Haven't we all at some point in time fantasized about stepping through a cinema/TV screen and into the world of our favourite movies and television shows? I certainly have!

With its modern, urban setting and stunning harbour, it is easy to see why Sydney leads the way as an ideal and versatile shooting destination. Movies shot here have been set in New York (Godzilla: Final Wars, Kangaroo Jack), Chicago (The Matrix and sequels), London (Birthday Girl), Seville (Mission Impossible 2), Bombay (Holy Smoke), Darwin (Australia), Myanmar (Stealth), Mars (Red Planet) and the fictitious city of Metropolis (Superman Returns, Babe: Pig in the City).

Whether popular landmarks or off the beaten track locations that are often hard to find, you can now explore Sydney in a fun and unique way with the SYDNEY ON SCREEN walking guides. Catering to Sydneysiders as much as visitors, the guides have something to offer everyone, from history, architecture and movie buffs to nature lovers.

See where productions such as Superman Returns, The Matrix and sequels, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Candy, Mission Impossible 2, Mao's Last Dancer, Babe: Pig in the City, Kangaroo Jack, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Muriel's Wedding, The Bold and the Beautiful, Oprah's Ultimate Australian Adventure and many more were filmed.

Maps and up-to-date information on Sydney's attractions are provided to help you plan your walk. Pick and choose from the suggested itinerary to see as little or as much of the city as you like.

So, come and discover the landscapes and locations that draw filmmakers to magical Sydney, and walk in the footsteps of the stars!

A GREAT ALTERNATIVE TO EXPENSIVE TOURS, YOU CAN NOW ENJOY EXPLORING SYDNEY FOR UNDER $10 WITH THE SYDNEY ON SCREEN WALKING GUIDES. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT US AT SYDNEYONSCREEN@HOTMAIL.COM

Subscribe to the blog and keep up with all the latest Aussie film and entertainment news. Read about what the stars are up to, who's in town, what movies are currently filming or being promoted. Locate us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/sydneyonscreen and "like" our page!

Sydney on Screen walking guides now on sale!

Click on the picture above to see a preview of all four walking guides and on the picture below to see larger stills of Sydney movie and television locations featured in the slideshow!

Copyright © 2011 by Luke Brighty / Unless otherwise specified, all photographs on this blog copyright © 2011 by Luke Brighty


Sydney on Screen guides are now available for purchase at the following outlets:

Travel Concierge, Sydney International Airport, Terminal 1 Arrivals Hall (between gates A/B and C/D), Mascot - Ph: 1300 40 20 60

The Museum of Sydney shop, corner of Bridge & Phillip Streets, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9251 4678

The Justice & Police Museum shop, corner of Albert & Phillip Streets, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9252 1144

The Mint shop, 10 Macquarie Street, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8239 2416

Hyde Park Barracks shop, Queen Square, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8239 2311

Travel Up! (travel counter) c/o Wake Up Sydney Central, 509 Pitt Street, Sydney - Ph (02) 9288 7888

The Shangri-La Hotel (concierge desk), 176 Cumberland Street, The Rocks, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9250 6018

The Sebel Pier One (concierge desk), 11 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8298 9901

The Radisson Plaza Hotel Sydney (concierge desk), 27 O'Connell Street, Sydney - Ph: (02) 8214 0000

The Sydney Marriott Circular Quay (concierge desk), 30 Pitt Street, Sydney - Ph: (02) 9259 7000

Boobook on Owen, 1/68 Owen Street, Huskisson - Ph: (02) 4441 8585


NSW, interstate and international customers can order copies of Sydney on Screen using PayPal. Contact us at sydneyonscreen@hotmail.com to inquire about cost and shipping fees.


All four volumes of Sydney on Screen are available to download onto your PC or Kindle at:
Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.fr, Amazon.de, Amazon.es and Amazon.it


Sydney on Screen guides now ON SALE!

Looking for something fun to do over Easter? Running out of activities to suggest to visiting family or friends?

Thinking of what to get a mate for their birthday?

Look no further!

The Sydney on Screen walking guides are now on sale for a limited time.




Check out the following links on eBay to bid on the four available titles. You can now purchase the guides at the bargain price of AU$6.25/copy:

Volumes 1 & 2:
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/NEW-Travel-guides-Sydneys-movie-tv-locations-SYDNEY-SCREEN-1-2-/260991853944?pt=AU_TravelGuides&hash=item3cc453a578

Volumes 3 & 4:
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/NEW-Travel-guides-Sydneys-movie-tv-locations-SYDNEY-SCREEN-3-4-/260991864015?pt=AU_TravelGuides&hash=item3cc453cccf

The complete series Volumes 1 – 4:
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/NEW-Travel-guides-Sydneys-movie-tv-locations-SYDNEY-SCREEN-1-4-/260990230380?pt=AU_TravelGuides&hash=item3cc43adf6c






Whether you’re a visitor or a Sydneysider, Sydney on Screen has something to offer everyone, from history and architecture buffs to nature lovers.

