Going Back to Meet the World (2022)

An old memory makes Mark decide to change his career as an electrician for a turn at theater school. Despite his friend’s objections, he sets off to find out that theater school isn’t all singing, and dancing, and laughing.

Going Back to Meet the World (2022).

Director’s Statement

‘Going Back to Meet the World’ is an attempt to make sense of four years spent in art school. It explores the experiences that the arts are an industrious environment; that as much as things seem to change in the socio-political arena, people are people; and that wanting to belong tends to background all other desires.

It is an experiment in translating reality into a fictional record of the people and spaces during a specific time in someone’s life. No auditions were held nor roles cast, and as such, no professional actors were on set. Everyone plays a version of themselves, a version that we discovered through rehearsals and conversations about the situations highlighted by the film. The themes explored surfaced from recent observations, for example, that artists and blue collar workers are cut from the same cloth, that it’s very hard for men to make friends in their thirties, and that some people, like Becca, go right for what they want and others, like Mark, build complex institutional paths out of simple desires.

This film brings together elements of humor, sadness, shame, failure, and beauty. The film benefits from effective and realistic performances, richness of the subtext (whether material through production design, or through backgrounded conversations), use of long takes, and avoidance of punch lines (for the most part) as it lays out intricate emotional processes onto classic narrative plot structures.

Screenings

‘Going Back to Meet the World’ had its world premiere at the Festival du Nouveau Cinéma in Montreal from October 10 – 12, 2022 where it won the Grand Prize for the RPCÉ presented by Netflix.

Cast

Mark Loader as Mark

Brynne Harper as Brynne

Robert Kitsos as The Professor

Sonja Tan as Sonja

Neil Madill as Neil

Amy Fisher as Amy

Alice Fisher Daniel as Alice

Rowan Landaiche as The Cinematographer

Zack Faulks as Zack

Lachlan Harris-Fiesel as Lachlan

Brendan Wren as The Guitarist

Garnet Tyler as The Assistant Camera

David William McEwen as Dave

Santi Henderson as Uncle Hermes

Sean Bray as Sean

March Loose as March

Vibert Jack as Vibert

Leon Pennjack as Leon

Nikolas Jugovac as Young Mark

Tony Charrette as Tony

Tamlin Vetter as Tamlin

Julia Cai as Julia

Sydney Bunning as The Drummer

Zach Walde as Theatre Student

Rebecca White as Becca

Niall Creegan as Drew

Ezra Sulin as Ezra

Leah Van Meer Mass as Leah

Elisa Penn as Elisa

Matilda Pennjack as Matilda

Amelia Frank as Young Brynne

Hassan Baber as Hassan

Jaeda Gonzales as Jaeda

Terris Tan as Terris

Michael McDiarmid as The Client

Ubair Shaheen as Bar Customer

Crew

Writer/Director – Santi Henderson

Director of Photography – Ubair Shaheen

Gaffer – Ivar Swanson

Editor – Santi Henderson

Costume Designer – Natali Karajeh

Dance Choreography – Brynne Harper

Assistant Directors – Rowan Landaiche, Anastasia Itkina, Vicente Villaroel, Niall Creegan, and Patrycja Kamska

Assistant Cameras – Katie Christing, Sydney Bunning, Pye Srisa-An, Malcolm Soundrup, Nastasja Sedi

Production Designers – Rowan Landaiche and Garnet Tyler

Producers – Santi Henderson and Anastasia Itkina

Associate Producers – Keegan Turnquist and Niall Creegan

Composer – Alex Abahmed

Sound Editor – Santi Henderson and Alex Abahmed

Sound Mixers – Audrey Kerridge, Tawan Shaller, and Grace Esplen

Boom Operators – Vicente Villaroel and Ezra Sulin

Grip – Zach Walde, Will Fitzsimmons, Baran Mehrdadian

Festivals and Accolades