Richard Wolstencroft
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| Richard Wolstencroft | |
| Born | April 23, 1969 Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| Nationality | Australian |
| Works | Pearls Before Swine |
Richard Wolstencroft (born 23 April 1969, aka Richard Masters) is an Australian filmmaker.
Wolstencroft began making short films in the 1980s. He co-directed his first feature Bloodlust with Jon Hewitt in 1990. In 1992 he founded the Hellfire Club, a BDSM-themed nightclub which operated in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. In 1996 he began work on his second feature film Pearls Before Swine, a project which would take him three years to complete starring Boyd Rice. In 2000, the film was submitted to the Melbourne International Film Festival, but was not selected. In response, Wolstencroft founded the Melbourne Underground Film Festival, which, as of 2000, has remained an annual event.
Wolstencroft has acted in several films. He appears as actor and producer in Mark Savage's Marauders.
Wolstencroft's writings have appeared in a variety of publications, including Filmnet, Misanthrope magazine (issue 2), Fangoria Magazine (issue 162), Large magazine (various issues), Beat Magazine (editor 1989-1990).
He is currently in post production on his fourth feature "The Beautiful and Damned" based on the classic novel by F.Scott Fitzgerald. The film is a modern adaptation, the first ever attempted of Fitzgerald's work and stars Ross Ditcham, Kristen Condon, Paul Moder, Zen Ledden, Norman Yemm, John Brumpton, Tanya Wenczel, Peter Lesley, Alex Spalck, Colin Savage and Frank Howson amongst others. Due for release in 2008.
[edit] Controversy
Wolstencroft decided to screen The Search For Truth In History, a 1993 documentary on David Irving, as part of the 2003 MUFF festival. Members of the Jewish community (including the Jewish Community Council of Victoria which went to court to seek a ban the film[1]) widely condemned Wolstencroft for this. The screening was ultimately cancelled when the cinema's landlord locked the MUFF organisers out.[2]
On the issue Wolstencroft said:
| “ | Sure, I thought we'd get a little half-page story about Irving — 'Ooh, this is a bit controversial.' I didn't expect it would be news every day for about a week. It was just a guy full of shit talking. To me, David Irving is interesting even though he is full of shit — why is he saying this stuff? | ” |
Wolstencroft has often declared a fascination with fascism. He wrote his honours thesis in philosophy on the topic. He stresses that he is interested in "a new conception of fascism", an idealized "transcendental" form of non-racist, internationalist fascism that has not yet existed. "Fascism doesn't have to be the way it's been in the past, just as communism doesn't have to be about Stalin." His concept is of a fascism that takes into account "the inherent paradoxes of its nature and dialogue" and which has the capacity to "interact with other political philosophies worthy of integration like anarchism, socialism and conceptions of justice, equality, liberty and autonomy". [3]
[edit] References
- ^ Fonseca, Michelle. "Film festival to screen Irving film", The 7.30 Report, 2003-07-09. Retrieved on 2006-11-24.
- ^ Griffin, Michelle. "Bad reputation", The Age, 2004-06-26. Retrieved on 2006-11-24.
- ^ Henderson, Gerard. "The truth is not in that movie", The Sydney Institute Quarterly, Sydney Institute, 2003-07-08. Retrieved on 2006-11-24.
[edit] External links
- Richard Wolstencroft at the Melbourne independent filmmakers website.
- Richard Wolstencroft at the Internet Movie Database
- Bad reputation, 26 June 2004 article in The Age on Wolstencroft and the MUFF.
- The 1st MUFF Manifesto written by Wolstencroft in May/June 2005