Maps and information on Sydney’s attractions are provided to help you plan your walks. Pick and choose from the suggested itinerary to see as little or as much of the city as you like.

So check out the Sydney on Screen walking guides and discover the magical cityscapes that draw filmmakers to the Emerald City.

Visit famous sites from both the big and small screen, and walk in the footsteps of the stars!

Picture of the month: March

Government House, Royal Botanic Gardens – Go Big

Frankenstein movie digs into local graveyard for filming

Frankenstein
The hollywood movie set of I Frankenstein, where a cemetery scene has been created in a suburban park. Picture: Alex Coppel Source: Herald Sun


The Herald Sun reports

Big-budget Hollywood thriller I, Frankenstein has turned a little village in Park Orchards into a graveyard as a film set.

The movie starring Aaron Eckhart and Miranda Otto began filming in the quiet suburb on Wednesday night. Yesterday the set was deserted, and locals were able to take a peek.

Residents have been notified flying scenes, including trapeze stunts, are to be shot next Monday and Tuesday night.

The impressively created cemetery includes angel statues, tombstones and a bridge.

Nearby homeowner Jenny said works had started on the set six weeks ago.

"They've turned our whole village upside down but it's very impressive," she said.

"The scenes on Monday and Tuesday will start at 9.30pm and they'll knock off at midnight for lunch."

I, Frankenstein, directed by Stuart Beattie, also stars Yvonne Strahovski and Bill Nighy, and is due for release in February.

The production is spending up to $37 million and will employ about 500 local cast and crew.



Frankenstein

The hollywood movie set of I Frankenstein, where a cemetery scene has been created in a suburban park.
Picture: Alex Coppel Source: Herald Sun

Half god, half Aussie

Titans
Ancient bed-head … Sam Worthington as reluctant hero Perseus.



Greg Truman, The Sydney Morning Herald, reports

Sam Worthington is armed with 'daggy' humour as Perseus in Wrath of the Titans.

Sam Worthington's performance in the Australian drama Somersault may seem an odd template for his latest swashbuckling Hollywood role as a monster-slaying, ancient Greek demigod but Wrath of the Titans is better for it.

Director Jonathan Liebesman (Battle: Los Angeles, Darkness Falls) is an unabashed fan of the actor in the 2004 Aussie indie film and urged Worthington to bring some of the intensity he brought to that dramatic role when it came to reprising the mythical character Perseus in the sequel to commercial blockbuster Clash of the Titans.

''He was so good in [Somersault],'' says Liebesman, a 35-year-old South African. ''He has a … quieter strength in that movie than other stuff. So we were trying to get him to embrace what he was good at.''

Worthington, whose global fame has been generated by his starring roles in Avatar, Terminator Salvation and 2010's Clash of the Titans, was pleased to bring a degree of complexity to Wrath.

Breaking the Hollywood mold, he had been publicly disparaging about his own performance in the hugely successful hit. Perth-raised Worthington was focused on ensuring he would add layers to the character for the sequel.

''I wanted [Perseus] to be a retired gunslinger,'' he says. ''He hasn't picked up his weapon for a while and he's rusty - he's going to get beat up.''

While the primary strength of the 3D version of Wrath is its thrillingly detailed computer-generated monsters, there is an effort to embellish the sometimes raucous fantasy with a more character-focused plot. In Wrath, Perseus, having defeated his evil grandfather, Kronos, is content with his life as a fisherman and father to 10-year-old Helius.

But Kronos is threatening to rise again, forcing Perseus into action to save his father, Zeus (Liam Neeson), and combat the threat of the demonic underworld. Amid the swordplay and impossible athleticism, Wrath also uses humour - ''daggy'' humour, Worthington says.

The actor's undisguised Australian accent, and the English dialects of co-stars Toby Kebbell (Agenor) and Bill Nighy (Hephaestus), may make some of the largely improvised gags difficult for American audiences to grasp but the levity is a welcome addition to the carnage.

''It lets the audience breathe,'' Worthington says.

Raw emotion mined in story of Beaconsfield rescue retold

Becaonsfield 
Images
Lachy Hulme and Shane Jacobson as Todd Russell and Brant Webb in Beaconsfield.


