WOODENHEAD DVD available now from: [Auckland] Real Groovy, Marbecks, Rhythm, Soundz, Acroma, [Hamilton] Tracs [Wellington] Aro St Video, Real Groovy, NZ Film Archive [Christchurch] Real Groovy, [Dunedin] Real Groovy

WOODENHEAD ONLINE SALES:
Woodenhead from Realgroovy.co.nz
Woodenhead from Gumboot.co.nz
Woodenhead from Aro St Video Online


KAIKOHE DEMOLITION DVD now also available as rental and purchase! Featuring bonus derbies, world premiere event, behind the scenes featurette, Kaikohe Demo in Kaikohe, music video, Florian Habicht interview and the most classic film commentary ever by Uncle Bimm, John Zielinski and Ben Haretuku. Available to buy at Borders, Whitcoulls, Video Ezy and soon Real Groovey Records.


KAIKOHE DEMOLITION ONLINE SALES:
Kaikohe Demolition From Realgroovy.co.nz
Kaikohe Demolition from Gumboot.co.nz
Kaikohe Demolition from Aro Street Video Online

DVD Rentals now available, for both Woodenhead & Kaikohe Demolition.



Woodenhead DVD Reviews

THE LISTENER
FEBRUARY 12-18 2005
CHRIS KNOX
Woodenhead (Pictures For Anna) is Aucklander Florian Habicht's fever-dream fairy-tale fantasy of one dope, his dame, his destiny, his dump and his donkey. It is set in Northland, is in black and white digital video, was shot to a pre-recorded soundtrack – dialogue included – and is quite brilliant. I know this because I say as much on the cover art, in the trailer and the fine little doco that features on the disc. I am biased, yes, but had nothing to do with the making of the film.

Its digital nature is harshly revealed at times, but generally it is a gorgeous thing to behold. The extras include a whole bunch of Habicht's even more enigmatic short films and one of the very best commentaries – starting at chapter eight's sex scene! – that I've ever sat through. The packaging's delightfully out of the ordinary. Join the circus! Hoorah!

THE PACKAGE
ISSUE 275 MARCH 10 2005 KELLY ANN LEE
Woodenhead is a contemporary kiwi film that offers a number of sumptuous treats for those wanting more than your typical drama, action or scenic genre flick. This Grimm's musical fairy tale has the feeling of an old radio play or puppet show, whereby writer/director Florian Habicht created the dialogue, location sounds and music first, and then shot the visuals to suit. The result is playful and dreamlike, reminiscent of a visit to David Lynch's sinister Red Room. The lush New Zealand outdoors as we know it is shot here in black & white, revealing a seductive and treacherous land filled with danger and magic where Gert and Plum, two kids from the stix, embark on their journey. Picture postcards shots are punctuated with overbearing kiwi accents atop slinky jazz percussion. It is this carefully crafted soundtrack which stands out and is illustrated through classy costumes, enchanted forests, stallar dance sequences and disturbing circus freaks- not to mention characters with wonderful faces a la Fellini. To watch Woodenhead is to explore beyond the looking glass. Moments of discomfort and deja vu are infused with much charm and humour, making for a memorable cinemtaic experience.


GROOVE GUIDE
FEBRUARY 23 2005 JOSH HETHERINGTON
What a freaky fable, an hallucinatory dream/nightmare is Florian Habicht's Woodenhead. Out now on DVD, and reminiscent of Dead Man or Eraserhead-on one part valium and one part [even stronger] LSD- this startling, funny, irritating, disconcerting and moving film takes Sam Neils notion of the 'Cinema if Unease' both to heart, and to the tip. Eschewing traditional filmic-narrative sense for the densely surreal and often poignantly revelatory possibilities of silent film-making [all the sound, including the ethereal musical soundtrack and even the dialogue, was recorded prior to filming-the film shot to fit] Woodenhead dwells, sweating and filthy, in a realm of mangroves, pine forests, demonic children a malevolent half-witted-man-servant, a masturbating, mucus-frothing hobo, erotic dancers, circus freaks and fornicating innocents.

The carnival-esque atmosphere backdrops the truly original love story. Gert is entrusted to deliver Plum to her wealthy groom. The pair lose their car and donkey, get lost in the woods, come across a feast-laden cabin, and begin to fall in love before Plum is abducted by a runaway circus strongman. Adding to the wooziness of it all is the apparent telepathy with which they communicate [lips don't move as they speak, or even as they whistle the wooziest of circus tunes]. The black and white cinematography sets an even denser tone, foreboding skies give way to heavenly shards of sunlight; ferocious, wild surf spans the screen; the Northland landscapes provide overwhlemingly Ansell Adams-like sets for the travels and tribulations of our heroes. Go and pick up a copy today-you won't regret it.


REAL GROOVE
NEW YEARS EDITION 2005 VERONICA McLAUGHLIN
One of my favourite films of 2003, Woodenhead is a surreal journey through a fairytale New Zealand. Gert is a shy dump-hand entrusted with the task of delivering his boss's beautiful daughter, Plum, to her groom in a town a day's journey away. But en route, the car breaks down and the two are forced to make the rest of the trip by donkey. Along the way, they encounter the strange denizens of the Northland forests-monsters, trolls and strange little children and find themselves tempted by the pleasures of the flesh.

The film is a visual feast, but the soundtrack is an aural banquet. Habicht and sound designer Marc Chesterman recorded the entire soundtrack before a single frame was shot, resulting in unusally clear sound for such a small budget film. As a result, the actors do not actually speak their lines, actually, Gert and Plum's mouth do not even move as they appear to communicate telepathically, which I found disorienting at first, but becomes part of the mystery and otherworldliness of this utterly enchanting film.

