“It’s great to have Screen Queensland supporting this vital local production both financially, by way of investment and loans, and practically in terms of attachments and internships for emerging Queensland talent,” said Mr Shiff.Įmerging female director Martha Goddard worked on episode 7 for her debut into broadcast series. “Behind the camera, our extraordinary Queensland crew brings an equally diverse richness to photography, technical production and design. “In front of the camera The Bureau of Magical Things represents a diverse ethnicity that audiences globally will relate to and embrace,” he said. Mr Shiff said cultural diversity as well as LGBTQIA+ relationships feature in the series. “Sunny and inviting Gold Coast locations such as the botanical gardens, local parklands, rainforests in the hinterland and the purpose-built studio at Arundel all feature in the series, as do drone shots of Brisbane, the river and the iconic Story Bridge,” said Mr Shiff. This next instalment of the fantasy youth series premiered in Australia last Saturday afternoon, with episodes screening Saturday and Sunday and streaming on 10 play.įilmed primarily on the Gold Coast and Brisbane in mid-2020, producer Jonathan M. Shiff said South East Queensland locations provided the ideal canvas for the world of fairies, elves and humans. Shiff Productions is on 10 Shake now and has been released worldwide by Nickelodeon International today. Season two of The Bureau of Magical Things by Queensland’s Jonathan M. Post, Digital, Visual Effects (PDV) Incentive.Production Attraction Strategy (PAS) Incentive.Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Program.
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