Karl Quinn, The Sydney Morning Herald, reports

It’s hard to imagine two less likely advocates for the talking cure than Brant Webb and Todd Russell, but the men at the centre of the Beaconsfield goldmine disaster have learnt the hard way the value of getting it off your chest.

Webb is the kind of man who brushes everything off with a ready laugh; Russell the taciturn type, more given, you imagine, to brooding than sharing. But in the aftermath of their rescue from the small wire cage in which they were trapped deep underground for 15 days following an explosion on Anzac Day 2006, the pair were given some advice that proved invaluable.

''Luckily we had some good people around us who said, 'Look, get all that shit off your liver' - excuse the French,'' says Webb in typically robust fashion. ''They told us, 'Tell the story - the more times you tell it, the better off you'll be'.''

That proved, he says, absolutely true, and he only wishes more trauma survivors would take the same advice. ''The big problem is Australian men have got too much pride,'' he says. ''We've just got to bust those little walls down.''

The story of how their colleagues struggled to bust down a lot of big walls in their bid to rescue the pair, and how they - and their families - got through it all has now been turned into a telemovie. On Wednesday, Webb and Russell and their wives, Rachel and Carolyn, were among a group of about 20 people who watched Beaconsfield for the first time in a small cinema at Crown. The actors who play them - Shane Jacobson is Webb, Lachy Hulme Russell - were there too for what proved a most unusual experience for all concerned.

Nine will hope for big ratings when it screens the telemovie next month, close to the sixth anniversary of the event, but the network has already had the thumbs-up from the men at the centre of the story. ''I can't believe they've squeezed all the emotions we had over 321 hours into such a short time,'' says Webb. ''It's a real emotional wave that goes through you. And if they got that emotion to go through me, then it's going to go through the ordinary Joes who've never been mining.''

''I've got mixed emotions,'' says Russell, who immediately popped outside for a smoke after the screening. ''It was very interesting to see the final product after working with them behind the scenes. A lot of our input has gone into it.''

Shane Jacobson says making Beaconsfield was one of the most draining experiences of his career. ''I'd come home every day feeling quite emotional, having endured about .0000001 per cent of what they had been through,'' says the funnyman. ''I'd be reading my lines for the next day and there'd be tears rolling down my cheeks. I'd turn the TV on and watch the news, see a kid had been hurt, and find myself tearing up very quickly. 'Emotionally raw' is the term I would use.''

For all that, he says, ''I have no idea what it would actually be like to be stuck down a mine. Brant will tell you he thought he was going to die every single millisecond he was down there. He never ever thought he was going to come out alive.''

Jacobson spent time with Webb but did very little physical preparation for the shoot last August. Melbourne actor-writer Hulme had to beef up, gaining 20 kilograms to look more like Russell (and less like Dr Martin Clegg, who he plays in the series Offspring).

For most of the film, the two were on their backs, in a replica of the wire cage in which Webb and Russell were trapped by a pile of rubble. ''I don't get claustrophobic, thank goodness,'' Jacobson says.

Watching Beaconsfield must have stirred up all sorts of memories and emotions for Webb and Russell, but both claimed to be fine with it. It's the wives, Russell suggests, who found it more gruelling, picturing afresh what their husbands experienced, and remembering anew the grief that mingled with hope as they waited for them to be recovered.

''We are at ease with it. We've already lived it in real life, so it's easy to sit back and watch it on a TV screen,'' Russell insists. ''It gives you guys a perspective on what we went through. Brant and I already know what we went through. It brings up quite a few raw emotions, but each day is a bonus and as time goes on it just gets easier.''

Webb, who has just landed a new job selling safety equipment, feels much the same way. Asked if seeing the story played out this way gave it some sort of closure, he says ''it's more like a new beginning''. The telemovie, he says, ''is not really about us; half of it is about the rescuers - my heroes''.

After the screening, Russell - who works in mining equipment sales and still goes underground occasionally - says ''me and the wife will obviously sit down and have a talk about it and reflect on what we've seen''. He also plans to watch it again with his kids.

And if one of those kids says they want to go down the mines, what will he say? ''I wouldn't let 'em. I drum into them that they need to do well at school and get an education. You don't want to be stuck mining.''

And that's something he and Webb would know better than most.

Beaconsfield screens on Nine in late April.

Liam Hemsworth is lovely say actress Teresa Palmer

Teresa Palmer
Teresa Palmer. Source: Supplied


The Daily Telegraph reports

Teresa Palmer thinks fellow Australian Liam Hemsworth is the most perfect male co-star.

