Screen Education

Dangerous Locations THE MISSING PERSON IN AUSTRALIAN CINEMA

The story of Australia is, to a significant extent, an ongoing chronicle concerning notions of isolation, of becoming lost and of the fear of becoming lost. Of the sense of displacement among the first convicts dispatched from England, art critic Robert Hughes notes that their homeland, 12,000 miles away by sea, must have felt ‘further away than the moon, because at least you could see the moon’.1 In the nineteenth century, as the early European settlers clung mostly to the coastal fringes, explorers like Ludwig Leichhardt, Robert Burke and William Wills entered the centre of the country, never to be seen alive again. Frederick McCubbin’s renowned 1886 painting Lost, in which a child is depicted isolated in rugged bushland, further epitomises this burgeoning sense of Australia as a place in which white interlopers who ventured too far inland could be engulfed by the mysterious centre. Indeed, scholar Elspeth Tilley extends the ‘lost child’ trope – prominent in local writing all the way up to the present era – to an extensive body of Australian literature on ‘white vanishing’ more generally.2

Our major cities have long been associated with a sense of civilisation and safety in numbers, whereas the aesthetically sublime but also largely remote outback has fed (simplistically) into narratives of trepidation and Otherness. In the twentieth century, the coastline, dominated by its ‘five teeming sores’, had long since developed into a fortress of white Australian purity, threatened by Indigenous cultures from within and alien immigrants from without. Meanwhile, a potentially pastoral,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Screen Education

Screen Education14 min read
Selling Virtue ‘WOKE’ ADVERTISING AND CORPORATE ETHICS
A melancholy piano score plays over a montage of similar images. Two people, faces unseen, reach out for each other’s hands in a range of everyday situations: walking together, climbing a tree, sitting at a table, lying by a pool. The pairs come clos
Screen Education13 min read
Play It Again THE REFERENTIAL LEVELS OF SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD
When Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (Edgar Wright) was released in 2010, it was considered a major box-office flop. Based on a series of graphic novels by Canadian artist Bryan Lee O’Malley, the screen adaptation was a big-budget studio affair. The proj
Screen Education2 min read
Endnotes
1 ‘Roma – an Invitation from the Director’, Netflix, , accessed 1 October 2019. 2 See Kristopher Tapley, ‘Alfonso Cuarón on the Painful and Poetic Backstory Behind Roma’, Variety, 23 October 2018,

Related Books & Audiobooks