A Ditchwater Pictures Film.
Cowboys and Indians
THIS IS NO ORDINARY WESTERN
Cowboys and Indians is a contemporary, feature-length, fish-out-of-water, romantic comedy adventure, about an Australian cowboy who sets out to make the world’s greatest ever Western ...
... in India.
Engaging, warm and funny with a massive heart it wants to share with the world, Cowboys and Indians shows there are no good or bad races in the world, just good and bad people, and that love is far more powerful than hate.
It’s been a while since an Australian film tickled the whole world’s funny bone. And the world could certainly use a laugh right now. This could be the one.
Think Crocodile Dundee meets Shanghai Noon at The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.
Photo Morgan Roberts
The Sixties was a decade of extremes, transformational change and bizarre contrasts: flower children and assassins, idealism and alienation, rebellion and backlash. From Kennedy to Martin Luther King, Kent State to the summer of love, the English invasion and the bloody war in Vietnam… the world would never be the same.
‘There Must Be Some Kind of Way Out of Here’ (working title) is a feature documentary that takes you on a journey through history through the eyes of infamous war photographer Tim Page, reliving his hedonistic adventures and accidental yet enduring friendships, a panoply of characters that include Ron Kovik, Roger Steffens, Harlan K. Ullman, Joe Galloway and George Hamilton.
Tim Page taking on the role of narrator/story-teller, the film paints a moving portrait of a life well lived through a decade riddled with turmoil, from the glamour of war to the religion of music, to the lies, fears and regrets of a generation, as we hold up this mirror image of history, and take stock of where we find ourselves today.
It’s gonna be one hell of a trip.
Photo Sean Flynn
“Acid confuses the sequences of time and memory”
© Monfils Pictures Ltd. 2018