Palmer, 26, and Hemsworth, who are co-stars in the upcoming romantic war drama AWOL, locked lips while filming the movie.

"I did get to kiss Liam,'' Palmer told E! Online. "Liam is lovely. He's the most perfect male co-star.''

Palmer enjoyed creating such a vivid on-screen love story with Hemsworth.

"It's very much a (The) Notebook style movie,'' Palmer said. "I try desperately not to fall in love with a soldier who's gone AWOL from the Vietnam War but that soldier is Liam Hemsworth! It's sort of a bittersweet romance between them. It's heartbreaking and beautiful.''

Last year, Palmer and actor Zac Efron dated briefly following the actor's split from actress Vanessa Hudgens.

Hemsworth and girlfriend Miley Cyrus have dated on and off for three years and she recently revealed about how proud she is of his success. The pair were rumoured to be engaged, but Cyrus recently denied the rumours.

Filming for AWOL has been completed.

Rebel Wilson to join Mark Wahlberg and The Rock in new Michael Bay film

Rebel Wilson
Former Fat Pizza star Rebel Wilson is becoming a sought after talent in Hollywood. Source: Getty Images


Maria Lewis, The Daily Telegraph, reports

Australian comedienne Rebel Wilson's star is continuing to rise in Hollywood after the success of her appearance in Bridesmaids.

Collider reports that Wilson has been added to the cast of Transformers director Michael Bay's new film Pain and Gain.

Based on a true story, it follows a pair of bodybuilders in Florida who get caught up in an extortion ring and a kidnapping scheme that goes terribly wrong.

Hollywood A-Listers Mark Wahlberg and Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson are playing the two bodybuilders. Ed Harris also stars.

Wilson will be playing Ramona Eldridge, a woman who finds herself in prison for her participation in the scheme.

It's just the latest in a long line of increasingly high profile roles for Wilson, who caught the eye of casting directors after her scene-stealing turn in Bridesmaids.

She will next be seen in comedies Struck By Lightning with Glee star Chris Colfer and Christina Hendricks, and Bachelorette with Kirsten Dunst and Isla Fischer.

Add to that parts in What To Expect When You're Expecting, Pitch Perfect, Small Apartments and Ice Age: Continental Drift.

Sharni's Twilight hunk Kellan Lutz on his way

Sharni Vinson
Loved up: Sharni Vinson and Kellan Lutz are expected to jet into Sydney this week. Picture: Splash Source: The Sunday Telegraph


The Sunday Telegraph reports

Things are heating up between Twilight hunk Kellan Lutz and his Aussie actor girlfriend Sharni Vinson.

The LA-based pair are expected to jet into Sydney to catch up with her family and attend the opening of The Star's Marquee nightclub tonight.

It will be Lutz's second visit here with Vinson, the last being over Christmas when they celebrated the festive season with her family in Cronulla.

"I've never seen Sharni happier," a friend said of Vinson, who played Cassie Turner on Home And Away for nearly four years before trying her luck in Tinseltown.

She and Lutz, famous for playing vampire Emmett Cullen in the Twilight series of films, have been together for almost a year.

Cate Blanchett takes European tour

Cate Blanchett
Cate Blanchett won critical acclaim for playing the same role in an Australian run of the play last year. Picture: Supplied. Source: Herald Sun


The Daily Telegraph reports

Oscar-winning Australian actress Cate Blanchett has taken her first steps on the Paris stage, playing a lonesome woman in the lead role of 1970s play Big And Small.

Written by German Botho Strauss in West Berlin before the fall of the Wall, the work tells the story of Lotte, who falls apart when her husband deserts her during a holiday in Morocco.

Directed by Australian Benedict Andrews, this version of the play was first created by the Sydney Theatre Company, of which Blanchett, 42, and her playwright husband Andrew Upton are co-artistic directors.

Blanchett says she found a resonance with the lonely character of Lotte.

Blanchett won best actress at the Sydney Theatre Awards last year for her role in the play.

Big And Small will tour Britain, Austria and Germany after its Paris season ends on April 6.

Joe Jonas is singing for Sydney

Joe Jonas 1
Joe Jonas, one third of the Jonas Brothers, tweeted pictures of himself out and enjoying Sydney. Picture: Twitter. Source: Supplied


The Daily Telegraph reports

He already loves our ladies (he is said to have had a brief romance with Renee Bargh), and now it seems Joe Jonas of Jonas Brothers fame is smitten with our Harbour City.

No sooner had the eldest-Jonas landed in Sydney yesterday for tonight's Marquee opening than he was hot on the tourist trail, traipsing from Bondi Beach to Sydney Harbour and preserving all of the memories on his Twitter account.

