Screen Culture Pty Limited, film production company founded by Janet Merewether.
ABOUT SCREEN CULTURE
Screen Culture Pty Limited, founded by award-winning director/producer Dr Janet Merewether in 2007, is engaged in the production of visually creative quality long-form documentary and media programs for the Australian and International marketplace. Screen Culture’s productions are distinctively provocative, progressive and playful. The company promotes the creative expression of ideas through the integration of sophisticated visual design with compelling storytelling.
See also
GO GIRL PRODUCTIONS for further
information about
short film,
media art and documentaries by
Janet Merewether
http://gogirlproductions.com.au
Recent award winning productions include:
‘Maverick Mother’
52minute documentary
http://www.maverickmother.net
WINNER – Audience Award – TIDF Taiwan International Documentary Festival 2008 WINNER – Jury Special Mention – TIDF Taiwan International Documentary Festival 2008 WINNER Best Australian Documentary – General and Human Interest Categories - ATOM Awards 2008
‘Jabe Babe – A Heightened Life’
52minute documentary
http://gogirlproductions.com.au/jbhome.html WINNER – Merit Award – TIDF Taiwan International Documentary Festival 2006 WINNER – AFI Award for Best Directing in Documentary 2005
WINNER – IF Discovery Award for Best Australian Documentary 2005
'MAVERICK MOTHER'.
52 minute hybrid documentary
'At 39, Janet's biological clock was chiming a deafening 'tic-toc'. A film about solo motherhood by choice and the contemporary role of the father.'
Written, Directed and Produced by
Janet Merewether
Produced by Screen Culture Pty Limited
Financed by
SBS Independent, the Film
Finance Corporation and the New South
Wales Film and Television Office.
PREMIERED ON SBS TELEVISION FRIDAY 1st FEBRUARY 2008 10pm
SHORT SYNOPSIS
Tired of waiting for the perfect partner, and alarmed by the deafening tic-toc of her biological clock, 39-year-old filmmaker Janet Merewther decides to take life into her own hands and embark on a journey into the new social phenomenon of solo motherhood by choice.
EXTENDED SYNOPSIS
Maverick Mother. Tired of waiting for the perfect partner, and alarmed by the deafening tic-toc of her biological clock, 39 year-old filmmaker Janet Merewether decides to take life into her own hands and embark on a journey into the new social phenomenon of solo motherhood by choice. She joins a waiting list for a donor insemination program, but while waiting has an affair with a Swiss man and falls pregnant. After the birth of her son Arlo, her journey now becomes that of solo motherhood by chance.
Janet documents her medical and emotional experiences and the birth of her son Arlo, through personal and at times irreverent video diaries and performed studio reconstructions which rework the traditional image of the ‘ideal mother’, Darwinian concepts of ‘natural selection’ and definitions of the role of the father. The film interweaves observational video footage, including the birth, as well as constructing imagery from genres such as the horror film, which represent the public’s aversion to the visceral, messy reality of birth.
The film follows Janet and Arlo during their first year together. Along the way Janet films her own family, including her father, as she attempts to analyse the role of the traditional father and the nuclear family. What are the implications of an absent father for a young boy and what role will other men play in Arlo’s life? The film charts Janet’s attempts to contact the biological father, her eventual phone contact when Arlo is 10 months old, then her realisation and shock that Arlo’s grandparents are no longer living in Switzerland but are here in suburban Sydney. They then receive a surprise visit from Arlo’s father on her son’s first birthday, before he again goes into hiding. From an initial expectation of knowing no paternal relatives, Janet suddenly learns that Arlo has new members of an extended family. But will he ever meet them, and will the father be willing to establish an ongoing relationship with his son? Does Janet feel threatened or worried now that she may have to relinquish some responsibility and control over her son’s life?
Solo motherhood is now on the verge of becoming chic in the west, a sign of ultimate reproductive independence for women. This documentary taps into a very current and contentious debate about many women’s inability to find a suitable and willing male partner with whom they can have children.
The film interrogates the nature of ‘family’ in contemporary western society and contemplates the past, present and future concepts of solo motherhood, and the attitudes of women who, rather than being ‘left on the shelf’ by men because they are too smart, too funny, too ‘ugly’, too talented or too independent, embrace their own sexuality and fertility to immerse themselves in life’s greatest love and greatest challenge.
MAVERICK MOTHER WAS
DEVELOPED IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE
AUSTRALIAN FILM COMMISSION
PRODUCED IN ASSOCIATION WITH
SBS INDEPENDENT (SBSi)
THE NEW SOUTH WALES FILM AND TELEVISION OFFICE (FTO)
THE FILM FINANCE CORPORATION (FFC)
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