Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster
|
|
Directed by | Cathy Randall |
Produced by | Miriam Stein |
Written by | Cathy Randall |
Starring |
Danielle Catanzariti Keisha Castle-Hughes Toni Collette |
Music by | Guy Gross |
Cinematography | Anna Howard |
Edited by | Dany Cooper |
Distributed by | Buena Vista International |
Release date
|
20 March 2008 |
Running time
|
103 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$6 million |
Box office | A$863,950 |
Hey, Hey, It's Esther Blueburger: Original Soundtrack | |
---|---|
Soundtrack album by Various Artists | |
Released | 14 March 2008 |
Label | Capitol Music Group |
Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger is a 2008 Australian independent teen film written and directed by Cathy Randall. It stars Danielle Catanzariti, Keisha Castle-Hughes and Toni Collette. The film follows Jewish 13-year-old Esther (Catanzariti), an outcast at her school, where she has no friends. That changes when she meets nonconformist Sunni (Castle-Hughes) from the local public school.
With Esther's character based loosely on her own adolescence, Randall was inspired to write the film's script by what she saw as a lack of role models for teenage girls. In 2002, the script earned her a fellowship to the Los Angeles Film School's Feature Development Programme, where she developed the project, and it was later picked up by Tama Films. Randall returned to Australia for casting, and Catanzariti was eventually chosen in the lead role after she attended an audition for minor roles and extras. Production spanned from October to December 2006, with filming taking place in Adelaide, South Australia and Sydney, New South Wales.
The film premiered on 10 February 2008 at the Berlin International Film Festival and was released in Australia on 20 March 2008. It failed to earn back its A$6 million budget with a total domestic gross of approximately $800,000. The film attracted mixed reviews; some critics praised the originality and the acting, though others found Randall's direction dull and the script poorly written. Catanzariti won the Australian Film Institute's Young Actor Award for her performance, and the film received a further three AFI nominations and a nomination for a Film Critics Circle of Australia Award.
Esther Blueburger is a 13-year-old Jewish outcast at her posh private school. Things are no better at home, where her twin brother is beginning to develop into a sociopath and her controlling mother pressures Esther to conform. She finds her only friend in a duck called Normal, and she frequently prays into a toilet asking God to "get me out of here". After escaping her own Bat Mitzvah, Esther bumps into Sunni, a rebellious girl from the local public school, who she had observed and spoken to on previous occasions.