An incredible but true Depression-era story about a 1,200 mile trek by three little aboriginal girls across rugged Aussie terrain is brought to the screen in "Rabbit-Proof Fence," which marks director ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... The phrase “rabbit-proof fence” evokes vivid reactions in Australians, who know the tough settlers of the vast continent’s dry interior were fully capable of ...
An old-fashioned weepie tucked inside a fiercely indicting political thriller, Phillip Noyce’s “Rabbit-Proof Fence” opens in the early 1930s along a stretch of red Australian dust called Jigalong.
Director Phillip Noyce turned down the Ben Affleck film, "The Sum of All Fears" to return home to Australia and make a small picture about a slice of Australia's shameful, secret history. Little did ...
David Gulpilil, the revered Indigenous Australian actor and dancer, known for his performances in films such as Rabbit-Proof Fence, Crocodile Dundee, The Tracker and Walkabout, has died of cancer. He ...
Shrishty is a decade-old journalist covering a variety of beats between politics to pop culture, but movies are her first love, which led her to study Film and TV Development at UCLAx. She lives and ...
SYDNEY, Australia — Molly Kelly, who as a child trekked 1,000 miles across the Australian desert to return to her Aboriginal mother in a journey that inspired the 2002 movie “Rabbit-Proof Fence,” has ...
A number of Miramax releases are hitting DVD racks and on-line services in low-price ($6.99) editions under the series title “Miramax Classics.” Few deserve that “classic” designation more than ...
An incredible but true Depression-era story about a 1,200 mile trek by three little aboriginal girls across rugged Aussie terrain is brought to the screen in "Rabbit-Proof Fence," which marks director ...
David Gulpilil, the revered Indigenous Australian actor and dancer, known for his performances in films such as Rabbit-Proof Fence, Crocodile Dundee, The Tracker and Walkabout, has died of cancer. He ...
Jigalong, Western Australia, 1931. Molly (Everlyn Sampi), Daisy (Tianna Sansbury) and Gracie (Laura Monaghan) are the children of Aboriginal women and white men. They live with their mothers near a ...