First up the singer stopped by North Bondi lookout to take in that famous view, tweeting "I luv Oz" before trekking his way to Bronte Beach.

From there it was time to sample a Harry's Cafe De Wheels pie and finally the teen idol took a stroll to the Botanic Gardens to catch a view of the Sydney Opera House from the Harbour.

No sign of his li'l brother Nick who, famously, recently split with Aussie songbird Delta Goodrem.

Game celebrates Australian film




The Daily Mercury reports

Australian graphic artist Chris Wahl has created a movie mural that pays homage to Australian film and has caused plenty of online buzz.

This unique piece of artwork (below) celebrates Australian film by incorporating 26 Australian-related films hidden in the image.

The artwork is part of a Facebook game at http://yesopt.us/optusmoviematch.

The online game 'Movie Match' includes Aussie movies, movies with Aussie actors, or movies shot in Australia.

More than 30,000 people have played the game so far, and thousands more are stumped by some of the clues.

The game was created for Optus Movie Rewards, and if people enter their answers they can be put into a draw to win 1 of 5 gold movie passes.

Can you spot all 26 Australian-related films hidden in the artwork?

Australian period drama to rival Downton Abbey

Hit period drama <i>Downton Abbey</i>.
Hit period drama Downton Abbey.



The Sydney Morning Herald reports

Australian TV networks are being offered a high-end local historical drama, designed to rival benchmark shows Downton Abbey and Deadwood.

The TV mini-series in development, based on the best-selling novel Vale Valhalla, is being produced to commemorate the 100th anniversary of World War I.

Beneath Hill 60's producer Bill Leimbach and director Jeremy Sims have been retained by the novel's author, Joy Chambers (Neighbours regular and wife of television mogul Reg Grundy), to produce the 13-part series, Caroline's War: Vale Valhalla.

The series will trace the lives of three families from the early 1890s in Brisbane through the years prior to and during the Great War of 1914-1918, culminating at the end of that harrowing conflict.

Sims says the epic drama is driven by action, tragedy and romance and will tap into the fascination that the world has for the Great War.

"I will look to a series like The World at War for historical detail as a guide as it's still one of the most popular and profitable documentary series ever made," he says.

Sims says he will find the right writers and directors to work with.

"People that have a love and interest in this period of history, along with an innate fascination for the maelstrom of change," he says.

"The story offers a unique opportunity to dramatise both the conditions that laid the foundations that swept the world at the end of the Great War and the war itself," Sims says.

He also says they intend to bring together a great cast of world-renowned actors to "deliver the emotional punch".

While no-one has officially been cast, the producers have cheekily used an image of Australian actor and Thor star Chris Hemsworth for their promotional poster.

Leimbach says with Hemsworth's star rising in Hollywood it might be difficult to secure him in a role "but he's at the top of our wish list."

Saying I love you with a train crash

a
Behind the scenes on Event Zero. Photo: Clark Carter



Giles Hardie, The Sydney Morning Herald, reports

Enzo Tedeschi and Julian Harvey are more used to guerrilla filmmaking than warfare, yet they dabbled in a little of both on Tuesday as a temporary office space in Gladesville was transformed into a terrorist crafted train crash at Circular Quay for the purposes of making movie magic.

An idea born out of the Tokyo sarin attacks, Event Zero is a web series funded by the pair's successful 60 second pitch in the Movie Extra Webfest competition that will consist of seven three minutes webisodes, each a different perspective on one story that begins with a terrorist attack on Sydney, spiralling from crash, to chemical warfare to conspiracy theory. "It was just an idea that we had kicking round the back that we thought was really cool," Harvey said on the set.

As far as career trajectories go, Harvey and Tedeschi's is oddly counter-intuitive. Having taken the mantle of torrent-funding pioneers last year to fund their feature film The Tunnel, a horror film about a monster lurking in the tunnels beneath Sydney, they now have an actual budget of $100,000 to make less than thirty minutes of story. And now they have money, they yearn for more screen time. "You've got this really restrictive parameter, so you have to be creative and every little detail counts," said Harvey.

City Rail aren't involved in the series - hence a credit for a Gladesville industrial estate in the role of Circular Quay train station - as the crash itself is digital and the stories rapidly move away from the train, but wannabe extras might find the crew filming around Circular Quay in the next few days.

Given that a generic location would be easier, crashing a train in Circular Quay is oddly a perverse love letter to Sydney. "I have a personal gripe with Aussie film makers who go out of their way to make it not be Australian," said Tedeschi. "It's one of the most awesome, readily identifiable cities in the world it's no different to using New York or Paris or all those cities that get used."

