Jordan Prosser Jordan Prosser i(A120758 works by)
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 1 y separately published work icon Big Time Jordan Prosser , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2024 26852251 2024 single work novel fantasy 'Set in a not-too-distant future where the Eastern states of Australia have become the world’s newest autocracy – a place where pop music is propaganda, science is the enemy, nationalism trumps all – Big Time is an anti- fascist ode to the power of pop music and a lament for the end of your 20s. A satirical black comedy about art in the face of entropy, wrapped up in a spec-fic road-trip saga.' 

(Publication summary)

1 The Long Shadow Australian Cinema’s Fealty to Hollywood Jordan Prosser , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 456 2023; (p. 64)

— Review of Cast Mates : Australian Actors in Hollywood and at Home Sam Twyford-Moore , 2023 multi chapter work biography

'A confession: I was a child actor. Never a child star, although certainly that was the intention. For years I endured the three-hour drive from Canberra to Sydney, preparing for my five-minute meeting with some Surry Hills casting director, whose first question would inevitably be ‘How’s your American accent?’ The zenith of my career was a thirty-second commercial for the orange-flavoured soft drink Mirinda, a merchandising tie-in with the release of Spider-Man 2, shot at Fox Studios on a full-sized replica of a New York subway carriage. On the soundstage next door, Baz Luhrmann was directing Nicole Kidman in their famously extravagant campaign for Chanel No. 5. There we all were: Australians in Australia, pretending to be Americans for America. Even at that early age, I sensed that Australian cinema existed in the long shadow of Hollywood, and that there has always been, as Sam Twyford-Moore expertly describes in his new book, ‘some kind of psychic gangway between Sydney and Los Angeles’.'(Introduction)

1 Eleuterio Cabrera's Beautiful Game Jordan Prosser , 2022 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin , September vol. 81 no. 3 2022; (p. 66-71) Meanjin Online 2022;
1 Fable or Fact : A Storyteller First and Foremost Jordan Prosser , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , October no. 447 2022; (p. 62)

— Review of Three Thousand Years of Longing George Miller , Augusta Gore , 2022 single work film/TV

'For the casual moviegoer unconcerned by matters of auteurship, it can still come as something of a shock to learn that the person behind the original Mad Max trilogy (1979–85), as well as its decade-defining follow-up, Mad Max: Fury Road (2015), also brought us the madcap animal antics of Babe: Pig in the City (1998) and the all-singing, all-dancing penguin colony of Happy Feet (2006) and Happy Feet 2 (2011). George Miller has one of the most eclectic oeuvres in modern cinema, but all his films are defined by a rich, seemingly limitless vein of imagination, as well as by the technical and aesthetic mastery necessary to mine it. Whether dabbling in live-action or 3D animation – whether wrangling penguins, pigs, or eighteen-wheeler ‘War Rigs’ – Miller is a storyteller first and foremost. It stands to reason that his latest film is a story about stories themselves: where they come from, what they mean to us, and what their place is (if any) in the modern world.'  (Introduction)

1 Breakneck Elvis : Baz Luhrmann’s Signature Maximalist Style Jordan Prosser , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , July no. 444 2022; (p. 63)

— Review of Elvis Baz Luhrmann , Craig Pearce , 2022 single work film/TV

'Crafting a biopic is a near-impossible act of curation; of the hundreds of thousands of hours that make up a person’s life, which two and a half will accurately sum up their entire existence? Some recent attempts, like the excellent Steve Jobs (2015) or the Judy Garland biopic Judy (2019), limit their slice of life to a handful of defining moments and allow the viewer to extrapolate from there, essentially opting for quality over quantity – a mantra no one would ever accuse director Baz Luhrmann of adopting.' (Introduction)   

1 Strange Beast : An Audacious Experiment in Science Fiction Jordan Prosser , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , May no. 442 2022; (p. 64)

— Review of Loveland Ivan Sen , 2022 single work film/TV
1 The Power of the Dog : A Stiff Shot of Pure Cinema Jordan Prosser , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December no. 438 2021; (p. 67)

