Tag: Film

  • Elusive Justice: Dean Gibson on Incarceration Nation and the Epidemic of Indigenous Imprisonment

    Former prisoner and Deadly Connections co-founder Keenan Mundine

    Although only 3.3 per cent of Australians are Indigenous, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men comprise 29 per cent of male prisoners in the country; women, 34 per cent of female prisoners; and youth, 55 per cent of young prisoners. Between 1991 and 2021, 500 Indigenous people died in custody. At the time of writing, not one of these deaths has resulted in a criminal conviction. These are just some of the facts that inspired Incarceration Nation (2021). Keep reading on Metro.

  • Home on the Rocks: Blue Lucine on Displacement and The Eviction

    ‘It was a film that everybody was telling me to stop making, the whole time I was making it,’ says director Blue Lucine, referring to her documentary The Eviction, which premiered at the 2018 Antenna Documentary Film Festival. ‘People would say, “No-one’s going to watch it,” or, “The story’s already over.”’ Keep reading on Metro.

  • Creation, Care and Country: Penelope McDonald on Audrey Napanangka

    Audrey Napanangka Martin (right) with her husband, Santo Giardina

    Filmed over a ten-year period in Mparntwe (Alice Springs), Audrey Napanangka (Penelope McDonald, 2022) is a documentary that grew out of an even longer ­friendship: that shared by director McDonald and Warlpiri artist Audrey Napanangka Martin, who first met in the 1980s in Lajamanu, a remote community of around 600 people of the Warlpiri nation on the northern edge of the Tanami Desert. Keep reading on Metro.