The Noosa to Noarlunga Q&A Tour
Hitting the road. Old school style.
Hi Everyone, Hope you are all well.
After some amazing SOLD OUT festival screenings of YOU SHOULD HAVE BEEN HERE YESTERDAY we’re hitting the coast for some old school Q&A’s before a cinema release on the 21st November.
The coastal roadshow is a blueprint first laid down 60+ years ago by the surf filmmakers who first filmed the footage we remastered, and we’re stoked to follow in their footsteps. Like those filmmakers we love nothing more than bringing people together. Hope you can join us. There’ll be plenty of special guests and a few giveaways along the way. Tickets and info below.
THE NOOSA TO NOARLUNGA Q&A TOUR
Queensland
Saturday 19 October – BCC Cinemas Noosa
Sunday 20 October – BCC Cinemas Maroochydore Sunshine Plaza
Monday 21 October – Dendy Coorparoo
Tuesday 22 October – Dendy Southport
New South Wales
Thursday 24 October – Palace Byron Bay
Friday 25 October – Lennox Head Cultural
Saturday 26 October – Yamba Cinema
Saturday 26 October – Sawtell Cinema
Sunday 27 October – Nambucca Cinema
Sunday 27 October – Port Macquarie Cinema
Monday 28 October – Event Cinemas Kotara
Wednesday 30 October – Avoca Beach Theatre
Friday 1 November – Randwick Ritz, Sydney
Saturday 2 November – Hayden Orpheum, Sydney
Saturday 2 November – Gala Twin Cinema, Warrawong
Sunday 3 November – Arcadia Twin Cinemas, Ulladulla
Sunday 3 November – Perry Street Cinema, Bateman’s Bay
Victoria
Thursday 7 November – Classic Elsternwick, Melbourne
Friday 8 November – The Lido, Melbourne
Saturday 9 November – The Pivotonian, Geelong
Saturday 9 November – Lorne Theatre
South Australia
Thursday 17 November – Victa Cinema, Victor Harbor
Wednesday 20 November – Wallis Noarlunga, Adelaide
A poetic homage to Australia’s early surf-culture with unearthed footage set to an original soundtrack. Combining hundreds of hours of lovingly restored 16mm footage with a salt-infused soundscape by Headland.
“A breathtakingly beautiful homage to the late ’60s generation of surfers. One for the ages.”
– Monty Webber, Tracks Magazine