Study Guide - (Black And White Packaging)
Baz Luhrmann’s Australia (2008) is an epic adventure set in the Northern outback of
Australia in the late 1930s and 1940s. The story brings together people from
many backgrounds and walks of life, from the English aristocracy to the
rough-hewn outback drovers and the Indigenous people of Australia. There is a
transforming journey, romance, war, greed mistreatment, heroism, tragedy and
triumph. The story traverses some of the most beautiful and inhospitable country
in the remote north of Western Australia and the Northern
Territory.
Curriculum relevance
The film will be of interest to
many people – fans of Baz Luhrmann (director of Strictly Ballroom [1992], Romeo + Juliet [1996] and Moulin Rouge! [2001]), fans of the Epic
style of moviemaking in the tradition of Gone With the Wind (Victor
Fleming, 1939), and fans of Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman who play the romantic
leads. However, the film is much more than a sweeping epic romance. It deals
honestly and sensitively with a period in Australia’s history when Indigenous
Australians were dispossessed of their land, their children and their human
rights. This theme of dispossession runs strongly through the film, not just in
relation to the Indigenous people.Many students would find Australia entertaining and informative – a romance set in Australia’s
recent past telling a story about both the country and the different races and
people who make up that history.There are several subject areas where
this film will have relevance, including English, Australian History, Geography
and Film Studies.