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Mitchell Miller Biography & Facts

Kennedy Miller Mitchell (known before 2009 as Kennedy Miller) is an Australian film, television and video game production house in Potts Point, Sydney, that has been producing television and film since 1978. It is responsible for some of Australia's best-known and most successful films, including the four Mad Max films, the two Babe films, and the two Happy Feet films. Kennedy Miller Mitchell is one of Australia's oldest existing film production companies, and the most successful internationally. Its principals are George Miller and Doug Mitchell who has been a financial partner in the enterprise since 1981 and is George Miller's producing partner. Many of the films are directed by the co-founder, George Miller, though he sometimes takes an organisational role and prefers to use someone else to direct, as with Babe, which was directed by Chris Noonan. The company's most recent project was the fourth Mad Max film, titled Mad Max: Fury Road. After being "in development hell for 25 years", the film was released on 15 May 2015, to critical acclaim but financial underperformance. History Byron Kennedy, who was a film school lecturer at the time, and George Miller first met at a summer film school in Australia in 1971. They began making short features and experimental work, including Violence in the Cinema, Part 1, which Byron produced, photographed and edited, and which won two Australian Film Institute (AFI) awards. In 1978, Kennedy and Miller formed the production company Kennedy Miller Productions, which produced their first feature film, Mad Max. The success of the film allowed them to establish Hollywood contacts, and work in the United States as well as in Australia. In July 1983, Byron Kennedy was killed when the helicopter he was piloting crashed. Miller's first reaction was to back away from filmmaking without Kennedy's input, but he decided to continue, and created a sizeable body of TV productions during the 1980s and 1990s, among them the six-part series The Dismissal (1983), the seven-part series Bodyline (1984), the six-part series The Cowra Breakout (1984), the ten-part series Vietnam (1987) with Nicole Kidman, the three-part series Bangkok Hilton (1989), and the five-part series The Dirtwater Dynasty (1989). In 1994, the company took court action against Australian television broadcaster Nine Network over a contracted creative rights dispute. Kennedy Miller received a payout of $8.1 million. In 1995, the company had a major success with the film Babe, the story of a pig who thinks it is a sheepdog. The film used cutting-edge animal animatronic and visual effects created by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, John Cox's Creature Workshop and Rhythm and Hues. Along with visual effects supervisor Scott E. Anderson, they were awarded the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects. Babe was the second largest grossing film at the Australian box office after Crocodile Dundee (1986). In 2006, the company had another big success with Happy Feet, which topped the US box office. In 2007, the company formed a partnership with Australian production and media services outfit the Omnilab Media Group, to launch a digital production company. In 2009, the company was renamed Kennedy Miller Mitchell. In 2011, the company made a strategic move towards video game creation, and plans to make games for its own films. The company has taken on staff from two Australian game developers that have collapsed, Krome Studios and Team Bondi. In early 2013, the company closed down their video game studio, KMM Interactive Entertainment, and ceased production on Whore of the Orient, which was going to be the next title from the devs behind the game L.A. Noire. After the studio closed down, the remaining devs formed an indie studio called Intuitive Game Studios, which would act as a successor to both Team Bondi and the KMM studio. Filmography Mad Max (1979) Mad Max 2 (1981) The Dismissal (1983) (miniseries) Bodyline (1984) (miniseries) The Cowra Breakout (1985) (miniseries) Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985) Vietnam (1987) (miniseries) The Year My Voice Broke (1987) The Witches of Eastwick (1987) The Dirtwater Dynasty (1988) (miniseries) Sportz Crazy (1988) (documentary series) The Clean Machine (1988) (TV movie) The Riddle of the Stinson (1988) (TV movie) Fragments of War: The Story of Damien Parer (1988) (TV movie) Dead Calm (1989) Bangkok Hilton (1989) (miniseries) Flirting (1991) Lorenzo's Oil (1992) Babe (1995) Video Fool for Love (1996) (Documentary) 40,000 Years of Dreaming (1997) (Documentary) Babe: Pig in the City (1998) Happy Feet (2006) Happy Feet Two (2011) Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) Three Thousand Years of Longing (2022) Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) Mad Max: The Wasteland (TBA) Untitled Mad Max: The Wasteland sequel (TBA) Whore of the Orient (Cancelled) Academy Award nominations The Witches of Eastwick (1987) Best Original Score: John Williams – nominated Best Sound: Wayne Artman, Tom Beckert, Tom Dahl & Art Rochester – nominated Lorenzo's Oil (1992) Best Actress: Susan Sarandon – nominated Best Original Screenplay: written by George Miller & Nick Enright – nominated Babe (1995) Best Picture: George Miller, Doug Mitchell & Bill Miller, producers – nominated Best Director: Chris Noonan – nominated Best Adapted Screenplay: screenplay by George Miller & Chris Noonan – nominated Best Supporting Actor: James Cromwell – nominated Best Film Editing: Marcus D'Arcy & Jay Friedkin – nominated Best Art Direction: Roger Ford & Kerrie Brown – nominated Best Visual Effects: Scott E. Anderson, Charles Gibson, Neal Scanlan & John Cox – won Babe: Pig in the City (1998) Best Original Song: "That'll Do," music and lyrics by Randy Newman – nominated Happy Feet (2006) Best Animated Feature: George Miller – won Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) Best Picture: Doug Mitchell & George Miller, producers – nominated Best Director: George Miller – nominated Best Cinematography: John Seale – nominated Best Film Editing: Margaret Sixel – won Best Costume Design: Jenny Beavan – won Best Makeup and Hairstyling: Lesley Vanderwalt, Elka Wardega & Damian Martin – won Best Production Design: Colin Gibson & Lisa Thompson – won Best Sound Editing: Mark Mangini & David White – won Best Sound Mixing: Chris Jenkins, Gregg Rudloff & Ben Osmo – won Best Visual Effects: Andrew Jackson, Tom Wood, Dan Oliver & Andy Williams – nominated See also List of film production companies List of television production companies References. Discover the Mitchell Miller popular books. 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