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Emerging SA filmmakers share in over $130,000 Quicksilver production funding

18 March 2025
Mercury Quicksilver recipients, images supplied

The Mercury has today announced eight short film projects from 19 emerging South Australian filmmakers will go into production this year as part of the Quicksilver Production funding initiative, supported by the South Australian Film Corporation.

Following an impressive and highly competitive round of submissions, eight diverse South Australian creative teams have been awarded a share of $136,000 in funding and mentoring support delivered through The Mercury’s Quicksilver Production Fund, funded by the South Australian Film Corporation. The grants will enable each team to produce a short film and access mentoring, script consultation, production support, filmmaking equipment and post-production facilities.

The Quicksilver Production Fund aims to nurture creativity and innovation within South Australia’s vibrant screen industry, offering emerging talent the resources and guidance needed to bring their unique projects to life. The selected projects showcase a vast array of genres and captivating artistic visions, including a dark comedy about a misfit racehorse and his down-on-his-luck con artist owner, a poignant story about a First Nations boxer forced to confront the social, emotional, and physical consequences of a media-fuelled witch hunt, a bittersweet film about two children who meet across three consecutive Christmases, and a family-friendly animation featuring a portal-hopping kangaroo.

The eight successful teams selected for the 2025 grants include two projects with majority First Nations key creatives: Stewed (Screen Producers Australia ‘Ones To Watch’ 2025 recipient and Ruby Award winner Lilla Berry and Pearl Berry) and False Narrative (Thibul Nettle and Travis Akbar). Tim Hodgson and writer/director Nicole Miller (This is Port Adelaide, which premiered at the 2020 Adelaide Film Festival) have been awarded the major $50,000 grant to bring their dark comedy Lucky Nine Fingers to life.

Recipients also include animator and illustrator Alice Lam, using the grant to move into a writer/director role with rising stars Emma Hough Hobbs and Leela Varghese – the creative forces behind the Berlinale award-winning animated feature Lesbian Space Princess – producing. Celebrated theatre creative Emily Steel, writer of critically acclaimed State Theatre Company of South Australia play Housework, and award winning theatre-maker Emma Beech, who are both using the grant to make a move from stage to the screen, are also among the successful creative teams.

The Quicksilver Production Fund is made possible with ongoing annual funding provided by the South Australian Film Corporation.

The Mercury General Manager Sarah Lancaster said: “We’re delighted to continue this collaboration with the South Australian Film Corporation to develop the next generation of South Australian filmmakers. This initiative underscores the Mercury’s role as an incubator for fresh voices and diverse storytelling within the screen industry. With one creative team receiving $50,000 to produce their project and take it to the world’s stage, all teams receiving above-the-line mentoring and guidance for all projects, and access to the new onsite filmmaking facilities at The Mercury, the Quicksilver Production Fund is a unique initiative that champions artistic vision and launches careers. I look forward watching the development of these unique projects and following their creative journeys.”

South Australian Film Corporation Head of Production and Development Leanne Saunders said: “The SAFC is pleased to foster the growth and development of emerging South Australian screen talents through our continued support for The Mercury and the Quicksilver Production Fund. Talent and career-boosting initiatives like Quicksilver are so important when it comes to cultivating our up-and-coming screen storytellers, providing opportunities for new voices to be heard and talents from a range of backgrounds and experience to collaborate on leading creative projects in new ways. We commend the Mercury on their selection of recipients for this latest Quicksilver round and congratulate all the creative teams chosen.”

The Quicksilver Production Fund has a strong track record of developing local talent and showcasing South Australian stories to audiences on a national and global stage. Recent successes include Dragon’s Breath (writer/director Melanie Easton, producers Lisa Bishop, Poppy Fitzpatrick) which screened at Flickerfest, was nominated for Best Short at the AACTA Awards and received the AWGIE Award for Best Short; Finding Jia (writer/director Alice Yang, producer Maisie Fabry) winner of the 2024 Flinders University Short Film prize; and I’m the Most Racist Person I Know (writer/director Leela Varghese, producer Suriyna Sivashanker) which had its World Premiere at SXSW in Austin Texas this month and was awarded the prestigious Special Jury Award in the narrative short competition.


Quicksilver Production Funding Recipients

$50,000

Lucky Nine Fingers
Producer: Tim Hodgson
Writer/Director: Nicole Miller
Logline: Lucky Nine Fingers is a dark comedy about down-on-his-luck Marty, who
attempts to settle old debts by overselling shares in a dud racehorse. Only to find this
‘sure bet’ scheme comes back to bite him!

$20,000

Forget Me, Not
Producer: Sarah Wormald
Director: Tamara Hardman
Writers: Sophie Morgan, Tamara Hardman
Logline: Following a near drowning, Sadie awakens in a secluded seaside home and
must rely on her partner Adrian to fill in the substantial holes in her memory, but when a
strange mark appears on her skin, she questions if her relationship with Adrian was as
perfect as he claims it was.

$10,000

Stewed
Producer: Lilla Berry
Writer/Director: Pearl Berry
Logline: After waking up in an unknown place with no memory of how she got there, Kelly
is forced to reflect on her self-destructive behaviour as she tries to piece together the
night before.

False Narrative
Producers: Thibul Nettle, Travis Akbar
Writer/Director: Travis Akbar
Logline: When a rising First Nations boxer is falsely accused of heinous crimes after his
image is mistakenly used in a viral news report, he must confront the social, emotional,
and physical consequences of a media- fueled witch hunt while battling for his identity,
accountability, and resilience.

The Other House
Producers: Charlie Milne, Juniper Dew
Director: David Friswell
Writer: Charlie Milne
Logline: A bittersweet short film about two children who meet across three consecutive
Christmases while their families fall apart year by year.

Finding Harmony
Producer: Lysah Phoenix
Director: Cameron Edser
Writer: Lysah Phoenix
Logline: A bunny who experiences the world differently and a portal-hopping kangaroo
show the forest community that true harmony emerges when everyone’s unique way of
being is embraced.

Strange Devil Signals
Producers: Emma Hough Hobbs, Leela Varghese
Writer/Director: Alice Lam
Logline: Three twenty-somethings struggling to run an amateur radio station find their
work cut out for them when the station is cursed by a witch, and starts receiving calls
from the literal depths of hell.

$8,000

Ananab Ananab
Producer: Emma Beech
Writer/Director: Emily Steel
Logline: When an eleven year-old boy loses his mum’s attention to her new Pentecostal
Christian faith, he fakes speaking in tongues to get it back.

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