Friday, 17 May 2013

Duo Art Productions

Duo Art Productions

Producer of feature films and documentaries, Duo Art takes projects from conception through to the global marketplace. Currently in post production on Wolf Creek 2.. Key projects in development are a feature on the Australian WW1 General sir John Monash and his crucial role in ending the war, and a romantic ghost story. Duo Art Entertainment is the company's distribution arm for its home territory of Australasia.

FEATURES
Swerve

Swerve

Pulsing with menace, writer-director Craig Lahiff's "Swerve" reorients the noir tradition, setting it within the South Australian outback.
Driving cross-country to a job interview, Colin (David Lyons) opts for a shortcut and happens across a fatal car accident. One of the drivers (Emma Booth) is shaken but not hurt, while the other lies dead - leaving a briefcase full of money without an owner. Despite his best intentions, Colin quickly finds himself drawn into a deadly game of survival, where no one is quite what they seem.
FILM DESCRIPTION  PLAY TRAILER
Swerve

Black And White

BLACK AND WHITE is a compelling period drama about one man's conviction that changed a nation.
An excitable young lawyer, David O'Sullivan (Robert Carlyle), finds he has drawn a 'bad lottery prize'; he must defend a young Aboriginal man Max Stuart (David Ngoombujarra) who has been arrested for the murder of a nine year old girl in the remote desert town of Ceduna. O'Sullivan suspects that Max has been framed by police and he and his legal partner, Helen Devaney (Kerry Fox), embark on a 'David and Goliath' battle against the charismatic Roderic Chamberlain, the Crown prosecutor (Charles Dance).
Just when all seems lost, O'Sullivan finds a new ally in Rupert Murdoch (Ben Mendelsohn), then a young tabloid publisher trying to make a name for himself.
FILM DESCRIPTION  PLAY TRAILER

Something blue...





Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Kathmandu Animal Treatment Centre - Together, let us create a city where cruelty to animals is eliminated.

Kathmandu Animal Centre Read here

The Situation of Stray Dogs
in Kathmandu, Nepal 

What is the KAT Centre?

The Kathmandu Animal Treatment Centre is a registered charitable animal welfare organization established in Kathmandu, Nepal. The Centre’s mission is to create within the Kathmandu Valley a rabies-free, non-breeding street dog population through Animal Birth Control (ABC), operating along the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for the management of stray dog populations.

A
                    stray dog with puppies in Kathmandu NepalThe city of Kathmandu, Nepal is home to more than 20,000 street dogs. They are commonly afflicted with injuries from collisions with cars, starvation, open sores with maggot infections, severe skin problems such as mange, and infectious ailments. Puppies especially struggle to survive in hostile environments.
Some stray dogs in Nepal carry rabies and other dangerous diseases which put people, particularly children who often play in the streets, at risk. Every year, around 200 people in Nepal die of rabies (most of whom are children), and 16,000 are treated for dog bites.
'Wherever the KAT team has targeted, there is significant and visible improvement in the standard of living.'
 – Carolyn Rafferty of California
A Nepali stray dog with mange getting treatment
                    and food at the KAT CentreThe Kathmandu city government used to poison more than 10,000 street dogs each year with strychnine, in an attempt to control the street dog population. This is a horrific form of death, throwing the dogs into violent seizures for up to nine hours before they die. The poison is scattered on the streets in lumps of meat, where it is a danger to children (who often play in the streets) and people's pets.
The dog carcasses are dumped in piles and left to decompose in the river beds. As many Kathmandu residents depend on the river for their drinking water, this creates a serious health hazard. Furthermore, this method is ineffective because the remaining dogs breed and the dog population returns to its original size within a year.
Through an agreement between the KAT Centre and the government of Kathmandu, the government no longer poisons stray dogs in the areas where KAT works.
Learn how the KAT Centre is improving the situation of Nepal's stray dogs
Read some of the incredible stories of stray dogs who have been saved by KAT!
Learn more about rabies in Kathmandu and throughout Nepal

Help here

Thursday, 9 May 2013

The Diggers Club

The Diggers Club
What's in a name? Diggers was born on July 1978 in an old tin shed! Our purpose was to rescue the wonderful old varieties of vegetables, such as Scarlet Runner Beans, that mainstream companies were dropping from their lists.
Due to the buying power of Coles and Woolworths, the only way to reach the keenest gardeners was to set up mail order distribution, bypassing retail shops. Over the past 30 years, a hardware collossus, such as Bunnings, have gained dominance and now control the garden market, just as Coles and Woolworths control the fruit and vegetable market. Buying food, rather than growing it at home, is a greater contributor to climate change than all the CO2 from coal fired power stations. Multinational chemical companies, like Monsanto, can now introduce chemicals into our food supply (ie: G.M. seeds), which threatens our health and the existence of our best plant varieties.
So to preserve our best plants and garden traditions, and to help solve climate change, Digger's has to become a club for subversive gardeners. We are anti-G.M. and anti-industrial agriculture and pro-organic, as we campaign to increase the growing of food in our backyards.

click here read about The GM debate
Along with avoiding chemicals and seeking better taste and nutrition, one of the top five reasons people choose to buy organic products is because it is one of the only sure ways of avoiding the untested genetically modified (GM) organisms that are slowly and silently creeping into our food supply.
GM is strictly prohibited in the Australian Certified Organic Standard (ACOS).  The GM debate has raged for years and surveys consistently find that the majority of people are very uncomfortable about GM-derived ingredients in their food, yet governments turn a blind eye, fold to the all-powerful lobbyists of the multinational chemical corporations and allow the planting of GM crops.
State politicians come and go rapidly and their privileged position often allows actions that leave lasting and dangerous legacies – like the sanctioning and release of the cane toad – long after the members are forgotten in their local electorate.

 Triple b biodynamic beef
We aim to educate consumers to the benefits both to their health and most importantly to the environment of biological (both biodynamic and organic) farming.  We also hope to raise awareness of animal welfare, food miles and eating local seasonal food.  Since the end of World War II there have been dramatic and detrimental changes to agriculture.  Many people would have heard about terrorists purchasing bomb making fertiliser products from hardware stores, but don’t realise that synthetic fertilisers came about due to what was left over from the bomb making industries of WW1.  Many people don’t understand the enormous problems created by lot fed cattle – not only is it obscene that in a world with millions starving, more grain is grown to feed cattle than people !  Cattle are not biologically designed to eat grain, but worst of all is the cruelty of keeping animals in such conditions.  Feedlots can be seen from space – brown desert-like areas where animals are living in their own waste.   We would urge everyone to read David Suzuki’s latest book “The Legacy” and understand that we need to act locally to save our environment – we can all do something on a local basis and as he comments we must think of the next 7 generations to come, as native people have done throughout history.

Somerton Park