Warwick Freeman Warwick Freeman i(A121165 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 Demonstrator : Filmmaker Notes Warwick Freeman , 2010 single work single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Perspectives Essays 2010;
'Demonstrator was a logical step for Freeman Fishburn Productions. We were experienced television and stage producers and directors, having driven the innovative and popular shows of the time - Mavis Brampston, Bandstand, Jacques Brel etc etc. I had moved into movies with the Goldsworthy features... it was time to direct an Australian feature. We were certainly ahead of the game... Demonstrator was 1971, the Australian Film Commission was not formed until 1973 and after that came Picnic and Mad Max and Caddie and ....funding. In hindsight, we should have waited! ' (Introduction)
1 1 form y separately published work icon Demonstrator Kit Denton , ( dir. Warwick Freeman ) Australia : Freeman-Fishburn International , 1971 Z1563217 1971 single work film/TV Set in Canberra, Australia's capital city, Demonstrator concerns an Asian security conference organised by the government's Defence Minister, Joe Slater. Tension arises between Slater and his son Steven, who is leading a student protest against the conference. By the narrative's end, Steven has been beaten up, rejected by both his father and his girlfriend (Joe Slater's secretary), and seen what was to be a peaceful demonstration taken over by professional agitators.
1 form y separately published work icon The Rovers Kenneth Hayles , Ron McLean , Michael Wright , Ted Roberts , Ralph Peterson , Glyn Davies , Kenneth Cook , Brian Wright , Ted Hepple , Rosamund Waring , Peter Schreck , Michael Latimer , Anne Hall , ( dir. John von Kotze et. al. )agent Australia : NLT Productions , 1969 Z1823397 1969 series - publisher film/TV adventure

Like The Adventures of the Seaspray and Barrier Reef, The Rovers was an adventure series based around a ship (in this case, an island schooner called the Pacific Lady). The concept allowed for a great degree of mobility, so that, in Moran's words (in his Guide to Australian TV Series), they 'drop anchor, go ashore and "have adventures".'

The crew consisted of Captain Sam McGill (called 'Cap'), Cap's ten-year-old grandson Mike, freelance wildlife photographer Bob Wild, and journalist for Wildlife magazine Rusty Collins, 'whose editor agreed to her accompanying the party on the boat as long as it doesn't cost him anything' (according to Don Storey, in his Classic Australian Television).

Moran says of The Rovers that it 'was a bargain basement variation of the Barrier Reef formula' (despite the fact that Barrier Reef didn't air until nearly two years later, in February 1971). But Don Storey similarly notes that

To be fair, The Rovers could not be considered a ground-breaking pinnacle of artistic achievement, following as it does the well-trodden path taken by Seaspray, Skippy and Woobinda. However, for all its predicability and happy ending, The Rovers is a slick, well-produced and entertaining product, with a balance between the dramatic and the light-hearted that appealed to adults and children alike.

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