Chandon Pictures
| Chandon Pictures | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Comedy | 
| Created by | Rob Carlton | 
| Directed by | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | 
| Starring | Rob Carlton Josh Lawson Darren Gilshenan Rebecca Massey  | 
| Country of origin | Australia | 
| Original language | English | 
| No. of seasons | 2 | 
| No. of episodes | 16 | 
| Production | |
| Producer | Rob Carlton | 
| Production locations | Melbourne & Sydney, Australia | 
| Running time | 25 Minutes | 
| Original release | |
| Network | Movie Extra | 
| Release | 10 November 2007 – 7 May 2009  | 
Chandon Pictures is an Australian comedy television series that premiered on Movie Extra on 10 November 2007 and ended on 7 May 2009.
The series featured sixteen episodes and was a spin-off from a Tropfest short film produced by Rob Carlton and Alex Weinress. It followed the misadventures of a struggling video production company called 'Chandon Pictures.'[1] Rob Carlton, who plays the main character, is the younger cousin of Brian Carlton, The Spoonman talkback host on the Austereo Triple M network. This was revealed when The Spoonman interviewed Rob.
On 10 July 2008, it was announced that the series had won a second season and it had sold format rights to its distributor Lionsgate.[2]
The first season premiered in the UK on Dave on 19 February 2009 in a 10pm slot. It was also aired in the US on the Sundance Channel.
Cast
Main / regular
- Rob Carlton as Tom Chandon
 - Josh Lawson as Carmichael Chandon
 - Darren Gilshenan as Nick Brenner
 - Rebecca Massey as Lucy Cannon
 
Guests / recurring
- Angus Sampson as Bevan (2 episodes)
 - Damon Herriman as Scotty Cornish (1 episode)
 - Dan Wyllie as Tracks Wilcox (1 episode)
 - Don Hany as Boysie (2 episodes)
 - Drew Forsythe as Graham Tucker (1 episode)
 - Ed Kavalee as David (1 episode)
 - Graeme Blundell as John (1 episode)
 - Heather Mitchell as Agent (1 episode)
 - Helen Dallimore as Megan (1 episode)
 - Jessica Napier as Annabelle (1 episode)
 - Jonathon Dutton as Harley (1 episode)
 - Justine Clarke as Samantha (1 episode)
 - Kate Mulvany as Maggie (1 episode)
 - Kathryn Beck as Sherbert (1 episode)
 - Lachy Hulme as Derek (1 episode)
 - Lynette Curran as Lorelei (1 episode)
 - Marshall Napier as Basil (1 episode)
 - Michael Denkha as Andrew (1 episode)
 - Penne Hackforth-Jones as Helen (3 episodes)
 - Peter Phelps as Eddie Connolly (2 episodes)
 - Roy Billing as Celebrant (1 episode)
 - Russell Kiefel as Warwick (4 episodes)
 - Teo Gebert as Bruiser (1 episode)
 - Tony Llewellyn-Jones as Sherbert's Dad (1 episode)
 
Episodes
Season 1 (2007)
| # | Title[3] | Director(s)[3] | Writer(s)[3] | Original Air Date[3] | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Cousins" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 10 November 2007 | 
| 2 | "Back To School" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 17 November 2007 | 
| 3 | "Bevan's Heaven" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 24 November 2007 | 
| 4 | "Champion Charles" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 1 December 2007 | 
| 5 | "Private Dick" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 8 December 2007 | 
| 6 | "Death Wish" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 15 December 2007 | 
| 7 | "White Ants" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 22 December 2007 | 
| 8 | "Hollywood" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 29 December 2007 | 
Season 2 (2009)
| # | Title | Director(s)[A] | Writer(s)[B] | Original Air Date | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 | "The Lifestyle" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 19 March 2009 | 
| 10 | "Run Bitch Run" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 26 March 2009 | 
| 11 | "Not a Pyramid" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 2 April 2009 | 
| 12 | "The Man with the Dancing Fingers" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 9 April 2009 | 
| 13 | "She's 22" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 16 April 2009 | 
| 14 | "Pack" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 23 April 2009 | 
| 15 | "Script is Written" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 30 April 2009 | 
| 16 | "Rock$tar" | Rob Carlton & Alex Weinress | Rob Carlton | 7 May 2009 | 
Awards and nominations
| Year | Award | Category | Recipients and nominees | Result | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | ASTRA Awards | Most Outstanding Drama | Chandon Pictures | Nominated | 
| Australian Film Institute | Best Performance in a Television Comedy | Rob Carlton | Nominated | |
| Best Television Comedy Series | Chandon Pictures | Nominated | ||
| Australian Writers' Guild | Comedy - Situation or Narrative | Rob Carlton (Episode 1: "Cousins") | Nominated | |
| Rob Carlton (Episode 2: "Return of the Titan") | Nominated | |||
| Rob Carlton (Episode 6: "Death Wish") | Won | |||
| 2009 | Australian Film Institute | Best Television Comedy Series | Chandon Pictures | Nominated | 
| Australian Writers' Guild | Comedy - Situation or Narrative | Rob Carlton (Episode 7: "A Script is Written") | Nominated | |
| 2010 | Logie Awards | Most Outstanding Light Entertainment Program | Chandon Pictures | Nominated | 
References
- ^ Newsome, Brad (10 November 2007). "Chandon Pictures review". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 13 November 2007.
 - ^ Knox, David (10 July 2008). "More Pictures for Chandon comedy". tvtonight.com.au. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
 - ^ a b c d "Chandon Pictures: episode guide". Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
 
External links
- {{Official website|https://web.archive.org/web/20071114050618/http://www.movienetwork.tv/Chandon/%7D%7D
 - Chandon Pictures at IMDb
 - Chandon Pictures - "Champion Charles" at Australian Screen Online