In fact the pair are so in love with the city, they've now put a monster underneath it and attacked it with terrorists. "Next time it will be aliens destroying the whole city or something like that," promises Harvey.

Love is on the air as Adam Hills hosts a big fat gay wedding

Gay couples tie the knot on the ABC’s <i>Adam Hills in Gordon Street Tonight</i>.
Gay couples tie the knot on the ABC’s Adam Hills in Gordon Street Tonight. Photo: Joe Armao



Karl Quinn, The Sydney Morning Herald, reports

The brides wore white. Barry Morgan pumped his organ (Hammond, that is). Adam Ant and his band played Prince Charming in place of the bridal waltz. And 41 same-sex couples had a ball as Adam Hills' big fat gay wedding went off without a hitch last night - literally, since none of it is legally binding.

The ABC will broadcast its first foray into the arranged marriage business tomorrow night, and whatever the viewer response it's safe to say it was a hit in Elsternwick with the famous but slightly shabby Melbourne studio taking on a touch of fairytale romance as Adam Hills in Gordon Street Tonight played host to what was billed as Australian television's first mass gay wedding.

"Our thought was we can't give you what you really want - a legal marriage - and a civil ceremony isn't ideal, so let's just do something ridiculous. Lets give you a TV wedding," said Hills from his make-up chair just before the nuptials began. "And we haven't had a big TV wedding for a while."

It's unlikely anything Rafters can conjure this season will be able to top last night's effort for sheer joyous spectacle.

The evening kicked off with the usual round of amiable chat between Hills and his guests - Vue du Monde chef Shannon Bennett, all-round nice guy Hamish Blake, and actress Noni Hazlehurst - before the entire audience upped stumps and relocated to a second studio, decked out as a wedding chapel. There was billowing white fabric and flowers everywhere; at the back of the room there was even a stage for the evening's wedding singer, Adam Ant, to perform on.

As TV stunts go, it was elaborate. The idea for the event was in fact conceived out of wedlock, a couple of weeks before the first show of the season went to air. Prospective audience members are asked to complete a questionnaire, and when they started pouring in for the first show a pattern began to emerge. Asked "what would you change if you were Prime Minister for a day?" an overwhelming majority answered they'd legalise same-sex marriage.

"And when I read one saying, 'I'd change the same sex laws so I could marry my girlfriend', I thought, 'I think I know what I have to do now'," Hills said last night.

The show's producers contacted Rebecca Edwards to ask how she would feel about being "married" - albeit without any legal status - on TV. She said was up for it. But even Hills was surprised by how up for it she was.

"I didn't expect her to pull out a ring and get down on one knee," he said. "That's when I realised this wasn't just a fun thing, there's some meaning behind it."

So much meaning for so many people, in fact, that the day after her proposal went to air 200 other couples contacted the ABC to say they wanted to be involved. In the end, logistics limited the wedding party to 41 couples.

The two women who started it all were unfazed about having their most intimate faux-ment broadcast to hundreds of thousands of people.

"None of us is in this to rattle cages," said Elyse James, 28. "We're all just here to show there's nothing wrong with this, the world won't collapse, there's no fire and brimstone, everything's going to carry on as normal except that a whole group of people who are unequal in society will be able to marry the people they love."

"I'm sort of treating myself as a bit of a pink prop for all this," said 37-year-old Rebecca Edwards. "I stand where the director says, I say what I'm told and then I'm out of it."

Yes, they were off on a honeymoon of sorts - a two-night cruise from Newcastle to Brisbane - but that was booked long before the wedding came into the picture, Edwards said. This occasion was more about a political cause than their personal desires.

"Our personal wedding, that will be our day," she added. "I've got it all planned, but I can't say too much in front of Elyse."

Do you have a date in mind?

"Hopefully when the law is changed."

The wedding will screen on ABC1 at 8.30pm Wednesday

Channel Seven's new The Price Is Right hosted by Larry Emdur to pay homage to Ian Turpie

The Price Is Right, Larry Emdur
Returning as host ... Larry Emdur with contestant Alison Gill from Newcastle in the 2004 version of The Price Is Right. Source: Supplied


Holly Byrnes, The Daily Telegraph, reports

The new Price Is Right will pay homage to its former host, the late Ian Turpie, Channel 7 has confirmed.

The Morning Show's Larry Emdur will front the revamped game show - as forecast by Confidential on March 14 - which starts production this week - with the first episode to be dedicated to "Turps'' who lost his battle with cancer earlier this month.

