Sam Haberle
Sam Haberle has a big and bold vision - he hopes to eliminate world poverty before he dies.
Sam Haberle has a big and bold vision - he hopes to eliminate world poverty before he dies.
Dr Nick Brodie presents a story form colonial Tasmanian high society, a deer hunt that doesn't go exactly as planned.
'How to Belong" is a 6-part poem about migration that was inspired by an exhibition at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery titled 'Snapshot Photography and Migrant Women A Tasmanian Experience'.
The thoughts of a young man living in Cygnet and his difficulties interacting with the wider world.
A young girl from Huonville muses on her experiences at the local skate park.
There are moments of destiny that build like a storm you can't escape. This is my storm. The storm that changed my life.
Filmed in the midlands plains of lutruwita (Tasmania) this is the story of an unusual alignment between a farmer, a scientist and the Tasmanian Aboriginal community. From a simple idea to run a science experiment emerged the story of a community returning an important cultural fire practice and reconnecting to lands where brutal dispossession took place. The collaboration benefits each in different ways but relies on a mutual trust heading into unchartered waters. The film highlights the importance of a traditional pakana practice that society is awakening to in an era of ecological collapse and global warming.
In the last week of January 2016, Tasmania experienced floods and fires simultaneously. This wild weather came at the end of over a year of drought throughout most of the island. This is the story of a family from the midlands during that time. A father writes to his far-away young adult daughter, conveying the burdens of the year, and asking her to visit him.
Grace Williams is a Tasmanian filmmaker who is passionate about human rights issues. She talks here about navigating her sense of belonging as a Sierra Leonean and an Australian woman.
A young girl concocts a Perfume that will change her grandmother's life.