Walking the road to success

Walking Fish

The Walking Fish Productions trio: Dave, Louis and Lachlan.

The Walking Fish Productions trio: Dave, Louis and Lachlan.

‘Hmm, I can’t remember.’ Dave’s eyes dart behind his glasses as he looks skyward, searching for the memory of meeting Lachlan for the first time.  

‘Really? You can’t remember our first moment?’ Lachlan retorts, with a disappointed shake of his head.  

‘Well, can you?’  

Silence.  

The initial meeting of Lachlan McLeod and David Elliot-Jones – who would later become business partners – seemingly wasn’t very memorable.  

On the other hand, Lachlan’s first interaction with third business partner, Louis Dai, is memorable, because Louis fell asleep mid-conversation. They were on a College boat cruise, it was late, and either Louis was tired or Lachlan was boring. It depends on who you ask. 

With the three reminiscing about their O-Week experiences, Dave suddenly pipes up, having recovered an early impression of Lachlan, who lived directly opposite him in Upper Cowan. ‘Actually, I remember Lachie being very polite, kind of like my dad or something.’ 

Despite their less-than-inspiring first impressions, the three freshers gradually found more things in common and bonded over their shared love of music, The Office (‘The UK version, of course’), and their interest in making short films around campus.  

The trio’s first ‘big’ film was made for the Trinity film festival and was about their mutual friend’s obsession with pigeons. ‘It was a strange film,’ Lachlan reflects.  

Following on from this, the first film that brought the students notoriety outside Trinity College, with a screening at the Brunswick Film Festival, was a short film about Dave having nobody to celebrate his birthday with him. The twist? He was thrown a surprise party by a collection of soft toys. Lachlan: ‘Yeah, that was strange as well.’ 

Lachlan’s interest in films came from making home videos while growing up and a short course in videography, completed after he finished high school. Louis, who was intent on becoming a journalist, and Dave, a fellow media and communications student who was cutting his teeth in student radio, say they simply liked watching films and didn’t have a desire to make them until they started playing around with a Handycam at Trinity. 

‘The College environment enabled some of those early film projects, like the pigeon one, for example,’ says Dave. ‘There was the competition run by the film club, plus, at College, you’ve got all this free time on your hands and you’re surrounded by people with similar interests and are encouraged to give things a go. If it wasn’t for that environment, we probably wouldn’t have done any of this.’ 

The Walking Fish team at the 2022 South by South West film festival in Austin Texas.

The Walking Fish team at the 2022 South by South West film festival in Austin, Texas.

The Walking Fish team at the 2022 South by South West film festival in Austin, Texas.

The friends say that if they had to pin down the moment their filmmaking became more serious, it was when they made a documentary about Australia’s student migrant crisis, circa 2010. They each pitched in $300 to buy a camcorder off eBay, then set off overseas.  

‘We had this really hack set-up, but got cheap tickets to India and decided to follow Indian students, trying to capture the entire process of applying to study abroad, to landing in Australia,’ says Louis. ‘We shot way too much stuff and didn’t know what we were doing, but when we came back to Australia, we had a side of the migration story that the mainstream media didn’t have – the student perspective.’  

The resulting film, Convenient Education, was pitched to and accepted by SBS in 2012, which led to another project with the broadcaster. At that point, funding became involved, and this provided the impetus for setting up a business.

Walking Fish Productions (named after two pet axolotls the boys had in their first share house out of College) was born, and the trio started exploring the stories of interesting people and topics that were ‘bizarre or intriguing’. 

The next big break came when the guys and their partners moved to Japan for two years on a working holiday and used the time to make the documentary Big in Japan, which was picked up by Amazon Prime upon its 2018 release and screened on Qantas flights.  

‘That’s when we got the confidence to get into corporate work and charge for our services,’ says Lachlan. In 2019 they quit their side hustles and went in full time. 

Of course, running a full-time business with your best mates has its pros and cons.  

‘I think the pros are that we trust each other and we know we can always rely on each other,’ says Louis. ‘But in the early years we were trying to figure out where we fit into the bigger picture. We all fell into it at the same time and none of us had any particular industry-specific skills, so it took us a while to work out what our strengths and weaknesses were. Now we comfortably have roles that we've assigned to each other and that’s helped us work more cohesively as a unit.’ 

