Carriberrie
An exhilarating and visceral film that tells the expansive story of Carriberrie- dance and song in Indigenous Australian culture. Beginning at the heart of the country at Uluru, actor and performer David Gulpilil guides us across Australia in a concentric, snake-like movement through time and space. We journey through traditional ceremonial dance and song, towards intrinsically contemporary and modern expressions. From iconic ceremonial traditional dance in Uluru, to rain forrests and funeral songs in the desert, from the most Northern tip of Australia to Sydney’s iconic Opera House with Bangarra Dance Theatre, this live-action VR documentary showcases a stunning range of Australian locations and performances.
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Dominic John AllenDirectorMany see imdb:http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3383148/
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Dominic John AllenProducerhttp://www.imdb.com/name/nm3383148/
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David GulpililKey Casthttps://www.imdb.com/name/nm0347858/
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Project Type:Virtual Reality
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Genres:Immersive, Documentary Dance
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Runtime:14 minutes 33 seconds
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Completion Date:February 20, 2018
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Production Budget:650,000 AUD
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Country of Origin:Australia
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Country of Filming:Australia
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Language:English
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Shooting Format:Jaunt One
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Aspect Ratio:VR TB 3D
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
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Australia MuseumSydney
Australia
March 1, 2018
World Premiere
Not Festival -
NEXT @Cannes Marche Du Film 2018Cannes
France
May 12, 2018
European Premiere
Selection in NEXT
Distribution Information
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Reddogs VRCountry: Worldwide
Dominic Allen (born 20 November 1980) is an award winning Australian director and producer whose work includes short and feature films, music videos, commercials, and television documentaries. His films have screened globally at major festivals including Tribecca, Rotterdam, Melbourne, London, Berlin and the Guanajuato International Film Festival.
In 2009, with the participation of the Kimberley Aboriginal Law an Culture Centre (KALACC) Dominic spent a month in Fitzroy Crossing, working with the Walmajarri youth community and cultural elder Annette Kogolo to produce a short film called TWO MEN https://vimeo.com/17970306
The film was a huge success becoming a Dendy Best Australian Short film finalist and screening to wide acclaim internationally, and was instrumental in Dominic winning both the 2009 MIFF Australian Emerging Filmmaker award and the Inside Film Rising Talent Prize.
Continuing his work with Indigenous subject matter and communities Dominic was selected to direct a series of in broadcast portaits of Indigenous AFL footballers which screened nationally in the 2016 Indigenous Round AFL. The short films received praise for their emotive, inspiring qualities.
Following on from that Dominic was awarded a Community Broadcast Grant from Indigenous Community Television (ICTV) to make a short documentary with the support of Mangkaja arts starring Kimberley elder and celebrated artist Amy Nugget about her relationship with living holes, Jila, explored through her painting.
Indigenous tradition dating back millennia melds with the future of fully immersive filmmaking technology in the breathtaking virtual reality mini-feature, Carriberrie. A faithful extension of the art and craft of the spiritual dance narratives it captures, this glorious film premieres at The Australian Museum as an integral part of WEAVE, a month-long festival celebrating First Nation and Pacific cultures.
Deriving its title from the word ‘corroboree’ as spoken by the Eora nation, the traditional owners of the land upon which the city of Sydney now stands, the 15-minute 3D/360° rendering of First Nation dance and music represents a deeply humanistic focussing of the VR lens. Director Dominic Allen has employed the Jaunt ONE camera (a custom-built VR rig offering unprecedented image quality) to capture not only the majestic Australian landscape from Uluru to The Torres Strait Islands to The Harbour City, but also the unique complexities and beautiful artistry of native storytelling in song.
A white Australian of Irish ancestry, Allen spent two years working with indigenous elders such as senior Kimberley Walmajarri woman Annette Kogolo and Marilyn Miller, Director of the Laura Aboriginal Dance Festival and former Bangarra choreographer, to ensure authenticity and respect was afforded all the performers in the film. Several of the sequences, including the funeral performance “Kun-borrk Karrbarda” from the Northern Territory and a Kuku-Yalanji ceremony called “Mayi Wunba” that depicts the cultivation of Queensland rainforest honey, have rarely been glimpsed by the wider Australian population.
Contemporary First Nation culture is also represented, with contributions from the acclaimed work “Bennelong”, courtesy of the internationally renowned Bangarra dance company, and the anthemic rock song “The Hunter” from Lonely Boys, a six-piece band hailing from the Arnhem Land community of Ngukurr. A picturesque highlight is the all-women Dubay Dancers, of the Arakwal people from the stunning Byron Bay region of New South Wales, who dance a re-enactment of the seaside collection of yuggari (pippi) and jalum (fish).
Allen unites indigenous musical culture and the nations from which they hail with drone footage that frames the vast yet singular bond they share with the land, from deep within the red of the Outback to the green of the hinterland to the blue of coast. In and of itself much of this resembles high quality travelogue footage, to date one of standard uses of VR technology. In cohesion with the symbolic stories, however, the footage stirs with profundity.
The director’s other triumphant artistic flourish is his use of the 360° device, allowing the viewer to be at the centre of the dance rituals within the very environment from which they traditionally emerged. The sense of discovery one experiences with every turn of the head, with musicians in full flight and choirs in boisterous song often over one’s shoulder, will be revelatory to those new to the virtual reality viewing realm.
With Carriberrie, Dominic Allen, writer Tara June Winch and the production team have defined a new direction for the VR format – an affecting journey rich in ancient cultural significance, every bit as soaring as the viewing experience itself. It is a remarkable work.