ABC News: 'Film-goers make tracks to shoefiti flick'

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Film-goers make tracks to shoefiti flick Cassie White

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Updated July 22, 2010 09:40:00

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It's been written about, photographed and documented on film, but still no-one really knows why so many shoes are hanging from powerlines around the world.

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From sexy to sinister, the reasons behind sneakertossing have become the stuff of urban legend and in the 1990s it was even given its own term: 'shoefiti'. Popular theories are that they signify gangland turf, drug houses, that someone's recently lost their virginity, or just a plain old schoolyard prank.

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tossing have become the stuff of urban legend.

South Australian film-maker Matthew Bate spent most of his holiday to the US a few years ago looking up, and was so intrigued by shoefiti that he made a short film about it called Flying Kicks.

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The film has since won several awards and is screening at the Melbourne Film Festival this month. "I got emails literally from all over the world giving me all these theories about why it happens and it just went from there really," he said. "The film is like a global Chinese whisper in a way. Somewhere along the line there may have been a grain of truth and these theories get passed along, especially on the internet.

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"Somewhere along the line the truth gets expanded and turns into myth and legend.

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"The classics are that it's a drug-dealing spot ... the other classic is that it marks gang territory, and that one's absolutely true. "I heard from people in Argentina who said it was a mafia symbol, or in Spain that the local mafia were using it as a symbol that they have a deal with the local cops where if they saw a pair of sneakers in a particular neighbourhood then the cops had to stay out of there. "In different countries it has different meanings. The one in the film is that in Sydney when boys lose their virginity they toss up their sneakers as a kind of rite of passage. "One that really stuck with me when I made the film is that people do it because it's almost like a memory they toss them up there to mark their territory. "We do that in many ways; we have children, we make art - all these things that somehow leave a legacy that we somehow existed on this planet." Allan Hurley says there might be something in the theory that it signifies a drug dealer's den, after he and his flatmates moved into a Brisbane house that had sneakers over the power lines out the front. "People would turn up and just rev their engine or flash their lights at the front of the house. We never went out to see what was going on, but they'd sit around for a while then eventually leave," he said.

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