Charmian Clift – Life Burns High

Directed by Rachel Lane
Australia
2024
80 mins

Synopsis

An intriguing portrait of Charmian Clift: a household name in the 1960’s and one of Australia’s finest writers.

Born in 1920s Kiama, teenage Charmian escaped to Sydney and after the war scored a newspaper job in Melbourne where she met leading war correspondent George Johnston. Tired of Australian postwar conservatism, the couple left for Europe, finally settling on Hydra, where an artists’ colony formed which included Leonard Cohen. Returning to Sydney, Charmian found success writing a newspaper column, but George’s ill health and a new novel rumoured to be critical of his wife, fractured their creative partnership, and tragedy ensued. Interest in Charmian’s work has revived with the recent publication of her unfinished novel The End of Morning, which was put aside to help her husband write his Miles Franklin winner My Brother Jack. This absorbing documentary is the latest film to explore undermined female artists (see Mozart’s Sister).

Limited seats are available for patrons requiring access for wheelchairs, low vision and hearing loop. Please contact our ticketing team directly on 1300 733 733 or tickets@sff.org.au to complete your booking.

Flexipasses cannot be redeemed for Back By Popular Demand sessions 

Tickets

Wed 12 June 2024, 8am
Event Cinemas George Street - Cinema 9
Assisted ListeningWheelchair
Sat 15 June 2024, 5:30am
State Library of NSW
Assisted ListeningWheelchair
Thu 20 June 2024, 8:15am
Ritz Cinemas Randwick - Cinema 3
Assisted ListeningWheelchair
  • Year
    2024
  • Country
    Australia
  • Language
    English
  • Director
    Rachel Lane
  • Producer
    Rachel Lane, Co-Producer: Sue Milliken
  • Screenwriter
    Rachel Lane
  • Cinematographer
    Jake Blackman
  • Editor
    Kenny Ang
  • Genre
    Australian Films, World Premieres, Women Directors, Focus on Women, Literary & Adaptations, Biography
  • Premiere
    World Premiere
  • Company Credits
    Australian Distributor: Bonsai Films
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Sydney Film festival acknowledges Australia’s First Nations People as the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the land, and pay respect to the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, upon whose Country SFF is based.

We honour the storytelling and culture of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities across Australia.

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