A hectic montage of wheelbarrow races, egg and spoon races, cow pat tossing contests, cuts abruptly to a the couple of blokes sitting quietly by their ute, somewhere in the outback having a cup of tea and commenting that the pace of change is too much for them. The clip finishes with a performance of Waltzing Matilda before their Royal Highnesses, Prince Charles and Princess Diana, and a beer gut competition. Summary by Damien Parer.
An interesting film in that the action took place on one day. Twenty-nine camera crews were briefed to record the celebrations in different parts of the country. Emphasis was placed on recording the Aboriginal protest as five directors were covering the event.
An observational documentary shot on the bicentennial anniversary of Australia’s European settlement. Twenty-nine directors working all over Australia have contributed segments as Australians celebrated 26 January 1988. Dissent was voiced to draw attention to the plight of contemporary Aborigines.
Notes by Damien Parer.
Australian Daze is set during the 1988 bicentennial celebrations of Australian settlement. Concurring with this moment in colonial history is Indigenous resistance to colonisation and settlement. In 1988, thousands of Indigenous people travelled to Sydney to protest the celebration of the arrival of British settlement.
Australian Daze documents the different preparations for the historic day by people of different demographics and cultures. The vocal presence of Indigenous peoples who gathered to celebrate survival is symbolic of the underlying issues regarding Australian race relations that survive into the present, and that is the Indigenous voice and perspective has largely been excluded from the Australian historical narrative, and the perception that Indigenous Australian’s represented and antagonistic presence on January 26 1988 is synonymous with the exclusion of Indigenous people from Australian nationhood.
Australia Daze provides an interesting snap shot of Australia on the day that 200 years of settlement were celebrated. In regards to the Indigenous gathering, it was a powerful moment in the history of Indigenous resistance to settlement, and policies such as the Council for Reconciliation established in 1991, was later initiated with the intention of making a more congruous relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.
National Reconciliation Week was first celebrated in 1996, and falls between 27 May and 3 June. Both are significant dates in regard to the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples with the 27 May being the anniversary of the 1967 Referendum in which 90% of Australian’s voted to make Aboriginal people citizens and to remove clauses in the constitution that discriminated against Indigenous peoples, and 3 June is the day that the High Court handed down its judgement on the Mabo case. In January 2001, the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation was replaced with a new private body, Reconciliation Australia.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.