Andrew Kavanagh

Andrew Kavanagh

略歴

Andrew Kavanagh was educated at the Victorian College of the Arts and is a screenwriter and filmmaker. Kavanagh experiments with unusual devices, to offer fresh perspectives on familiar subjects. His graduation film At the Formal (2011) won several awards, including Best Emerging Australian Filmmaker at the Melbourne Film Festival. Men of the Earth is the second film in his Short Collisions trilogy. Welcome Home Allen (2016) is the third part.

プロフィール写真

Andrew Kavanagh

参加作品

Welcome Home Allen
Writer
A group of soldiers return home to a world that no longer recognises them.
Welcome Home Allen
Director
A group of soldiers return home to a world that no longer recognises them.
Men of the Earth
Writer
Traffic is delayed on the edge of a roadwork site, but what are the council workers doing? A privileged encounter with a secret somber ritual of working men. This is the second in Andrew Kavanagh’s trilogy (after the successful "At The Formal’) exploring tribalism and ritual in contemporary society.
Men of the Earth
Music
Traffic is delayed on the edge of a roadwork site, but what are the council workers doing? A privileged encounter with a secret somber ritual of working men. This is the second in Andrew Kavanagh’s trilogy (after the successful "At The Formal’) exploring tribalism and ritual in contemporary society.
Men of the Earth
Editor
Traffic is delayed on the edge of a roadwork site, but what are the council workers doing? A privileged encounter with a secret somber ritual of working men. This is the second in Andrew Kavanagh’s trilogy (after the successful "At The Formal’) exploring tribalism and ritual in contemporary society.
Men of the Earth
Director
Traffic is delayed on the edge of a roadwork site, but what are the council workers doing? A privileged encounter with a secret somber ritual of working men. This is the second in Andrew Kavanagh’s trilogy (after the successful "At The Formal’) exploring tribalism and ritual in contemporary society.
At the Formal
Director
Modern and ancient rituals collide in this macabre depiction of a high school formal.