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- 'Remembering Agatha' is a whimsical drama (or melancholic comedy) about Agatha (38), who is in a domestic quagmire and a crumbling love story as a mother of two and wife to angry wolf-man, Robert (40). Haunted by the Black Madonna, while being encouraged by her carefree friend Cynthia to somehow liberate herself, Agatha feels trapped, unable to transform her life. One night, she finds a portal through the dishwasher into the forest of her childhood. In this world, her child-self reminds Agatha of forgotten joy and innocence. However, she also holds the secret to the real source of Agatha's grief, which she must now face if she is to transform her present and embrace a better future. Live action 'reality' and animated 'imaginings' intersect to illustrate Agatha's struggles, insights and exultations.
- 'Coming Home' tells the story of a family's yearning to know what happened to brothers Cyril Rigney and Rufus Rigney who set off from their community to Raukkan in Point McLeay Mission, South Australia to join the Great War and fight for country.
- A feature length drama made collaboratively with young people who dip below the surface of their often tough exteriors to reveal what is going on inside.
- The Dusty Feet Mob dancers tell healing stories of the Stolen Generation, featuring Archie Roach's famous song 'Took the Children Away'.
- This First Nations led short film comes from First Nations owned and governed Aboriginal art centre Iwantja Arts, which is located in the rocky, desert country of Indulkana Community on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands in the remote north-west of South Australia. More then forty young men and women from Indulkana Community story boarded, created props, and prepared dances in workshops led by Iwantja artists to create the film, which explores the inter-generational effects of the transition from traditional Anangu life prior to first contact through to contemporary life in Indulkana Community. The film incorporates dance and music, both traditional and contemporary, blending live action with animated sequences. While the film looks at the drastic and often damaging changes faced by Anangu people across generations, the project's leaders want their film to convey a positive message, celebrating Anangu cultural resilience and a spirit of irreverent humour.
- A young nature photographer hesitantly accepts an assignment to shoot for a fashion magazine which takes him to a ski resort. He leaves his loved ones behind and further distances himself by obsessively following a falcon around the snow fields, apparently in a quest for self-fulfilment.
- Imprisoned within memories a woman tries to make sense of her life. Outside, a world observes and judges as the handyman (her animus) pushes her interior further into disrepair and forces a breakthrough to an unburdened future.
- Alec Baker, Peter Mungkuri and Mr Kunmanara Pompey are three senior artists and respected leaders from Indulkana community on the APY Lands, SA. As young men, they were renowned stockmen and in 2017 they coordinated a men's camp at the local cattle station. Influenced by their ongoing love for cowboy and western films and country music, they created their own spaghetti western: Never Stop Riding.