News| Dec 2, 2021

From the spectacular, lunar-like landscapes of Mortal Kombat’s Outworld, to the underground vampire lairs of forthcoming AMC+ series Firebite, the South Australian outback town of Coober Pedy offers a range of unique and dramatic locations for all screen productions.   

Kanku-Breakaways Conservation Park, Coober Pedy, South Australia, Photo Credit: Elise Cook

Situated 840km (520mi) north-west of the state capital Adelaide, Coober Pedy is known as “the opal capital of the world”, its moon-like landscape dotted with mine shafts and piles of loose stones from opal mining activities.

The town is also famous for its network of underground homes, known as “dugouts”, with about half the population living in residences carved out of the hillsides – some spreading up to 450sqm (4843sqft) underground.

Underground Residence, Coober Pedy, South Australia

“Coober Pedy is a unique location offering arid desert vistas, pock-marked mining landscapes and a visceral underground world of tunnels and chambers, difficult to replicate or find in one place. It’s also an accessible town with a rich filming history and dependable climate, and the Coober Pedy and Umoona Community were welcoming to us and to filming on the traditional lands of the Antakirinja Matu-Yankunjtjtjara people of the western desert.”

– Paul Ranford, producer, Firebite
Umoona Underground Mine, Coober Pedy, South Australia. South Australian Tourism Commission Photo by Adam Bruzzone.
Shantae Barnes-Cowan as Shanika in Firebite, which was filmed in Coober Pedy. Photo credit Ian Routledge/AMC+

GOING UNDERGROUND

New AMC+ and See-Saw Films vampire series Firebite recently wrapped shooting in Coober Pedy, using both underground and above-ground locations.

Directed and written by Warwick Thornton and Brendan Fletcher, the series was actually created with the town specifically in mind.

“It was: did you know there are a quarter of a million abandoned mine shafts around Coober Pedy, in a town of like 5,000 people? A quarter of a million holes! Wouldn’t it be cool if there were vampires in those holes? So the pitch for the show was always Coober Pedy, it was always vampires in the mining tunnels, the mining tunnels leading to the towns. What a great concept for a vampire show.”

Brendan Fletcher, writer/director/producer, Firebite
Rob Collins as Tyson in Firebite, which was filmed in Coober Pedy. Photo credit: Ian Routledge/AMC+

“Coober Pedy formed the basis for all design elements of Firebite, from the colour palette to tunnel studio sets. The actual landscape itself and the myriad of tunnels and caves elevated our production values exponentially,” said Rachel Gardner, Producer of Firebite.

“Our lair set, for example, which we shot on location in Coober Pedy, would have been outside of the scope of our budget to replicate in a studio. Likewise, above ground, the uniqueness of the landscape provided us with exterior locations that look heightened and stylised and outside of the scope of our budget to replicate. Other than the visual uniqueness of the location, the people of Coober Pedy make this a special filming location. The community welcomed us with open arms and bent over backwards to support us in making our series,” 

Rachel Gardner, Producer, Firebite
Callan Mulvey as Josiah in Firebite, which was filmed in Coober Pedy. Photo credit Ian Routledge/AMC+

“Coober Pedy, it’s the most beautiful man-made disaster in the world. It is ugly, beautiful… it’s just mineshaft after mineshaft, treeless planes – so cinematic. If you’re going to make a film about vampires, it’s probably the best place to make it.”

Warwick Thornton, Writer/Director, FIREBITE

KANKU BREAKAWAYS & THE PAINTED DESERT

Lying 32km (20mi) north of Coober Pedy, these colourful low hills are so named for having “broken away” from the nearby Stuart Range, and have been featured in films such as Mortal Kombat and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome.

As the day goes by, the passing of the sun changes the desert colours, creating stunningly surreal scenes.

Further north lies the Painted Desert, where dramatic rocky outcrops of yellow and orange splash purple and black shadows as the sunlight shifts.

Painted Desert, Coober Pedy, South Australia
The Breakaways, Coober Pedy, South Australia
Behind the Scenes of Mortal Kombat, on location in Coober Pedy. Credit Mark Rogers
Mortal Kombat on location in Coober Pedy, South Australia. Photo by Todd Garner
Mortal Kombat on location in Coober Pedy, South Australia. Photo by Todd Garner

“I couldn’t be more impressed with the locations. I really don’t think we could have made (Mortal Kombat) as gritty and as authentic and as epic in visual scale anywhere else… I don’t know where else we would have found the locations we needed in Australia.
Adelaide and South Australia are a filmmaker’s city and state – there is a history and a pedigree here, but it hasn’t been overshot, it hasn’t been over utilised, so it’s actually just sort of sitting here waiting to be harnessed for what it really has.”

Simon McQuoid, Director, Mortal Kombat
Josh Lawson as Kano and Jessica McNamee as Sonya Blade in Mortal Kombat, filmed in Coober Pedy. Credit Mark Rogers

THE MOON PLAIN

About 18km (11mi) north-east of Coober Pedy lies the famous Moon Plain, a stark desert of grey, soft clay dirt dotted with fossilised shells and dramatic cracks that look positively extra-terrestrial. The unique landscape has been used as a backdrop for many screen productions including Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Pitch Black and The Red Planet.

Painted Hills, Anna Creek Station, Coober Pedy, Wrightsair Scenic Flight, Credit: South Australian Tourism Commission


“South Australia is pretty unique in that you can have a world like Coober Pedy that has looks nothing like anywhere else on the planet, then you can be down the next day in the South Australian Film Corporation’s Adelaide Studios, and you’re working in a state-of-the-art studio environment. I can’t imagine shooting Firebite anywhere else except South Australia.”

Brendan Fletcher, writer/director/producer, FIREBITE

Coober Pedy is just one of the many stunning and diverse filming locations on offer in South Australia, all accessible by road or air from capital city Adelaide.

Combined with outstanding production incentives, flexible facilities at the South Australian Film Corporation’s Adelaide Studios and an array of award-winning world-class post-production and VFX companies, South Australia is the perfect location for screen productions of any size.

To find out more about filming in South Australia, contact SAFC Production Executive Julie Ryan
or visit safilm.com.au