Limited release set to extend

By Sonia Isaacs

AWARD winning Australian documentary The Trust Fall: Julian Assange is set to have it’s limited cinema release continue later this year.
The film reveals the meaning and significance of the continued detainment and persecution of the most divisive political prisoner of modern times – Julian Assange. The film is the directorial debut of Australian filmmaker Kym Staton – founder and director of Films For Change. It has been shown by all the major cinema chains with a continued national run expected in May, and the well-received documentary delves into the controversial disclosures of WikiLeaks, and its co-founder Assange from 2010.
According to director Kym Staton, The Trust Fall: Julian Assange examines the meaning and significance of the insights that WikiLeaks shared with the world, the resulting behaviour of the governments involved, and the extraordinary personal risk taken by Assange.
“This is a film about a man who risked everything to bring the truth to light,” said Kym.
Filmed over two years on three continents and in ten cities, The Trust Fall: Julian Assange features high-profile Assange supporters and global experts. The film is narrated by Susan Sarandon, Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters, rapper M.I.A and Rage Against The Machine’s guitarist Tom Morello.
The Trust Fall is set to be re-released locally in May. It has already won several awards including Best Emerging Director at Melbourne Documentary Film Festival and Best First-Time Director at the Cine Paris Film Festival.

Advertisement