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Screenplay
by CHRISTINE OLSEN
Produced by PHILLIP NOYCE CHRISTINE OLSEN Director of
Photography CHRISTOPHER DOYLE H.K.S.C
Production Designer Costume
Designer ROGER FORD
Edited by JOHN SCOTT VERONIKA JENET
Music by PETER GABRIEL
Book: DORIS PILKINGTON & GARIMARA
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CAST
EVERYLYN SAMPI
TIANNA SANSBURY
LAURA MONAGHAN
DAVID GULPILIL NINGALI
LAWFORD MYARN LAWFORD
DEBORAH MAILMAN
JASON CLARKE
KENNETH BRANAGH
NATASHA WANGANEEN
GARRY McDONALD
ROY BILLING
LORNA LESLIE
CELINE O'LEARY
KATE ROBERTS
TRACY MONAGHAN
TAMARA FLANAGAN |
DAVID NGOOMBUJARRA The 19th and 20th Century
is full of crimes against humanity. Racial discrimination
and racial engineering are a well documented fact and source
of shame in South Africa. In the USA the native population
was decimated by greed, hatred and a deliberate misunderstanding
of the rights and needs of the American Indian. The white
man and his God created havoc, pain and misery
all across South America, North Africa, and the Caribbean.
You cant turn around without seeing the effects of
slavery and then apartheid (in whatever name it was called
in other places). Somehow, Australia has escaped most of
the appropriation for its treatment of the aboriginal peoples
over the centuries.
Rabbit Proof Fence
ably and poignantly directed by Philip Noyce tackles
one particular nasty element of the administration of that
countrys native people. Successive Australian Governments,
from the late twenties, all the way up to the 1970s,
followed a program of taking so called half-caste
children from their mothers and placing them in a camp
where they were trained to be servants and good Christians.
This systematic destruction of family values
of aboriginal people made them despair, self-destruct and
reinforced in the eyes of the white man that native people
werent a culture worth respecting.
The same methods were used in South Africa, but there whole
families were uprooted and shipped out to homelands
or remote townships where there was no work and poor farming
land. The impoverishment of the black and brown people of
South Africa was alarmingly depressing and self-fulfilling.
Its no use hiding behind history. The Nazis were just
an extreme example of the same thing. Intolerance, injustice,
Christian values, racial hatred made these things happen
and the consequences of these events still reverberate and
destroy futures.
Rabbit Proof Fence is
not a scientific film; it is not a political film. Its
not a thriller or dealing with an untold secret holocaust
what it is, is a testimony to the human spirit, to
courage and fortitude. It displays a righteous hatred for
this system that dehumanised native peoples. Set in 1931
Australia, it tells the true tale of Molly, Gracie and little
Daisy who were abducted by the government against their
will and taken to Moors Farm 1500 miles from their home.
Here they would be trained to be willing slaves
house maids and shop workers. (The lighter skinned ones
would be taken elsewhere to be educated.
The eldest child Molly, beautifully played by Everylyn Sampi
utterly rejected this life and first chance she got, she
took her fellow abductees Gracie and Daisy, so tiny she
couldnt possibly last and they set out to find the
Rabbit Proof Fence that would take them home. All 1500 miles.
This is a remarkable journey, you cant help but feel
for their courage and will and when you discover that poor
Molly did this twice! You just weep for her and a society
that could be so cruel.
Kenneth Branagh as the Administrator is cold, calculating,
and filled with almost religious zeal for his job and the
keeper of racial purity. The rest are just following
orders.
Molly and the two other children Gracie and Daisy break
your heart with their simple desire to find their way home
against all odds and there is not necessarily a happy ending.
See Rabbit Proof Fence
its a real film about real issues. It's a lesson
as well as a damn good drama that just happens to be true.
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