The iconic series will return to air next month, most likely at 5pm, followed by Andrew O'Keefe's Deal Or No Deal, in a bid to give Seven's Sydney nightly news bulletin a solid kick-start.

Emdur, Australia's longest-serving Price host, said Turpie would be thrilled to see the show he also hosted (from 1981-1986) come back.

"There's a whole generation of people who grew up watching Turps on The Price Is Right and we'll now have a new generation seeing the show for the first time. We can't wait to start.''

Emdur said he was "madly in love with this show'' and leaped at the chance to reboot the program.

"When I was asked if I wanted to be involved in this new version, I think I was as excited as 20 showcase winners in an inflatable spa bath.''

Over the years, contestants have scored luxury, as well as wacky, prizes on the show: from sports cars to chainsaws, grocery items to golf clubs.

It premiered in 1957 and has been revived several times on Seven.

To be in the audience for a chance at competing, go to www.priceisrightaudience.com.au.

Naomi Watts' son Sasha shows disdain of the paparazzi at Sydney international airport

Naomi Watts, Sasha
Early disdain of the paparazzi ... Naomi Watts's with five-year-old Sasha at Sydney International airport departures. Picture: Matrix Source: Supplied


The Daily Telegraph reports

The things kids do ...

Even having Aussie movie goddess Naomi Watts as a mum doesn't guarantee good behaviour, as evidenced by a cheeky pose from cheeky five-year-old Sasha at Sydney Airport.

A bemused Watts looked on as her eldest son, who flew out of Sydney with mum and little brother Samuel, happily poked his tongue out at photographers - clearly demonstrating an early distaste of the paparazzi.

The showbiz spawn of Watts and husband Liev Schreiber has spent the past few months hanging out on the mid-north coast, where Watts recently finished filming the upcoming romance/drama The Grandmothers opposite Robin Wright.

It's understood Watts wrapped filming over the weekend and is now Europe-bound to start shooting the comedy When We're Young.

No Tomorrow, When the War Began sequel for star Caitlin Stasey

TWTWB
Actor Caitlin Stasey (front) in scene from hit film Tomorrow When The War Began. Picture: Image.net Source: Supplied


Vicky Roach, The Daily Telegraph, reports

Tomorrow, When the War Began star Caitlin Stasey doubts she will reprise the lead role of Ellie Linton in any sequel.

Although production company Omnilab remains committed to filming the second book in John Marsden’s best-selling teen franchise, the 21-year-old actress fears the original cast members will be too old to play the teenage characters by the time it finally goes into production.

"You always hear things, you always hear that someone's writing it, that someone's putting it together," Stasey told IF magazine.

"Nothing has happened until it happens. Unfortunately for the Tomorrow series, I feel that for the actors that were in the first film, maybe our commitment to it is done."

The apocalyptic action adventure, about a bunch of teenagers who turn into rebel fighters when their country is invaded by a foreign army, was the highest-grossing Australian film of 2010, taking $13.48 million at the box office. But it failed to secure a US distributor.

A sequel was to start filming in February last year, with Tomorrow When The War Began writer-director Stuart Beattie at the helm.

But the project was shelved when he signed on to write and direct a film adaptation of the graphic novel adaptation I, Frankenstein, now shooting in Melbourne with Aaron Eckhart in the lead role.

Channel Ten's Young Talent Time reboot hosted by Rob Mills will not be extended beyond one season

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Facing end after one season ... Young Talent Time host Rob Mills with crew member Adrien Nookadu. Picture: Adam Ward Source: The Daily Telegraph


The Daily Telegraph reports

It recently got the bump from prime-time Sundays to the Friday night "death slot" and word now is that Channel 10 may limit its love affair with the Young Talent Time reboot to just the one season.

Announced in a blaze of glory at last year's media launch and tipped as one the network's big hopes of 2012, YTT has steadily seen its ratings dwindle, opening with just over 1.1 million viewers before tanking to its most recent figures of just over 600,000.

Talk is that the expensive junior talent show, helmed by Rob Mills, is set for the scrapheap after it winds up its first and only season though a Ten rep said yesterday the network was confident it would "settle in" to its new "family friendly" Friday night home.

Sex confessions: Jason Donovan opens up on Travelodge first time with Kylie Minogue

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Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan in the early episodes of Neighbours and the early years of their romance. Picture: Supplied


News.com.au reports

They had one of the most famous relationships in pop history following their on-screen soap romance.

But Jason Donovan has admitted that when he and Kylie first got serious, it wasn't the most romantic of settings - as they consummated their relationship in a Travelodge.

