Difference between revisions of "Anti-Fan"
Thomas Bull (talk | contribs) m |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | A [[fannish]] film which was actually named '''''Aussie Fan''''' but is generally remembered as ''Anti-Fan'' after the villain. It was a highly successful [[bid]] film (it won a [[Ditmar]] in 1973) by the [[Australia in '75]] bid followed by a less-successful film for [[Australia in '83]]. The two films are generally referred to as the AntiFan films. | + | A [[fannish]] film which was actually named '''''Aussie Fan''''' but is generally remembered as ''Anti-Fan'' after the villain. It was a highly successful [[bid]] film (it won a [[Ditmar Award]] in 1973) by the [[Australia in '75]] bid followed by a less-successful film for [[Australia in '83]]. The two films are generally referred to as the AntiFan films. |
''Aussie Fan'' was made in [[Melbourne]] in 1972 to publicize the Australian bid to host the [[1975 Worldcon]]. It was directed by [[John Litchen]] It featured were quite a few members of Melbourne fandom, with [[Paul Stevens]] as the nefarious ‘Antifan’ who is determined to wipe out the members of the Aussiecon committee. [[Malcolm Hunt]], who played the heroic Aussiefan, disappeared from fandom shortly after. It included scenes at [[Space Age Books]]. | ''Aussie Fan'' was made in [[Melbourne]] in 1972 to publicize the Australian bid to host the [[1975 Worldcon]]. It was directed by [[John Litchen]] It featured were quite a few members of Melbourne fandom, with [[Paul Stevens]] as the nefarious ‘Antifan’ who is determined to wipe out the members of the Aussiecon committee. [[Malcolm Hunt]], who played the heroic Aussiefan, disappeared from fandom shortly after. It included scenes at [[Space Age Books]]. |
Latest revision as of 16:16, 18 March 2023
A fannish film which was actually named Aussie Fan but is generally remembered as Anti-Fan after the villain. It was a highly successful bid film (it won a Ditmar Award in 1973) by the Australia in '75 bid followed by a less-successful film for Australia in '83. The two films are generally referred to as the AntiFan films.
Aussie Fan was made in Melbourne in 1972 to publicize the Australian bid to host the 1975 Worldcon. It was directed by John Litchen It featured were quite a few members of Melbourne fandom, with Paul Stevens as the nefarious ‘Antifan’ who is determined to wipe out the members of the Aussiecon committee. Malcolm Hunt, who played the heroic Aussiefan, disappeared from fandom shortly after. It included scenes at Space Age Books.
Aussie Fan premiered in Sydney in August 1972 at Syncon 72. The 16mm print was then flown to the United States and shown at L.A.Con I, the 1972 Worldcon. Between L.A.Con and Torcon 2, the 1973 Worldcon in Toronto, that would decide the location of the 1975 Worldcon, Aussie Fan was shown at conventions across North America. The Australia in 1975 bid succeeded at Torcon 2 and Aussiecon, the first Australian Worldcon, was held in Melbourne in 1975.
The second AntiFan film was made in Sydney in 1980. Called The Anti-Fan Strikes Back, it was made to publicize the Australia in '83 bid to host the 1983 Worldcon in Sydney. The Anti-Fan Strikes Back also premiered in Sydney, at Syncon 80, before going on to conventions in North America. It was also shown at Cinecon in Melbourne in 1981. The Australia in '83 bid was unsuccessful but Australia ultimately hosted a second Worldcon, Aussiecon Two, in Melbourne in 1985.
Paul J. Stevens played Anti-Fan in both films and was accordingly sometimes referred to as Anti-Fan.
Both films on YouTube (description is wrong)
John Litchen is known to have worked on a third Anti-Fan film, in colour, featuring Canberra.
Show | 1972—1980 |
This is a show page for fannish plays and musicals. Please extend it by adding more information about who wrote it, who performed in it and where it was staged/screened. |