
Day in the Life
Day in the Life (2020) charts an ordinary day in a small rural Indigenous community in which nothing quite works and the authoritative hand of the government is a always constant, shadowy presence over the community. The film comprises five satirically titled vignettes—“Breakfast,” “Play Break,” “Lunch Run,” “Cocktail Hour,” “Takeout Dinner”—illustrating the ways in which the community’s everyday lives are shaped by external influences and constraints and by their insistence on going forward with the ancestors."In the work, the perspectives of the Karrabing cast are always central, creating an empathetic viewing experience that flips mainstream assumptions about Aboriginal communities on their head." Matariki Williams, Art in America.Premiere: International Film Festival Rotterdam, 2020, with support from “Artists in Cinema” Commission & Projections, Tyneside Cinema CommissionAwards: Special Mention, Film Victoria Erwin Rado Award for Best Australian Short Film, Melbourne International Film Festival, 2020.

The Family
2021, in production
A new film commission and cross-artforms project aimed at enhancing ancestral Emmi narratives about the southern coastal region of the Anson Bay (Northern Territories, Australia), and specifically about the ecologically fragile Cape Ford region.

Roan Roan, and Connected
2020, online project
Produced for The Art Gallery of New South Wales’ online exhibition, Medium Earth. A powerful manifesto celebrating the ‘smooth and rough’ practices that keep Karrabing connected to their ancestors and obligated to their lands by practices that enhance their own lands by enhancing their relations to each other and the more than human world.

The Mermaids, Mirror Worlds
2018, 26’29’’
In the not so distant future, Europeans will no longer be able to survive for long periods outdoors in a land and seascape poisoned by capitalism, but Indigenous people seem able to.

Just because you can’t see it…
2020, 2’26’’
Produced for Dazibao, Montréal. A serious, sometimes humorous, reflection on Karrabing understandings of the ancestral present.

Night Time Go
2017, 31’10’’
During WWII, the Australian government tried to remove a group of Karrabing ancestors from their lands, but they refused to leave.

The Jealous One, 2017
2017, 29’17’’
Two plot lines meet in a dramatic final encounter. An Indigenous man weaving through bureaucratic red tape to get to a mortuary service on his ancestral land. A fight between a husband consumed by jealousy and his wife’s brother, who excludes him from community ceremonies.

Wutharr, Saltwater Dreams
2016, 28.53’’
Across a series of increasingly surreal flashbacks, an extended Indigenous family argues about what caused their boat’s motor to breakdown and leave them stranded.

Windjarrameru, The Stealing C*nt$
2015, 35’02’’
Teenaged boys fall into a trap – presumably set to get them jailed for a minor offence – and have tricks played on them by ancestral spirits when they hide out in a toxic mangrove to evade this fate.

When the Dogs Talked
2014, 33’55’’
A thoughtful yet humorous drama about the difficulties Indigenous communities have living within the strictures of modern white culture while maintaining a sense of their own traditions and relationship to the land.

Karrabing! Low Tide Turning
2012, 14’01’’
In the Northern Territory of Australia, an extended Indigenous family attempts to track down a missing family member so as not to lose their government housing.