Aboriginal culture = magic?

Jeffry 2022-03-24 09:01:41

When a large group of frightened running bulls slowly slowed down in front of an indigenous child, the mention of the throat also fell.

The film repeatedly highlights the importance of music in the indigenous culture, saying that it is a song written by the distant indigenous ancestors using nature's landscapes, fish and insects, and is able to channel all things.

When Mrs. Ashley first arrived, her grandparents and grandchildren used singing to call her "Rainbow Snake" potential;

1,500 running bulls instantly became gentle because of Nara's wide range of

voice ; To let Mrs. Ashley sing, he can hear...

Every urgent and important plot is basically relieved with special "soul music", which seems to be an inexplicable but very powerful, in the historical development. indispensable force in the process. Although impressive and the audiovisual effect is good, is there no credible way to call people to pay attention to the importance of indigenous culture?

Maybe it can only be understood from the point of view of watching movies. The movie is not an exaggeration and no one has watched it, so it becomes a documentary...

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Extended Reading

Australia quotes

  • Drover: Now where the *hell* are all the bloody stockmen, eh?

    Lady Sarah Ashley: That's what I need to speak to you about.

    Drover: Where's Fletcher?

    Lady Sarah Ashley: We disagreed, and I dismissed him.

    Drover: [Dumbfounded] ... *Dismissed?*

    Lady Sarah Ashley: Yes.

    Drover: Wait, wait a minute, hold on. What about the cattle?

    Lady Sarah Ashley: Well, as he was leaving, he *deliberately* let the cows out of the, uh... I don't know, whatever you call it, and they *ran off.*

    Drover: [Storms off] Damn! Do you realize, woman, what you've done?

    Lady Sarah Ashley: Mr. Drover, do not take that tone with me *thank you, very much!*

    Drover: [Stomps back to her] Don't take that tone with ya, huh?

    Lady Sarah Ashley: [Firmly] No.

    Drover: I'm askin' ya, woman, do you know what you've *done?* I won't get another drove this late in the season, alright? You've cost me my *living!*

    Lady Sarah Ashley: Can't you just round them up?

    Drover: Round 'em up, huh? Oh, round 'em up, yeah. Huh? Round 'em up!

    Lady Sarah Ashley: Yes! You just... go *get them!*

    Drover: Fifteen-hundred head o' cattle, scattered over a million acres with just me, and my two men. That's a *great* idea! Stupid cow...

  • Title Card: After the bombing of Pearl Harbor on the 7th of December 1944, the Imperial Japanese Navy steamed south, unleashing their fire on Darwin, a city in the northern territory of Australia. 'The territory' was a land of crocodiles, cattle barons, and warrior chiefs where adventure and romance was a way of life. It was also a place where aboriginal children of mixed race were taken by force from their families and trained for service in white society. These children became know as the stolen generations.