“We are delighted to be bringing this remarkable, forgotten story home to Australasian audiences,” the filmmakers said. “We were overwhelmed by the response the film had at its world premiere in Berlin. We can’t wait to screen the film in Australia.” David Mallet, who directed the video for Let’s Dance (and its follow-up, China Girl), is one of many collaborators the filmmakers interviewed for the project. Bowie, Mallet notes, has an uncanny knack of knowing what he wants (and what will work), saying that, “Let’s Dance was unlike any other video… MTV jumped on it, and played the hell out of it.” Nile Rodgers, the legendary Chic front man who produced the Let’s Dance LP with Bowie, adds that their crossover record was “a new kind of dance music” that appealed to both black and white audiences, with its visual interpretation reflecting a broad-based, cross-cultural appeal. Let’s Dance –which introduced contemporary Indigenous Australians to a worldwide television audience –transformed Bowie from cult hero to global phenomenon. It remains his most popular release, with single and album sales in excess of 10 million copies worldwide. Let’s Dance: Bowie Down Under will have its Australasian premiere at the 64th Melbourne International Film Festival (MIFF) on Sunday, August 9th. Tickets can be accessed via the festival’s official site: www.miff.com.au These exclusive Australasian screenings follow the film’s celebrated world premiere, in competition, at the 65th Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) earlier this year. |