— Review of The Power of the Dog Jane Campion , 2021 single work film/TV

'After eighteen months of wayward blockbusters and couch-ready, pandemical streaming entertainment, Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog arrives like a stiff shot of pure cinema. Adapted from Thomas Savage’s 1967 book of the same name, Campion’s film offers no quick thrills, no easy answers, no simple heroes, and no mercy for its inhabitants. It’s a rare beast in an industry increasingly split between shoestring-budget genre films and $200 million franchise toppers; a quintessential adult drama.' (Introduction)

1 An Exasperating Game of Cluedo : The New Dramatisation of Liane Moriarty Jordan Prosser , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , November no. 437 2021; (p. 66-67)

— Review of Nine Perfect Strangers Samantha Strauss , David E. Kelley , John Henry Butterworth , 2020 series - publisher film/TV

'Picture this: a taut, ninety-minute thriller featuring some of Hollywood’s biggest names, based on a bestseller from a literary big-hitter. A slow-burn mystery about a group of wealthy strangers, each with their own dark secrets and buried traumas, arriving at a boutique wellness spa for a ten-day retreat. Nicole Kidman starring as the enigmatic, ethereal Russian wellness guru Masha Dmitrichenko, who has specifically chosen these guests to carry out a series of risky experiments involving cutting-edge psychotherapy and mind-altering drugs. An hour and a half of rich character drama and suspense that builds to an intriguing philosophical twist. Now imagine that same story, stretched well beyond the longevity of its initial premise to a bloated eight-hour runtime, robbing it of coherent structure and narrative tension. An unwieldy hydra of tone and storytelling style. An exasperating parade of superficial soul-baring and perfunctory plot table-setting, leaving its exceptional cast treading water week in, week out. There you have Hulu’s recently concluded Nine Perfect Strangers, a show that epitomises the era of Peak TV while simultaneously embodying a compelling argument against it.' (Introduction)

1 Knotty Traumas : A Sophisticated Depiction of Mental Illness Jordan Prosser , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 432 2021; (p. 65-66)

— Review of Wakefield Kristen Dunphy , Sam Meikle , Joan Sauers , Cathy Strickland , 2021 series - publisher film/TV
1 The Adventures of Jay Swan : A New Series of Mystery Road Jordan Prosser , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , August no. 423 2020; (p. 70-71)

— Review of Mystery Road Michaeley O'Brien , Steven McGregor , Kodie Bedford , Jon Bell , Timothy Lee , Blake Ayshford , Danielle MacLean , 2018 series - publisher film/TV
'As a genre, the western springs from colonial tension: tension between the old ways and the new; between the native people and an invading population; between humans and the land itself, between lore and the law. There are no westerns set in Britain. And while the gun-slinging adventures of cowboy frontiersmen have receded into the background of American culture, the genre remains ripe with critical and narrative potential for more freshly colonised countries like Australia.' (Introduction) 
 
1 Catharsis : An Australian Film About PTSD Jordan Prosser , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June-July no. 422 2020; (p. 61-62)

— Review of Hearts and Bones Ben Lawrence , Beatrix Christian , 2019 single work film/TV

'Post-traumatic stress disorder is a slippery condition to pin down and portray. Cinema in general struggles to convey the depth and nuance of mental illness, especially when it stems from trauma. We’re often left with frenzied flashbacks, bombastic sound design, and overripe performances that skirt dangerously close to parody. A mental illness is like a haunting, which may be why genre cinema – especially the horror genre – has recently found such success exploring the topic.' (Introduction)

1 [Review] True History of the Kelly Gang Jordan Prosser , 2020 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , March no. 419 2020; (p. 62-63)

— Review of True History of the Kelly Gang Shaun Grant , 2018 single work film/TV

'So opens Ned Kelly’s personal journal, addressed to his future daughter. The irony of this heartfelt promise, of course, is that Kelly never kept a journal. Even his unborn child and her mother are inventions of Peter Carey, author of the much-acclaimed True History of the Kelly Gang (2000). The ‘truth’ in the title of his work, and now in the new adaptation directed by Australian filmmaker Justin Kurzel – Snowtown (2011), Macbeth (2015) – is a deliberate provocation. It dares the reader (or in this case, the viewer) to take umbrage with any of the fanciful details contained therein.'

1 The Landlords Jordan Prosser , Sam Burns-Warr , 2007 single work drama
X