DALE BRADLEY
Dale Bradley has been a professional storyteller internationally for over forty years. He has produced more than 35 feature films and tv drama series, directed 9 feature films and written 7 other film scripts that have been produced internationally.
Dale was a finalist for Best Director and Best Film award for his acclaimed production of the feature film Chunuk Bair.
He has worked with a wide range of stars including Sir Ben Kingsley, Ray Liotta, Josh Hartnett, Mel Gibson, Patrick Macnee, BAFTA best actor Jared Harris, Academy Award winner Cuba Gooding Jr., Joan Collins, Sir Edmund Hillary, John Denver, David Hasselhoff, Sir Ian Mune, Linda Carter, Judge Reinhold, Mariel Hemingway, Aaron Eckhart, and Bella Thorne,
Dale has also researched and directed several documentaries. He loves telling stories and is excited about bringing to life these topics and the memories that have been almost forgotten. As a long time Whitford resident he brings a unique passion to this project.
Dale and his associated film production company, Aristos Films, Limited own or have access to top quality production and postproduction facilities that will be made available to this project at rates well below market.
HISTORY
Many memories and important historical information has been preserved by the Whitford residents who lived in the past two centuries. We need to tell those stories today, using the medium and distribution methods of our age. Learing about our heritage is an important aspect of community building. We've lost some of that good old sense of community because our methods of communication and socialising has changed. That's why we need to update the way we tell our stories.
FUTURE
Its our responsibility to record our own stories for the benefit of future generations. What is regarded as just "normal" today will be fascinating to the Whitford people of the future. We aim to tell today's stories in an entertaining way that preserves our way of life and the changing Whitford area for the benefit of those who, in decades to come, will ask what it was like at the beginning of the 21st century.