Rubberman Accepts The Nobel Prize

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A superhero who speaks only the language of dance makes an outrageous, graceful and rambunctious physical acceptance speech.Key Credits:Director: Karen PearlmanWriters: Karen Pearlman and Richard James AllenProducers: Daniella Ortega and Richard James AllenChoreographer: Richard James AllenCinematographer: Tim SpicerProduction Designer: Kate E. WillsCostume Designer: Justine SeymourEditor/Digital Effects: Andy CannySound Designer/Composer: Serge StanleyAnd appearing as Rubberman: Richard James AllenA Physical TV Company Production in association withthe Australian Film, Television and Radio School.Duration: 6 minutesYear completed: Copyright © 2001DistributorsTheatrical Distributors:The Physical TV Companyand The Australian Film, Television and Radio SchoolNon-Theatrical Distributor Australia and New Zealand:Marcom Projects as part of 3 Physical Digital Videos.Non-Theatrical Distributor USA:Artworks Video.Awards and ReviewsRubberman was shortlisted for Best Dance Film at the 2001 Australian Dance Awards and shortlisted for Best Short Film at Shepparton Shorts Short Film Festival in Victoria.It won the 2001 AFTRS Critic's Circle Award for Best Production Design for Kate E. Wills. It featured in Dance,Camera, Action2, Dennis Alexander's trailer for the 3rd Constellation Change Screen Dance Festival in London, which won the DPA Award in Germany for Best Editing in a promotional trailer.Rubberman has been described in glowing terms in Independent Filmmaker magazine by Christopher Strickland." Karen Pearlman (writer/director) and Richard Allen (writer/choreographer/performer) deliver this quirky and energetic short on the trails of Rubberman -- an indomitable superhero in black rubber suit and a helmet of styled pink rubber hair." Rubberman's Nobel prize acceptance speech (a voiced-over translation of his native language of dance) riffs on the enduring power of flexibility and the ability to bounce back. He reveals that only under attack from alien forces has he realised his chameleonic nature as liquid and solid, finally thanking his enemies for forcing him beyond the limits he had imagined for himself."Part poetic manifesto, part movement piece, Rubberman also does karate in comic strip colours, KAPOW! style text harking back to the days of cheesy Batman stoushes. Warped screen effects and lightning zooms show that the Physical TV Company is easing with maturity into film, doing much more with it than merely recording performance. They also seem to be the only bunch attempting this sort of thing in Australia, and doing it well."Rubberman web page on The Physical TV Company website: http://www.physicaltv.com.au/RubbermanAcceptsTheNobelPrizeThePhysicalTvCompanyRichardJamesAllenAndKarenPearlman_500_1078_3_0.html

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