306 Hollywood
UPSTAGEING Canberra
Fri
20
Fri 20 Mar 6:00 PM
Arc Cinema
Allocated Seating
94 Mins
March
Presented as part of UPSTAGEING Canberra
2018 | DCP | USA | D: Jonathan and Elan Bogarín
Siblings Jonathon and Elan Bogarin recorded interviews of their grandmother Annette Ontell until her death at age 93. After she passed the siblings returned to her now-abandoned farmhouse at 306 Hollywood Avenue, New Jersey. As they sort through decades of accumulated objects, they uncover memories of her loving personality, fussy habits and the pride she took in the family’s Jewish heritage.
The film meditates on loss, inheritance and the emotional weight of material culture. It considers how people assign meaning to everyday items and how those stories linger long after a loved one is gone.
‘By treating objects as emotional artefacts rather than evidence, 306 Hollywood finds a poetic language for grief, showing how memory clings to the everyday long after people disappear.’ - Guy Lodge, Variety
Ahead of the feature film we will screen two short films:
Meet Angus
2025 | AUS | 1 min | D: Paul Easther
Grandparents Visit
2025 | AUS | 1 min | D: Paul Easther
Winners of the ‘Across Generations Award’ at the UPSTAGEING Short Film & Video Competition.
The UPSTAGEING Short Film & Video Competition is in partnership with Screen Canberra and is a cornerstone of UPSTAGEING - Canberra’s first large-scale celebration of creative ageing. By centring stories told for, by or with older people, the competition aims to dismantle ageism and celebrate the profound contributions older Canberrans make to our culture.
2018 | DCP | USA | D: Jonathan and Elan Bogarín
Siblings Jonathon and Elan Bogarin recorded interviews of their grandmother Annette Ontell until her death at age 93. After she passed the siblings returned to her now-abandoned farmhouse at 306 Hollywood Avenue, New Jersey. As they sort through decades of accumulated objects, they uncover memories of her loving personality, fussy habits and the pride she took in the family’s Jewish heritage.
The film meditates on loss, inheritance and the emotional weight of material culture. It considers how people assign meaning to everyday items and how those stories linger long after a loved one is gone.
‘By treating objects as emotional artefacts rather than evidence, 306 Hollywood finds a poetic language for grief, showing how memory clings to the everyday long after people disappear.’ - Guy Lodge, Variety
Ahead of the feature film we will screen two short films:
Meet Angus
2025 | AUS | 1 min | D: Paul Easther
Grandparents Visit
2025 | AUS | 1 min | D: Paul Easther
Winners of the ‘Across Generations Award’ at the UPSTAGEING Short Film & Video Competition.
The UPSTAGEING Short Film & Video Competition is in partnership with Screen Canberra and is a cornerstone of UPSTAGEING - Canberra’s first large-scale celebration of creative ageing. By centring stories told for, by or with older people, the competition aims to dismantle ageism and celebrate the profound contributions older Canberrans make to our culture.
March


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