Electricfilms pty ltd - A Digital Production Company
The Crew

Graeme Beck - Producer / Director
Graeme Beck's experience as a Producer spans back to ABCTV in Sydney as an Assistant Cameraman on News and Documentaries. After working in Queensland producing Television Commercials he moved to Western Australia where he made a large number of Corporate and Television Commercials for the Local and Asian markets. Graeme has now returned to Sydney.
AWARDS
2 TVB Advertising Awards - Director/DP
New York Film &
Video Festival / Short Drama - Best Cinematography
2 ACS Gold Awards - Director/DP
4 ACS Silver Awards - Director/DP
4 ACS Highly Commended Awards - Director/DP
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Ferry Lie - Cinematographer / Sound Recordist
Ferry Lie graduated from TAFE in 2003 and after working on a number of Short Films has joined Electricfilms as a Sound Recordist and second Cameraman.
AWARDS
Best Commercial & Best Technical Achievement (Indonesian Independent
Commercial Competition)
Nominee for Best Interactive Media Content (UTS Golden Eye Awards)
FEATURE FILMS
Under The Same Sky ("Dibawah Langit Yang Sama") - DOP
SHORT FILMS
Sembelance
Pictures of Anna
Red Coloured Finger Nails
Two Billion Desirables
Broken
Together Again



Video Production and Post Production facilities for Television, DVD and the Web.
OLD FILM FACTS
The first feature
film (commercially made film over 1 hour in length) was the 1906 Australian
film "The Story of the Kelly Gang."
The largest number of cameras used in a single scene was 48 for the sea battle
in Ben Hur. 42 were employed in the Chariot Race with the operators shooting
53,000 feet of film in a single day.
The shower scene in Hitchcock's Psycho involved 70 set ups over seven days
for 45 seconds of edited footage.
The most edited film was Howard Hughes "Hell's Angels" which consumed
2,254,750 feet of film with a continuous running time of 23 days.
The greatest number of known retakes was 342 for the blind flower girl scene
in Chaplin's "City Lights."
Marilyn Monroe did 59 takes in 'Some Like it Hot" in which her only line
was 'Where's the bourbon.'
The most costly news story ever was the Centenary Air Race in Melbourne where
160 frames were transmitted to Britain over 68 hours at a cost of US $30,000
in 1934. It was shown in 1500 cinemas within 48 hours.
"Jurassic Park" cost $90 million dollars to make and $98 million
dollars was spent in publicity.
The funeral scene in "Gandhi" contained around 300,000 extras, 94,560
contracted and over 200,000 volunteers.
Contact
Graeme Beck
Producer / Director
m: 0411 82 7799
p: (02) 9980 7788
e: graeme @ electricfilms.net.au
electricfilms pty ltd