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Ronin Films

First Nations

BALANDA AND THE BARK CANOES, THE

Year: 2006

Classification: Exempt - Ronin Recommends: G

Runtime: 52 min

Produced In: Australia

Directed By: Tania Nehme, Molly Reynolds, Rolf De Heer

Produced By: Rolf De Heer, Julie Ryan

Language: English and Ganalbingu language

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Vimeo on demand

This lively and eye-opening documentary is a companion film to TEN CANOES, the landmark feature film which Rolf de Heer made with the people of the Arafura Swamp in Central Arnhem Land. (TEN CANOES and its compilation sequel, TWELVE CANOES, are both available from Ronin Films).

"We are making a movie. The story is their story, those that live on this land, in their language, and set a long time before the coming of the Balanda, as we white people are known. For the people of the Arafura Swamp, this film is an opportunity, maybe a last chance, to hold on to the old ways. For all of us, the challenges are unexpected, the task beyond anything imagined. For me, it is the most difficult film I have made, in the most foreign land I've been to ... and it is Australia." - Rolf de Heer , May 2005, Central Arnhem Land.

Thus Rolf de Heer wrote during the production of TEN CANOES. The making of that landmark feature film provides the framework for THE BALANDA AND THE BARK CANOES, a documentary exploring much more than simply the practicalities of working with non-professional actors in crocodile-infested waters. Long before cameras rolled on TEN CANOES, de Heer was involved in complex consultations with the Aboriginal cast and community members.

The film observes the process by which the people of Ramingining and Murwangi recreated the canoe-making process for TEN CANOES, working from a wealth of photographs taken in the 1930s by anthropologist Donald Thomson.

Taking misunderstandings and cultural differences in its stride, this fascinating and often amusing documentary is as an uplifting account of how free-for-all discussion evolved into a highly successful feature film.

See also the 1969 documentary, MAKING A BARK CANOE (from the AIATSIS Collection), directed by Roger Sandall with anthropologist Nicholas Peterson, also in the Arafura Swamp area.

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