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  2. Stephen Vagg wrote the film All My Friends Are Leaving Brisbane in 2007. Fifteen years later its sequel, All My Friends Are Returning to Brisbane premiered. So what has changed in the city which many creatives felt they had to leave to find success?

    • Stephen Vagg
  3. “Look, the film did very well for something made on a $42,000 budget – it got a cinema release, had a great run on DVD, launched a bunch of careers – but it wasn’t as though financiers were banging down my door for All My Friends are Leaving Brisbane: Maverick. I have had the notion of a sequel in the back of my mind for ages – it’s ...

  4. Budget. A$42,000. All My Friends Are Leaving Brisbane is a 2007 Australian romantic comedy film directed by Louise Alston and written by Stephen Vagg. It follows Anthea, a 25-year-old girl who hates her job and has to sit back and watch as all her friends move away from her hometown, Brisbane, to make a better life.

  5. Oct 17, 2023 · These themes are explored in the production, All My Friends Are Returning to Brisbane. Call it what you will the ebb and pull of the Sunshine State has its young people running away, and then running back to Brisbane, in a perpetual state of disenchantment and ocker pride.

    • Nadia Jade
  6. Anthea is undergoing a crisis of confidence: overworked, no boyfriend, struggling to find goals - and all her friends are leaving Brisbane. She is tempted to leave herself, but is opposed...

  7. Apr 14, 2021 · All my friends are (leaving) returning to Brisbane takes influence from the indie rom-com 'All my friends are leaving Brisbane'. The artists in the exhibition consider the return of the Brisbane exodus, prompting us to reflect on why people leave and why people return. Featuring Elizabeth Will-ing,

  8. The best thing about All My Friends… is the absence of sentimentality and the gratification that middle-class middle achievers in Brisbane are as emotionally immature as everyone else. Anthea (Charlotte Gregg) is an odd heroine, although such an archaic label hardly touches the consciousness of these once cool stay-at-homes.