The Weekly Advertiser – Wednesday, February 12, 2020

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Vol. No. Vol. 2218No. 31 27

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Wednesday,February January 12, 13, 2020 2016 Wednesday,

LET IT RIP: X Amount lead singer ‘Lou’ Cramer does her best to lift the roof off Horsham Town Hall while pumping out a spine-tingling power ballad at a 60 Years of Wimmera Rock celebration and reunion in Horsham. X Amount members, similar to many other bands, reunited for the first time in decades to be part of the unique festival. Story, page 5. Picture: PAUL CARRACHER

August film release I

BY DEAN LAWSON

mages of the Wimmera-Mallee’s landscape, towns and people are set to appear before a potential worldwide audience later this year with the release of a major motion picture. Rob Connolly, who directed The Dry, shot in the region last year, described this week how the locality had played a key role in telling the story adapted from author Jane Harper’s award-winning book of the same name.

He said in providing the backdrop to the project, the Wimmera-Mallee had produced both ‘wonderful’ filming opportunities and experiences. Connolly, whose previous credits include award-winning films Balibo and Paper Planes, said an Australian release of the movie on August 27 represented an opportunity to show the region to a wide audience. “Jane Harper’s book is a massive global success, depicting the life and hardship faced in this area of Australia, and we are excited that the film

will expand on this audience as it is released in cinemas this year,” he said. “Jane joined us during production in the region too, for the opening scenes of the film, and fans of her book will have a chance to see the world of her book translated to the screen, with locations and cast very much responding to her writing.” Connolly said he had ‘fallen in love’ with the location while on reconnaissance for a setting with executive producer Eric Bana, who stars in the

movie, and the film’s location manager. “We were continually surprised by the wonderful opportunities each town offered up, and how perfectly suited they were for the locations described in Jane’s murder-mystery,” he said. “The epic landscape of this region is also massively cinematic suiting the large format ambition for the film.” The Dry is an award-winning crime mystery set in a fictional town of Kie-

warra, which, based on its description, could easily be any drought-ravaged settlement undergoing economic downturn in north-western rural Victoria. Primary character Aaron Falk, played by Bana, is drawn into an investigation and web of intrigue when he returns to the country town of his youth to attend the funeral of his childhood best friend. Shooting occurred in various parts of Yarriambiack Shire from Murtoa to Beulah. Continued page 3

IN THIS ISSUE • Dr Grenfell leads coronavirus fight • Irish festival returns • Football-netball countdown Phone: 03 5382 1351 Read it online: www.theweeklyadvertiser.com.au

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