drive in Kit's old VW Beetle to E's father's seaside mansion to help her move out. During the Lotto results, Jack gets up on the house roof to adjust the TV antenna. While Kit watches the Lotto results, she cuts her bangs. Kit and E go off to meet their friend Joey (Chrissy Ynfante) at "The Garage" while Jack stays up late to watch the World Cup.

On Monday, Kit is working at her job stacking shelves at a local supermarket and Jack goes to a local barber, Vince (Francesco Caudullo), for a shave. Vince suggests that Jack should take a holiday. Kit reflects that butchers seem to be happy people, and works on some new paintings for an upcoming exhibition. Over dinner, Jack wonders if he has wasted his life and the three housemates discuss paths forward.

On Tuesday, Kit and E drink coffee in the backyard and make plans to see Joey's band, Dirt. (It is later revealed they have changed their name to "the dirt!") Jack then goes to visit his parents, Bob (Tony Barry) and Joan (Julie Hamilton), before Bob's upcoming hospital admission. Jack asks them what they'd do if they won Lotto, and they demur. E gives Jack the latest copy of Pretty Ugly to photocopy at work. Kit reflects on the difference between pool and snooker. At work, she runs into an old friend, Hunter (Simon Lyndon) and goes on an awkward lunch date with him, learning that he has become rich from a career in advertising. Jack returns home having printed 50 copies of the zine for E. Kit tells Jack they should make time to clear out the spare room so that a fourth housemate can move in. Kit rehearses for a play in which she is playing accordion, and she and Jack go out for dinner while E practices drums at home. While attempting to kill a spider that has come into the car, Jack smashes the front headlight.

On Wednesday, E meets Kit at a café and introduces her to Brett (Michael Angus), who is practicing martial arts. Kit reflects that she feels "stuck in a long queue" and discusses her lunch date with Hunter from the previous day. That evening, Jack returns home with his parents' dog, Rex, and their barbecue strapped to the roof. E begins editing a film to show at Kit's exhibition.

On Thursday, Rex picks up a lit firework off the street. Jack manages to wrest it from his mouth and deposit the firework in a postbox, running away before it explodes. Kit receives a rejection from the Arts Council in the mail, and mentions that she sent her latest application off earlier that morning in the postbox across the street. She talks to Jack about her artistic ambitions and need for recognition, and mentions again that he has given up on his filmmaking. That night, Jack and Kit attend a house party. Kit discusses plans to attend two protests on Saturday - one against noise pollution from Sydney Airport, and another against cars.

On Friday, Kit and E swap stories about things they have seen throughout the week as they play Boggle. E gets her clothes washed at a laundromat then goes to a tattooist, where all her clothes are stolen. Kit visits Bob in hospital, without Jack. She mentions in passing that Jack is busy because it's his "last week" at work, and Bob and Joan seem not to know that he has been fired. Jack sits in on a studio session for the band "the dirt!" and falls asleep. Kit's exhibition opens, but few attend as the invitations were not sent out on time by the gallery. Jack does not attend, which disappoints Kit. E's film is screened to a small audience but she does not attend either, spending the night practicing bass in Jack's clothes. Hunter is one of the few people to show up, gifting E with a large sunflower. Jack comes home late and is apologetic when he realises he forgot about the exhibition.

On Saturday, Kit plays soccer with Rex at the Canterbury Velodrome in the morning. Kit and E then attend the protest at Sydney Airport, throwing paper planes and blowing whistles in the departure lounge. Meanwhile, Jack helps film a commercial, and acquires a large ceramic statue of Mother Mary. Later, he turns up to the hospital to visit Bob and finds out he's already been discharged. Returning to his parents' home and dropping off Rex, he chats to Bob who mentions "All I needed was a breath of fresh air."

Kit and E then attend the "Carmageddon" protest where Kit finds that Jack has given her VW Beetle car away to be smashed up by attendees. Kit decides to break up with him, but is brought around when Jack turns up to her play. He gifts E with the Mary statue and Kit with a small ceramic cow. He also tells Kit he plans to go on the dole, and make a new film. Kit then plays accordion in a band at a Carmageddon benefit show, but the set is interrupted by a power failure.

As the film ends, Kit and E excitedly talk about having seen the Concorde fly over earlier that day, to which Jack expresses surprise because they had just attended a protest against the airport. Kit and E respond that the Concorde is "different." Meanwhile, at a local kebab shop, a newspaper headline reveals that this week there has been no Lotto winner.

Production

[edit]

Mansfield was working at Film Australia and working on the script. It began as a purely visual comedy, "then I started working in dialogue and it took off from there," said Mansfield. "In the final stages of development, we worked on bridging the kitchen sink drama with the observational comedy."[2]

Mansfield showed the script to Rosemary Blight who liked it and decided to produce it. "I first read it on the bus between Broadway and Newtown," Blight said, "and I couldn’t stop laughing. It was very observant of people – in fact, some of the characters seemed to be on the same bus with me… He’s very observant…his view of the world is very different. In other scripts, you see people larger than life, but he sees them as they are."[2]

Mansfield wrote 12 drafts of the script. It eventually got some finance through the New Screenwriters Scheme of the NSW Film and TV Office, through which Bill Bennett agreed to mentor Mansfield. Then the film attracted support from Bridgit Ikin, head of SBS Independent, and Marion Pilowski, Head of Acquisitions and Program Development at Premium Movie Partnership (Foxtel) who supported the film's successful application to be one of the five "Million Dollar Movies" jointly financed by the Australian Film Commission and SBS Independent.[2]

Shooting took five weeks, with six weeks of shooting the "zine" elements. Mansfield called the film "'zinema'... a wanky excuse for a cut and paste style. Zine as in home made, non-profit sort of magazine. It’s expressionistic in style but naturalistic in content."[2]

Cinematographer Toby Oliver said the film uses "wobblycam, and a fragmented jump cut style, but also some scenes are very static with no camera movement, or there may be an elaborate dolly set up. We are also using photos and words sprinkled through the film. "[2]

Critical reception

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Fresh Air was positively received in Australia. On The Movie Show, David Stratton reviewed the film favourably, calling it "rather effective, surprisingly romantic at times, very atmospheric, with great use of music and lots of youthful energy". Margaret Pomeranz was less enthusiastic, wondering if the film might have been better as a short, and adding that it had a "fairly inaccessible originality... I mean, I feel it’s a real generation of film of which I am not a part."[4] In The Sydney Morning Herald, Garry Maddox called the film "an innovative feature that celebrates the underachiever".[5] Paul Byrnes, also of the Herald, called the film "quietly charming" with a tone "never quite wholly satirical, nor wholly serious".[6] Tom Ryan in The Age praised the "intriguing mix of the mundane and the exotic (that) delivers something of the exotic flavour of an inner-suburban Australian neighbourhood", adding that the film "leaves you wanting a sequel".[7]

Cast

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References

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  1. ^ "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria Archived 9 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 12 November 2012
  2. ^ a b c d e f Andrew L Urban, "FRESH AIR – ON LOCATION", Urban Cinefile. Retrieved 12 November 2012
  3. ^ "Event listining for screening of Static Electricity". Amplify.
  4. ^ Stratton, David (1999). "Likable look at depressed generation". The Movie Show. SBS. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
  5. ^ Maddox, Garry (7 May 1999). "The air down here". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
  6. ^ Byrnes, Paul (8 May 1999). "Marrickville Moments". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
  7. ^ Ryan, Tom (11 July 1999). "Fresh Air (review)". The Age. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
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