mific: (rage)
[personal profile] mific posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Rabbit-Proof Fence (movie)
Characters/Pairings: Gen
Rating: Teen and up
Length: 00:06:03
Content Notes: abduction and abuse of children, children suffering extreme hardship (dehydration, hunger, exhaustion)
Creator Links: I don't know. To me, this is a fanwork for the movie, even if it is also a music vid for part of Peter Gabriel's score for the movie. The person posting the vid is Michou Berlin but I don't know if they made the fanvid. However, there's a video with just the music, no video, on Peter Gabriel's channel here, so maybe they did?
Theme:
Indigenous characters, Female characters, Family, Fanvids, Gen

Summary:
I'm posting the bulk of the Notes from the video here as there isn't a summary as such.
Rabbit-Proof Fence is the true story of Molly Craig, who, in 1931, at 14, was taken from her mother in Jigalong, a depot on one of the fences that were being constructed across the continent in an attempt to keep marauding rabbits from destroying the western farmlands. Along with her half-sister Daisy, 8, and cousin Gracie Fields, she was taken to the Moore River Native Settlement in Western Australia.

"I would not hesitate to separate any half-caste from its aboriginal mother, no matter how frantic momentary grief might be at the time," wrote one "protector". "They soon forget their offspring." He maintained it was just like removing a pup from a bitch. The film would show the terrified children sprinting across stony wasteland in a futile attempt to escape the police, distraught mothers wailing in the dust, and an aged granny battering her head with a stone in impotent frustration. It would show the girls in a cage as they are transported by train to their new home and a culture of flogging and solitary confinement for those who failed to appreciate what the white man was doing for them.

One day, when the coming rainstorm would hide their tracks, Molly, Daisy and Gracie set off for home, traipsing across the desert, scavenging from farmers and aborigine hunters, cooking what little meat they could obtain over an open fire, close to collapse with hunger, heat and exhaustion. For long parts of the journey the girls followed the rabbit-proof fence.

After walking for nine weeks, Molly and Daisy were reunited with their mother (though Gracie was recaptured). They disappeared into the desert, just the sort of uplifting ending the film needed. They are still living in the Jigalong area, 600 miles north-east of Perth - two days on a bus, followed by a couple of hours in a truck.

Reccer's Notes: Even though this maybe isn't a conventional fanwork, I wanted to rec it as it very much fits the theme, and as it's very powerful, and records the "Stolen Generation" - something that should never be forgotten. With the music, and the choice and editing of clips from the movie to compress the essence of the movie's story into a brief video, it's exactly like a music-based fanvid. Watch to the very end, for the happy ending and some comfort, after all that hurt.

Fanwork Links: Peter Gabriel - Ngankarrparni (Sky Blue) - The Rabbit-Proof Fence

Date: 2024-01-15 04:33 pm (UTC)
runpunkrun: Pride flag based on Gilbert Baker's 1978 rainbow flag with hot pink, red, orange, yellow, sage, turquoise, blue, and purple stripes. (Default)
From: [personal profile] runpunkrun

Added!

Date: 2024-01-15 09:56 pm (UTC)
iormungand: (Default)
From: [personal profile] iormungand
The Stolen Generation is Aboriginal kids abducted from their parents. The Lost Generation is people who became adults in WWI and describes a certain age group, like Baby Boomers, Generation X, etc. Could you please fix that up for clarity?

Beautiful music!

Date: 2024-01-15 10:46 pm (UTC)
iormungand: (Default)
From: [personal profile] iormungand
No worries, mate

Date: 2024-01-23 11:00 pm (UTC)
verushka70: CKR's hands are just so damn sexy. (hand porn)
From: [personal profile] verushka70
Oh thank you for reccing this! What an incredibly powerful movie that is (and the song, and the vid). And it shows, sadly, what the official policy was for First Nations indigenous people all over the dominions and former colonies of Great Britain of North America (Canada and the U.S.) in the 1800s and WELL into the 20th frakkin' century. (Not that the Spanish did the indigenous people any better everywhere they went.) But the ending! It just makes me cry every time, even though it is happy. (Maybe because it is happy? I don't know why, happy things often make me cry in my old age. Even though sad things make me cry too, it's different crying. I think. Eh, don't mind me... RL is pretty crappy lately.)

Now I want to watch Rabbit-Proof Fence all over again.
Edited (addendum) Date: 2024-01-23 11:02 pm (UTC)

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