The Sydney Morning Herald reports
Winning awards, financing movies or scoring
magazine covers is no longer enough to be a major player in the Australian film
industry. Rob Lowing crunched the numbers to discover who the real heavy-hitters
are.
1 SAM WORTHINGTON (actor, 3796 points)
1 SAM WORTHINGTON (actor, 3796 points)
Avatar is just the gift
that keeps giving. Sam doesn't set the photo agencies alight and his Clash
of the Titans was undermined by a ballyhooed sequel Wrath of the Titans
and a Raspberry Award nomination for worst ripoff. But solid dramas The Debt
and Man on a Ledge helped. And no one seethes as cinematically as our
Sam …
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
2 CHRIS HEMSWORTH (actor, 2540 points)
The 29-year-old went stratospheric because of his
roles in 2012's top-grossing film (so far), The Avengers, and also Thor
and Snow White and the Huntsman.
Year ahead: up (thanks to sequels to the above).
Year ahead: up (thanks to sequels to the above).
3 GEOFFREY RUSH (actor, 1540 points)
Rush's combination of box-office gold (Pirates
of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides; The King's Speech) is boosted
by a willingness to return home for local gems (Bran Nue Dae; Eye of
the Storm).
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
4 MIA WASIKOWSKA (actor, 1145 points)
The 23-year-old has barely been seen home recently,
moving steadily from blockbusters such as Alice in Wonderland to smaller
dramas such as Jane Eyre, Albert Nobbs and The Kids are All
Right. She's back for the lead in Tracks.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
5 STUART BEATTIE (writer, director,
1086 points)
The internationally renowned scriptwriter (the man
behind the characters in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides)
made his directorial debut with the AFI Award-winning Tomorrow, When the War
Began. Pity about that Razzie for Beattie's G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra script.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
6 LIAM HEMSWORTH (actor, 823 points)
Chris's little brother scored his own lucrative
franchise (The Hunger Games), was anointed into the action-man club (The
Expendables 2) and rated ''hotter'' than his brother (photo-agency-wise)
thanks to his high-profile romance with Miley Cyrus.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
7 GUY PEARCE (actor, 621 points)
Film critics like him more than the photographers
but Pearce's consummate acting skills shone in Hollywood sci-fi (Prometheus)
and Oscar winners (The Hurt Locker,The King's Speech). But he was happy
to come home for juicy supporting roles (Animal Kingdom). His latest, Lawless,
has already racked up $48 million overseas.
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
8 ROSE BYRNE (actor, 517 points)
Byrne has barely been home since her Two Hands
break-out success and she doesn't rate with most local photo agencies. But she
had a monster hit with Hollywood's Bridesmaids and her trashy pop star
stole Get Him to the Greek.
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
9 EMILE SHERMAN (producer, 468
points)
Wins at the Oscars and the BAFTAs (and that
worldwide box-office) made the The King's Speech producer our biggest
behind-scenes player. He also produced Oranges and Sunshine and his
coming projects include the adaptation of Robyn Davidson's desert memoir, Tracks.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
10 CATE BLANCHETT (actor, 412 points)
No local movies for Cate (but sterling theatre
contributions). Her Robin Hood box-office and ''warm'' photo rating
keeps her a point above co-star Russell Crowe.
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
11 RUSSELL CROWE (actor, 411 points)
Just two outings in the past three years (The
Next Three Days, Robin Hood) mean Crowe missed the top 10. A lead
role (singing?!) in the coming Les Miserables could change that.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
12 HUGH JACKMAN (actor, 314 points)
Maybe Australia (the movie, not the country)
soured photographers' favourite Hugh on coming home. He's spent recent years
hosting the Oscars (and rappelling in to help Oprah) and on US fodder such as Real
Steel. Next up: Les Miserables and that Wolverine sequel.
