![Kate Lyn Sheil in Kate Plays Christine, screening at MIFF 2016.](/web/20160802162253im_/http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/content/dam/images/g/q/e/4/8/r/image.related.landscape.460x307.gqi59f.png/1470040754936.jpg)
Kate Plays Christine review: Documentary turns Christine Chubbuck story into a compelling meta narrative
Kate Plays Christine is utterly compelling
Karl has held a variety of senior editing and writing roles since joining Fairfax Media in 1999. Most recently he was The Age's entertainment editor from 2009-2012. As national film editor, he oversees our film coverage in print and on our digital platforms.
Kate Plays Christine is utterly compelling
Qantas never crashes, said Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. But Netflix does.
It took a little nudge, but Homer Simpson has finally declared for Hillary, and self-interest, of course.
The shocking on-air death of TV presenter Christine Chubbuck in 1974 had all but faded from memory, but two very different films have put it back on screen.
It's been more than a decade since Rachel Ward acted on screen, but the chance to share a role with daughter Matilda Brown tempted her back.
He may be Britain's 'greatest living filmmaker', but that doesn't mean making films is getting any easier for Terence Davies.
The TV ratings are about to get a big overhaul, in a bid to keep pace with the way our viewing habits have changed.
The last VHS player is set to roll off the production line this month, but that doesn't mean there's no life left in the format.
It was her first report since the bungled child abduction scandal in Lebanon, so how did Tara Brown do in her much-hyped return to 60 Minutes?
With its identically dressed blonde children and its use of LSD, The Family was one of the stranger outposts of the counter-culture. And it's not finished yet.
Search pagination