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Count Vim's Last Exercise

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Peter Weir has said of this film in Sue Mathews' book '35 mm Dreams: Conversations with Five Directors about the Australian film revival': "In 1967 I decided to make a film for the Channel Seven Staff Social Club Xmas Revue I'd been organising. It was called Count Vim, and took a year to make and was about 15 minutes long. I think they got a surprise at the station because they thought it was going to be a comedy on funny characters around the place, the doorman and the head of the Channel or something with funny hats on, but it wasn't...The station executives liked the film and asked if I wanted a job directing the film sequence of what was then the last year of the satirical revue, The Mavis Bramston Show. 1968 was a very tough year because I really knew so little. I had to edit my own clips - it was a very hard school to go through and a very good one. I used to cut the original film which added to the tension - each time you made a splice you had to be very careful not to damage the film or cut in the wrong spot...I'd go to any of the 'underground' film screenings put on by UBU films - they took up Count Vim and put it in a program, Underground '68 I think it was called. A film of Bruce Beresford's was shown too - he was working at the British Film Institute - and a couple of others who went on to do things, Albie Thoms being one."
First of two shorts that director Peter Weir made whilst working as a stage-hand at TV station ATN Channel 7 in Sydney, Australia. The second was The Life and Times of the Reverend Buck Shotte (1968).

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