Possible Worlds will screen world premiere of Arctic Blast
Monday, June 21, 2025 at 11:05AM
Possible Worlds

 

 

Arctic Blast, a sci-fi action thriller directed by Australian Brian Trenchard-Smith, will have its world premiere at Possible Worlds, Sydney’s 5th Canadian Film Festival.

The Australian-Canadian co-production was shot in Tasmania with post-production done in Montreal, including effects by Modus (300, Sin City). It stars Canadian Michael Shanks (Stargate SG-1) alongside Australia’s Indiana Evans, Alexandra Davies and Robert Mammone. Bruce Davison also stars.

The film will screen Wednesday 4th August at Dendy Opera Quays, followed by a Q&A.

In Arctic Blast, a solar eclipse sends a colossal blast of super-chilled air towards the earth, setting off a catastrophic chain of events that threatens to engulf the world in ice. As Coastal Australia undergoes mass evacuation, physicist Jack Tate races to find a solution while protecting his family.

Arctic Blast is genre master Brian Trenchard-Smith’s first Australian film in over a decade. A key player in the Ozploitation film scene of the 70’s and 80’s, Trenchard-Smith is often credited as one of Quentin Tarantino’s favourite director.

“I am proud to have made a movie with a climatologist as the hero.” Says Trenchard-Smith, “Arctic Blast is a timely film. Its story of a family's response to an environmental catastrophe, one that might become a reality if corporate polluters and global warming deniers continue to have politicians in their pockets, is a timely one.”

“I have shot all over the world and Australia remains my favourite production environment”, says the director. “Shooting in Tasmania with a crew of young enthusiasts and fellow old lags was a blast, an Arctic blast in fact."

Arctic Blast is my fourth production financed via co-production treaties with Canada,” explains Executive producer Antony I. Ginnane. “The ability to share and collaborate on the creative process with my Canadian colleagues Tom Berry and Pierre David as well as access the very generous Canadian and provincial funding envelopes to supplement Australian funding was crucial to the success of the film and a comparatively simple process given the complexities of international film financing these days. I will be working with Canada again!”

The world premiere will takes place as part of Sydney’s 5th Canadian Film Festival, at Dendy Opera Quays, 9/2 East Circular Quay.

It will kick off with a welcome drink at 6:00pm, followed by the screening at 6:30pm. Tickets are $14 and available from Dendy Opera Quays from July 1st (phone 02 9247 3800 or visit www.dendy.com.au).

The full program will be revealed on Canada Day, July 1st 2010.

Article originally appeared on Possible Worlds (http://www.possibleworlds.net.au/).
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