mdblist.com logo The Best Tony Williams Directed Movies


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poster
68
61
6.2
/5031/
63
/196/
62
/119/
3.4
/16235/
100
/9/
54
/28/

Next of Kin (1982)
After Linda inherits a retirement home, she witnesses a series of strange events which seem connected to a dark and unspeakable evil.
poster
?
6.0
/68/
53
/3/

Solo (1977)
When a young Australian hitchhiker, Judy (Peers), enters a prohibited forest area, she encounters Paul (Gil) whose job is spotting fires from a plane. She is invited to stay with him and his teen son, Billy. Later they go on a sightseeing flight in a "Tiger Moth" bi-plane, but having a forced landing, are accommodated by an odd elderly couple.
poster
?
10
/1/

The Hum (1974)
Documentary about sailing legend Geoff Stagg and his yacht Whispers.
poster
?
8.9
/27/
38
/2/

A Place Called Robertson (2013)
A celebration of the spirit found in an Australian rural village. Old timer farmers rub shoulders with newcomer creative people which include some of Australia's most famous artists and composers seeking a tree change. They discover in Robertson there is more than just trees. Above all, the residents of Robertson want to retain their town as a rural village. Collectively the community, old and new, vigorously fight against the invasion of the outside world, threats of a large jail, bores which deplete the aquifers and coal seam gas mining. In a contemporary world that sometimes questions the advantages of social media technology, A Place Called Robertson is a snapshot of traditional Australian values, a magical film, celebrating the spirit that can be found in a small Australian rural village.
poster
?
10
/1/

The Day We Landed on the Most Perfect Planet in the Universe (1971)
A documentary taking its cues from children's imaginative flights of fancy.
poster
?
10
/1/
60
/1/

The Sound of Seeing (1963)
Made on a wind-up Bolex camera, The Sound of Seeing announced the arrival of 21-year-old filmmaker Tony Williams. Based around a painter and a composer wandering the city (and beyond), the film meshes music and imagery to show the duo taking inspiration from their surroundings.
poster
?
10
/1/

Getting Together (1971)
A documentary about socialising and society in early 1970s New Zealand.
poster
?

Lost in the Garden of the World (1975)
Cannes is the town in France where Bergman meets bikinis, and the art of filmmaking meets the art of the deal. In 1975, a group of expat Kiwis managed to score interviews with some of the festival's emerging talents, indulging their own cinematic dreams in the process. Werner Herzog waxes lyrical on the trials and scars of directing; a boyish Steven Spielberg recalls the challenges of framing shots during Jaws; Martin Scorsese and Dustin Hoffman talk a gallon.


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