As well as content for channels like VICE, The Guardian and Al Jazeera, the Walking Fish portfolio includes several videos created for Trinity College, which the team says are always enjoyable and bring back fond memories.

‘It’s always fun doing Trinity shoots because you get different perspectives of your own experience,’ says Louis.  

‘Plus, the reality is, the production company wouldn’t exist without Trinity College … [Going to Trinity] is such a unique experience that not a lot of people get to have and we’re all very privileged to have had it. We’re very grateful.’ 

Watch a video made by Walking Fish about Trinity’s Dining Hall.

Clean, a Walking Fish documentary about a woman working in the trauma cleaning business, was the closing film at the 2022 Melbourne International Film Festival and screened on SBS.

United on the path to adulthood
The worlds of Georgina Ridley and Charlie Kemp collided in 2014 when they joined Trinity as freshers.

CONTENTS

TIMELINE


FROM THEN TO NOW

This is how Trinity College's story has unfolded.

COLLEGE NEWS


NEWS

A snapshot of 2022....and what a special year it was.


OBITS

We are saddened to acknowledge the passing of Trinity alumni and friends during 2022.

ART AND CULTURE

TRINITY UP IN LIGHTS

Trinitarians have been taking to the stage since the late 19th century. We look at the trajectory of Trinity's performing arts scene.

We explore how Trinity came to hold such a diverse and impressive art collection.


DR CALVIN BOWMAN

Meet Calvin, an Oakleaf Awardee.

SPORT

The rivalry between Trinity and Ormond can be traced right back to the beginning.


TIGER WOO!

It doesn't matter if you're a champion athlete or the type who works out rules on the fly, there's a place for everyone on the Trinity team.


GILLON MCLACHLAN

Meet Gillon, an Oakleaf Awardee.

LEADERSHIP


MERCURY RISING

Andrew Prentice shares his journey to become one of the world's leading experts on the formation of the solar system.


ON BEING 'EDUCATION PEOPLE'

Dr Denis White served as Executive Director of Trinity College's Foundation Studies during the program's foundational years and his leadership played an integral role in setting our Pathways School up for success.


TAKING A HOLISTIC VIEW

From its earliest days, Trinity College has aimed to offer students a well-rounded education. Warden and CEO Ken Hinchcliff (TC 1976) explains what this means and the impact it has on our future leaders. 


JEROME CUBILLO

Meet Jerome, an Oakleaf Awardee.

FAITH


EXPRESSING ANGLICAN IDENTITY

The Archbishop of Melbourne, the Most Revd Dr Philip Freier, reflects on the history of the Trinity College Theological School.

A MATTER OF FAITH

We look at the influence of chaplaincy and religious worship throughout Trinity's history.


THE REVEREND JENNY INGLIS

Meet Jenny, an Oakleaf Awardee.

FASHION

Mullets, shoulder pads, suits on the Bul and knee-high socks at Juttoddie. Here are some of the fashions we rocked and some we'd rather forget.


MEGHA KAPOOR

Meet Megha, an Oakleaf Awardee.


ARCHITECTURE


A NEW ERA FOR OUR DINING HALL

The beating heart of Trinity College will undergo a major renovation in 2023.


THINK BIG, GIVE BIG

Among many valued donors, the Clarke family has made significant contributions to Trinity College's built environment, and in turn, its educational offering.


ANDREW FARRAN

Meet Andrew, an Oakleaf Awardee.


RELATIONSHIPS


WALKING THE ROAD TO SUCCESS

Three young men who met during O-Week in 2007 could never have foreseen that one day they would own a video production company together.


SIBLING SUPPORT

We talk to Aquinne and Saskia Wijewardene on what its like to attend Trinity with a sibling.


UNITED ON THE PATH TO ADULTHOOD

Georgina and Charlie's worlds collided in 2014 when they joined Trinity as freshers.


EVENTS


THOSE WERE THE DAYS

We have always valued the power of events in bringing us together and keeping us connected. Take a stroll down memory lane.


THESE ARE THE DAYS

2022 was fun...and we've got the photos to prove it!