The Daily Mail reports the Strictly Come Dancing star also revealed that the pop star was the love of his life and was left heartbroken when she left him for INXS frontman Michael Hutchence.

But speaking to Piers Morgan, in what is said to be his most frank interview to date, Donovan, now 43, said it was Kylie who pursued him.

Opening up to the journalist on his Life Stories TV show, the former soap star said: "She chased me and then I guess I gradually gave in. The next thing you know we were working and having this relationship.

"At the time it was great. We cemented it in a Sydney Travelodge. Travelodges in those days were posh places."

He said she was his first love and there was "a lot of chemistry between us" but he knew it would come to an end as she started to become more successful than him.

He said: "I could see her slipping away. We argued a lot about her wanting to go off and do other things."

And he revealed that he was with her when she met Michael Hutchence for the first time.

Jason said that's "where the relationship began" and he was then dumped by her in a phonecall in 1989 while she was in Japan and he was in New York.

He said: "I later found out from my manager that they had met up in Hong Kong and I did not take it easily.

"For a male it’s a difficult thing to deal with to be dropped by a woman, but not only a woman but someone of her status. I took it hard.

"But you move on. I never went to an INXS concert after that."

Ironically, it was Hutchence - who was found dead aged 37 in a hotel room in Sydney - who saved Donovan when he collapsed at a party in Los Angeles after taking cocaine.

He was at Kate Moss's 21st birthday party at the Viper Room club and said: "I had a seizure and I don’t remember anything. It’s not comfortable seeing those images.

"Michael took the drugs off me that night and got me into the ambulance. It was good of him to do that."

Donovan said he finally beat his cocaine addiction when he met and married his wife Angela in 1998 and they went on to have three children - Jemma, 12, Zach, 11, and one-year-old Molly.

He said: "Once Jemma was born things started to dilute. Drugs were no longer the priority. Gradually I ended up falling out of love with cocaine and in love with my daughter and back in love with the woman who changed the landscape of my life.

"Getting married made us stronger and it is great for the kids. She is the love of my life."

Supanova set to explode on Sydney with geeky guests Hayden Panettiere and Christopher Lloyd

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Actress Hayden Panettiere is one of the many geek guests heading to Sydney. Source: Getty Images



Maria Lewis, The Daily Telegraph, reports

The geeks are set to descend on Sydney in June with the first line-up for the Supanova Pop Culture Expo announced today.

Hollywood starlet Hayden Panettiere is one of the headlining guests, along with Christopher Lloyd who played Doc Brown in the classic Back to the Future films.

Panettiere is best known for her role on TV series Heroes and most recently in Scream 4.

It’s back to the Batmobile for Yvonne Craig, the original Batgirl from the sixties TV series starring Adam West.

Craig is returning to Supanova after being a crowd favourite in 2002.

Other guests include Michael Rosenbaum, who played Lex Luthor in Smallville, Mercedes McNab, remembered as Harmony from Buffy and Angel, and Bob Wall from cult martial arts films Way of the Dragon and Enter the Dragon.

Best-selling novelist Christopher Paolini is set to be a favourite amongst the younger audience for his novels Eragon and Brisingr.

Comic book creators David Mack (Kabuki series) and Jim Cheung (Scion, Young Avengers) are set to be fanboy favourites.

Supanova 2012 kicks off in Melbourne and the Gold Coast next month, before a new line-up of guests come to Sydney, Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide in June.

Supanova is on at The Dome, Olympic Park on June 16 and 17.

Mel Gibson's new movie Get The Gringo won't hit theatres

Mel Gibson
Mel Gibson's new film Get The Gringo is trying to target his longtime audience. Source: Supplied


The Daily Telegraph reports

Mel Gibson's new film Get The Gringo won't be hitting theatres, at least not in the US.

Screen Rant reports the troubled actor will try releasing the movie through a new distribution model - Video On Demand.

The first trailer for the action/comedy has hit the net and shows Gibson back in Lethal Weapon-mode.

Get The Gringo follows a career criminal (Gibson) who is nabbed by Mexican authorities and placed in a tough prison where he learns to survive with the help of a nine-year-old boy.

Given the several controversies surrounding Gibson, his box-office draw has taken a big blow.

His last starring role was in Jodie Foster's The Beaver which bombed. It cost $US21m but grossed only $US1.1m worldwide.

VoD may be a savvy move for the struggling star. From first-time director Adrian Grunberg and costing $US20m, Gibson still has enough fans for the film to make its money back digitally.

Get The Gringo could still be released theatrically in Australia and in other international territories.