The term Ozploitation – popularised in Mark Hartley's 2008 documentary Not Quite Hollywood: The Wild, Untold Story of Ozploitation! – refers to Australian low-budget genre filmmaking of the 1970s and 80s.
From bawdy sex comedies like Alvin Purple (Tim Burstall, 1973) to horrors like Patrick (Richard Franklin, 1978), this category of filmmaking is variously characterised by its obsession with excess – exploitative marketing, lewd humour, gratuitous gore, violence and nudity, and idiosyncratic Australian quirks and characteristics.
The prolific output of Australian genre films during the period can also be seen as a response to 2 key developments. These were generous tax concessions that gave enthusiastic producers the incentive to make new movies, and a change in censorship laws with the introduction of the adults-only R-rating classification in Australia in 1971.
Influential works from the Ozploitation canon featured in the Australians & Hollywood exhibition, which was on display at the NFSA from January 2022 to January 2024. These include George Miller’s 1979 apocalyptic road movie Mad Max (which has since attained global appeal and enduring cult status) and Ted Kotcheff's psychological thriller Wake in Fright (1971), which has the rare distinction of being officially selected for the Cannes Film festival twice.



