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
13 NICOLE KIDMAN (actor, 284 points)
What the god of movies giveth, he taketh away:
Kidman earned big box-office for the woeful Adam Sandler comedy Just Go With
It but copped a Razzie nomination. Rabbit Hole's Oscar nomination
soothed the pain of another Razzie nom (worst screen couple, alongside Nicolas
Cage in Trespass) and iffy box-office for Nine.
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
14 ABBIE CORNISH (actor, 283 points)
Bright Star earned her raves,
that relationship with Ryan Phillippe got her into the mags. Reviled Sucker
Punch and Madonna's tepidly received W.E. couldn't dim the lustre of
Limitless's worldwide take.
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
15 JAMES WAN (director-producer) 258
points)
Wan and long-time collaborator Leigh Whannell's Saw
movies were (dis)credited with starting the recent glut of torture-porn flicks.
Wan clawed back some creative respect with Insidious. The world waits to
judge Wan's next, The Conjuring.
Year ahead: down
Year ahead: down
16 LEIGH WHANNELL (actor-writer 256
points)
Yes, it's true. Thanks to the combination of co-executive
producing the Saw franchise, and scripting and acting in housebound
horror hit Insidious (starring Rose Byrne), the 35-year-old vaults past
better-known peers.
Year ahead: down
Year ahead: down
17 TERESA PALMER (actor, 239 points)
Solid global box-office for I am Number Four
was backed up by a great turn in local flick Wish You Were Here. Now to
prove she's not just another pretty blonde …
Year ahead: steady
Year ahead: steady
18 GEORGE MILLER (writer-director, 186
points)
The Happy Feet Two maestro also produced via
his renowned company Kennedy Miller Mitchell and both it (and he) stays firmly
based in Sydney. If that Mad Max sequel, with The Dark Knight Rises star
Tom Hardy, finally unreels …
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
19 NAOMI WATTS (actor, 161 points)
The only name to earn an unequivocal ''hot'' from
the photo agencies (especially for pics with husband Liev Schreiber and kids),
Watts enjoyed steady returns (and great leading men) with J. Edgar and Fair
Game.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
20 JOEL EDGERTON (actor, 139 points)
The hard-working drama star has had a dream run,
with local hits Animal Kingdom and Wish You Were Here, and
Hollywood outings Warrior and The Thing. His The Odd Life of
Timothy Green just opened to $50 million in the US. Next up: Baz Luhrmann's
The Great Gatsby adaptation.
Year ahead: up
Year ahead: up
THE ONES THAT GOT AWAY …
Baz Luhrmann has been quiet,
preparing to unleash The Great Gatsby - so expect him to figure in this
list again soon. Oscar nominee Jacki Weaver and Hanna star Eric
Bana got pipped at the post, as did up-and-comer Bojana Novakovic (Devil
and Burning Man) and Rango voice-star Isla Fisher. And
after a few bad years (box-office and press-wise), Mel Gibson scored
less than also-rans such as Sanctum's Richard Roxburgh.
HOW WE RATED THEM
We collated our master list of films made and/or
released January 2010 to October 2012 from the Screen Australia, Box Office
Mojo, Urban Cinefile and IMDb databases, cross-referencing releases with Empire
and FilmInk magazines.
For the films' producer(s), director, writer, and
five top-billed actors (and we began with a list of 422 names), we awarded two
points each per $1 million earned at the Australian box office; one
point for each $1 million earned elsewhere in the world (global box office
was the telling factor); plus points were also given for major award wins
(including Oscars, BAFTAs, AACTAs), major festival appearance and/or prizes
(including the Sydney, Cannes, Berlin, Sundance, Venice and Toronto festivals),
and magazine covers (sampled 2011-2012 from Who, New Weekly, Empire,
FilmInk and so on). Voice animation work also counted.
We asked Sydney photo agencies, including Jamie
Fawcett's PhotoNews, to rate our top 40 (hello, Naomi Watts). We awarded bonus
points to internationally known ''names'' who returned home (good on you, Guy
Pearce) and deducted points for Golden Raspberry Award mentions (sorry,
Nicole).
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