The DVD comes with an impressive set of special features including a Making of Featurette, Horoscopes with Lutz, several short films Habicht has directed, Trip to Thailand with Woodenhead vocal performer Killer Ray, Circus acts, a music video for Hospice for Destitute Lovers and additional artwork from designer and lead actor Teresa Peters.


THE LUMIERE READER, JOHN SPRY
A VERY NEW ZEALAND FOLK TALE
A very New Zealand landscape dark in visual style but rich in imagination and the natural ideal that is in the hearts of people living in Aotearoa. By JOHN SPRY. Woodenhead (2003) Florian Habicht | NZ | 106 min | Featuring: Nicolas Butler, Teresa Peters, Tony Bishop, Matthew Sunderland, Mardi Potter, Steve Abel.

With Woodenhead, Florian Habicht has created a visual snapshot of the Northern portion of New Zealand and integrated this with a "cut and paste" folk story from around the world. The story revolves around the two main characters (one could even say caricatures) who, while attempting a very simple task of travelling from one town to another end up loosing themselves in a greatest hits of well known folk stories. They move through and around such stories as Hansel and Gretel, Goldilocks and even Jack and the Beanstalk.

The plot of the film is one of necessity in which the town garbage man (and hero) Gert, is ordered to escort Princess Plum, the daughter of his boss (the owner of the town dump), to her wedding in a neighbouring town. What follows is a unique road-trip through the in-between hinterland of New Zealand. A place on first impressions untouched by human hands, except for the barb wire fences and dirt roads put there to facilitate the journey by way of car or in this case a mule by the main characters, as well as keeping any good story on its course. Christopher Pryor, the film's cinematographer offers a stark black and white landscape which adds to the frontier feeling and folk story itself, by capturing the surrounding country in a uniquely New Zealand way. This struck me as being unique in terms of what an audience sees while viewing a film that is set in one county but for budget reasons is filmed in another. This film is very much the New Zealand landscape on screen.

The narrative told in the film is itself unique in the way characters are introduced and move throughout the story. The most obvious aspect of this is the way in which the on-screen actors dialogue has been replaced by off-screen actors speaking those same parts. This adds to the sense that Woodenhead is standing on its own merits while providing the director with a way of treating any financial obstacle as a choice to illustrate through non-synchronous sound a true fantasy world. While watching Woodenhead I could not help but think of New Zealand director John O'Shea and some of his own films including Broken Barrier (1952) and the way in which the expense of non-synchronous sound lead to a third person narrative instead of the own on-screen actors voices. This technique works well especially in scenes such as Gert and Princess Plum trying to get their own Donkey back and receiving beans in return.

The film as a first feature is original in concept and is carried out with little hint to the viewer that there was not a lot of cash to spare. There is much to recommend the film for cineastes as well as the average film goer in terms of the plot and narrative, but to me its strength is the locations used and the originality in terms of look and sound of the actors.

The DVD itself can be termed as fully loaded with the features listed below. The film is presented in a letterbox format (4:3) and has little or no blemishes and the sharpness of the picture is no doubt helped by the black and white cinematography.

The audio commentary is by director Florian Habicht and is interesting in terms of low budget film-making in New Zealand and the relative success that he has achieved over the past two years.

In terms of DVD releases I have to say that viewing this title was an absolute pleasure in terms of the relevance of the menus to the actual film. It is time that locally made films that are released here and Internationally put some thought into the menus and the extras themselves to make them not only relevant but interesting to the audience whether a renter or purchaser. This film may be classed as an "art-house" film and have immediate appeal to a smaller audience, but the extras make it more enjoyable and these can lead a wider audience to enjoy the film as well. I look forward to the release of Florian's next film.

DVD Info + Special Features:
Pictures for Anna / Region 0 PAL - 4:3 Aspect Ratio / Stereo - Retail Only - Making of Woodenhead documentary - Horoscopes with Lutz - "Liebestraume" Short Film - Trip to Thailand with Killer Ray - Original Demo Songs by Marc Chesterman - Sound Recordings - Circus acts - Trailer - Music video for "Hospice for Destitute Lovers" by Steve Abel - Stills and artwork by Teresa Peters - Director's commentary.

To find out about purchasing Woodenhead on DVD, visit www.woodenhead.co.nz or online/in-store at Real Groovy for more information. 08.12.04 | © John Spry / Lumière 2004


ON FILM MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 2004
NZ feature film Woodenhead, Florian Habicht's indie digi success, was released on DVD on November 12 [2004]. A film fest fave-it's screened at the New Zealand International Film Festivals, Melbourne International Film Festival, Commonwealth Film Festival, Spain's Sitges International Film Festival and the Cardiff Film Festival in Wales -the DVD boasts a host of special features [or "sideshows", as Habicht refers to them, in keeping with the film's circus theme].

They include a 'making of' featurette, Horoscopes with Lutz, Liebestraume [an ealier short film from Habicht that inspired Woodenhead's innovative approach], extra music and sounds, circus acts, the cinema trailer, "Hospice for Destitute Lovers" music video, a director's commentary, and "more beautiful Woodenhead artwork" by Teresa Peters. The DVD is being distributed by Pictures For Anna and Next Technology; the DVD package was funded by the NZFC.

In related news, Habicht's follow-up film, the doco Kaikohe Demolition, opens November 25 [2004] at Auckland's Academy Cinema, while Habicht has been accepted to study and develop a new script at the Maurits Binger Institute in Amsterdam starting February 2005.