
1996
The British Film Institute Presents The Century of Cinema: Australia and New Zealand
Australian-born filmmaker George Miller offers a personal view of Australian films. He suggests that they can be regarded as visual music, public dreaming, mythology, and song-lines. In extrapolating the idea of movies as song-lines he examines feature films under the following categories: songs of the land; the bushman; the convicts; the bush-rangers; mates and larrikins; the digger; pommy bashing; the sheilas; gays; the wogs; blackfellas; and urban subversion. He then concludes that these films can be thought of as "Hymns that sing of Australia."

George Miller
Self - Host / Narrator

Joseph Campbell
Self - Mythologist (archive footage)

Andrey Zvyagintsev. The Director

Yakutia — Between The Worlds

Shark's Paradise

Not Quite Hollywood

The Last Confession of Alexander Pearce

Hellborn

This Film Is Not Yet Rated

Blood & Flesh: The Reel Life & Ghastly Death of Al Adamson

Gallipoli from Above

It Conquered Hollywood! The Story of American International Pictures

Becoming Bond

A Look at the World of 'Soylent Green'

General Hercules

Take 2

Chaplin Today: Modern Times

Seijun Suzuki: kabuki & yakuzas

Smile

A Profile of 'The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp'

The Farmer and the Shark

Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet at Work on a Film Based on Franz Kafka’s Amerika