Joffa: The Movie
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Joffa: The Movie | |
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Directed by | Chris Liontos |
Produced by | Chris Liontos |
Starring |
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Release date |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$200,000 |
Joffa: The Movie is a 2010 independent Australian buddy movie starring Australian sports fan Joffa Corfe.[1] The film was financed by director and producer Chris Liontos.[2] Additional acting roles include performances by actor Shane McRae (who stars as Joffa's friend in the movie) along with cameos by Father Bob McGuire and Australian Football Hall of Fame legend Kevin Bartlett.
Plot
Joffa Corfe and Shane McRae star as a couple of knockabout handymen with a passion for the Collingwood Football Club. The pair is a magnet for trouble, which drives the local priest, Father Bob McGuire, to the point of despair.[3][4] Portrayed as an ordinary man, Joffa attracts the affection of thousands and the hatred of tens of thousands. The man who guides the Collingwood Cheer Squad would have no other way.
Corfe said that the ordinary people who inhabit his real world "give the movie its heart."[4] People such as Fr. Bob McGuire, Kevin Bartlett, and 93-year-old Mavis, used to attend dances with Ron Barassi's father.
One of the highlights for Australian audiences is hearing Good Old Collingwood Forever sung in Mandarin. Another is hearing a classic Australian food, the Chiko Roll, being explained to a Londoner.[4]
The Australian Council on Children and the Media said that the main messages from this movie are: "Working together as a team is what wins the game."[3] And "Mateship is one of the most important and meaningful things in life."[3]
Cast
The main cast includes:
- Joffa Corfe as Himself
- Shane McRae as Shane
- Fr. Bob McGuire as Himself
- Kevin Bartlett as Himself
Rating
The Australian Government Classification Board rated Joffa: The Movie as PG -- Parental Guidance Recommended[3] for its mild coarse language.[3]
Production
Script
Producer-director Chris Liontos started out by wondering why nobody was making films about Aussie Rules football.[4] His inspiration was The Club (1980), a classic Australian movie.[4] He decided to explore the world of Aussie Rules "through the eyes of the most passionate supporter in the country."[4]
Filming
The overseas segments were filmed cheaply, with crew living in backpacker bunk-rooms eating baked beans and dodging crack addicts.[4]
Budget
The budget was less than A$200,000. "I took a risk on fully self-funding this, no grants at all", said Liontos. "A lot of films these days do get a lot of (government) funding. Nobody goes and sees them."[4]
The risk appeared to pay off. The film was released nationally on 2 September 2010. For such "an ultra-low budget movie to get a national cinema release – this has never happened (before)," Liontos said.[5]
Locations
The film is set partly in Australia (Melbourne and Drouin, Victoria) and partly in the UK (London and Glasgow).[4]
Celtic F.C.
Although best known as an active supporter of Australian Rules football, Corfe takes an interest in the Scottish Premier League soccer club Celtic F.C. So much so, that he included a pilgrimage to Celtic Park, Glasgow, in the movie.[6]
Critical reception
The film has received a mixed reception. While Collingwood supporters provide uniformly positive reviews, non-Collingwood fans were less than thrilled.[7] Greg King of FilmReviews.net.au said that "the only thing more excruciating than sitting through this film would be to endure watching Collingwood win another premiership."[8]
Professional reviewer Leigh Paatsch[7] said that "With his tatty jacket of gold, albino mullet hairdo and a face made for keeping birds off crops, the infamous general of the Collingwood cheer squad was never going to be your typical movie star." He added that "Joffa is definitely a natural in front of the cameras. Just a shame that those behind the cameras of Joffa: The Movie are not."[7]
The Australian Council on Children and the Media said that Joffa: The Movie is a "light-hearted mockumentary targeting an adult audience, but which may appeal to those adolescents with an interest in football. The film has some funny moments, particularly those involving Father Bob."[3]
Donna Demaio, reporter for The Age, likened the movie to Kenny, another famous Australian mockumentary.[9]
DVD release
Joffa: The Movie was released nationally in Australia on 2 December 2010 by Madman Entertainment.[10]
See also
- Cinema of Australia
- List of Australian films
- Australian films of 2010
- List of films set in Australia
- List of films shot in Melbourne
References
- ^ "Joffa gets his own full-length movie". Archived from the original on 9 February 2010. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
- ^ Nick's Bulletin Board – Joffa: The Movie...IN CINEMAS!
- ^ a b c d e f "Joffa the Movie". The Australian Council on Children and the Media, 30 August 2010. Archived from the original on 20 February 2011. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Joffa the Collingwood Super Fan to star in his very own movie". Terry Brown, Herald Sun, 9 February 2010. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
- ^ "A finals cinema fling for crusty Pie Jeff 'Joffa' Corfe". Terry Brown, Herald Sun, 30 July 2010. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
- ^ Celtic F.C. discuss Joffa: The Movie
- ^ a b c "Joffa hits big time in his first film". Terry Brown, Herald Sun, 5 June 2010. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
- ^ "Joffa the Movie". Greg King, FilmReviews.net.au, 5 September 2010. Archived from the original on 8 September 2010. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
- ^ Joffa: You bloody idiot
- ^ Madman website – DVD release
External links
- Official website
- Trailer for Joffa: The Movie on YouTube
- 3AW interview Joffa gets his own full-length movie
- Joffa's Front Page
- Australian Council on Children & the Media Joffa the Movie
- Joffa: You bloody idiot The Age reporter Donna Demaio speaks to Joffa about his movie and tries on the gold jacket for size
- 2010 films
- 2010 independent films
- Australian sports comedy films
- Australian rules football films
- Films set in Melbourne
- Films shot in Melbourne
- Australian independent films
- 2010s mockumentary films
- Association football films
- 2010 directorial debut films
- 2010s English-language films
- English-language independent films