Rolf de Heer's 2006 film "Ten Canoes" is an Aboriginal story presented in an\ud Aboriginal way that in doing so, further empowers its stars, the Ganalbingu speaking people of remote Ramingining, Northern Australia. The native language of the participants is foregrounded and in the secondary versions in which it was released, the English voice over narration is by heavily accented Aboriginal icon David Gulpilil. Cascading repetition characterises the film's plot with its Aboriginal style of storytelling. And non-Aboriginal writer and co-director Rolf de Heer collaborates like few others we might describe as auteurs: his successful and authentic co-operation with the community is reaping awards and, more importantly, seeding many other produc...
Abstract Storytelling is an integral part of life for Indigenous Australians. Befor...
Cinema is an art form widely recognised as an agent to change the social condition and alter traditi...
In a speech at the Sydney Film Festival in 2005, actor Tom E. Lewis likened the Australian film indu...
By insisting "Ten Canoes" (2006) have all its diegetic dialogue in the Aboriginal dialect of Ganalbi...
By privileging Aboriginal language, Aboriginal-accented narration and the Aboriginal style of story-...
The awarded film Ten Canoes (2006) broke new ground in the cinematic representation of Indigenous Au...
Anna Hickey-Mody and Melissa Iocca invented a new name for the cinema-goer at "Bad Boy Bubby" (1993)...
By insisting "Ten Canoes" (2006) have all its diegetic dialogue in the Aboriginal dialect of Ganalbi...
Indigenous knowledge can challenge liberal and anthropocentric definitions of water as human propert...
The 2006 Australian film Ten Canoes, directed by Rolf de Heer and Peter Djigirr, opens wIth a slow a...
This article examines the ways in which Ten Canoes (de Heer and Djiggir, 2006) works as what Nichola...
Dutch-born Australian director, Rolf de Heer, is Australia's most successful and unpredictable film-...
In a reading of the Rolf de Heer film Ten Canoes this article explores the pervasive, contemporary c...
Gulpilil: One Red Blood, directed by Darlene Johnson, follows the life and career of multi-award win...
© The Author(s) 2017. Cinema is an art form widely recognised as an agent to change the social condi...
Abstract Storytelling is an integral part of life for Indigenous Australians. Befor...
Cinema is an art form widely recognised as an agent to change the social condition and alter traditi...
In a speech at the Sydney Film Festival in 2005, actor Tom E. Lewis likened the Australian film indu...
By insisting "Ten Canoes" (2006) have all its diegetic dialogue in the Aboriginal dialect of Ganalbi...
By privileging Aboriginal language, Aboriginal-accented narration and the Aboriginal style of story-...
The awarded film Ten Canoes (2006) broke new ground in the cinematic representation of Indigenous Au...
Anna Hickey-Mody and Melissa Iocca invented a new name for the cinema-goer at "Bad Boy Bubby" (1993)...
By insisting "Ten Canoes" (2006) have all its diegetic dialogue in the Aboriginal dialect of Ganalbi...
Indigenous knowledge can challenge liberal and anthropocentric definitions of water as human propert...
The 2006 Australian film Ten Canoes, directed by Rolf de Heer and Peter Djigirr, opens wIth a slow a...
This article examines the ways in which Ten Canoes (de Heer and Djiggir, 2006) works as what Nichola...
Dutch-born Australian director, Rolf de Heer, is Australia's most successful and unpredictable film-...
In a reading of the Rolf de Heer film Ten Canoes this article explores the pervasive, contemporary c...
Gulpilil: One Red Blood, directed by Darlene Johnson, follows the life and career of multi-award win...
© The Author(s) 2017. Cinema is an art form widely recognised as an agent to change the social condi...
Abstract Storytelling is an integral part of life for Indigenous Australians. Befor...
Cinema is an art form widely recognised as an agent to change the social condition and alter traditi...
In a speech at the Sydney Film Festival in 2005, actor Tom E. Lewis likened the Australian film indu...