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George Trumbull Miller (28 November 1943 – 17 February 2023) was an Australian film and television director and producer. He directed The Man from Snowy River, The NeverEnding Story II: The Next Chapter, and Zeus and Roxanne. Miller was born in Edinburgh on 28 November 1943. [1] He started his career in 1966 working for Crawford Productions ...
Miller’s death was confirmed by the Sydney Morning Herald. No details regarding a […] George T. Miller, Australian Director of ‘The NeverEnding Story II’ and ‘The Man From Snowy River ...
Miller was born on 3 March 1945 [2] in Chinchilla, Queensland, to Greek immigrant parents: Jim Miller and mother Angela. Jim (aka Dimitrios) was born on the Greek island of Kythira (at Mitata), Jim's father anglicised his surname from Miliotis to Miller when he emigrated to Australia in 1920; Angela's family were Greek refugees from Anatolia, displaced by the 1923 population exchange.
Australian film and television director George Miller has died of a heart attack in a hospital in Melbourne, Australia. He was 79. He is best remembered for his film The Man From Snowy River ...
Byron Kennedy was born in Melbourne. At the age of 18, he formed his own production company named Warlok Films and produced many amateur short films under this logo. In 1970, at the age of 21, he won The Kodak Trophy, Australia's Ten Best on Eight, for the short film Hobson's Bay, a short documentary film about the Melbourne port suburb of Williamstown.
George T. Miller (1943–2023), Australian film and television director George Bures Miller (born 1960), Canadian artist George Miller, stage name Joji (born 1993), Japanese musician and Internet personality formerly known under the pseudonyms Filthy Frank and Pink Guy
Australia produced nearly 400 films between 1970 and 1985, more than had been made in the history of the Australian film industry. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In contrast to pre-New Wave films, New Wave films are often viewed as fresh and creative, possessing "a vitality, a love of open spaces and a propensity for sudden violence and languorous sexuality".
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, commonly known as Mad Max 3, is a 1985 Australian post-apocalyptic dystopian action film directed by George Miller and George Ogilvie and written by Terry Hayes and Miller. [5] It is the third installment in the Mad Max franchise.