Overview
Asylum seekers, drone warfare, women's rights and the environment are just a few of the issues under the microscope at this year's Human Rights Arts and Film Festival. With its main arm returning to ACMI in Melbourne, along with condensed programs for cities including Sydney and Brisbane, the latest edition of this socially conscious festival is sure to get audiences all fired up.
The festival begins with the Australian premier of Chasing Asylum, a confronting and extremely timely look at mandatory detention from Oscar-winning filmmaker Eva Orner. Other highlights include Sundance prize winner The Bad Kids, about at risk high school kids in the Mojave desert, and Prison Songs, Australia's first ever musical documentary about the inmates of the Northern Territory's notorious Berrimah prison.
Audiences in Melbourne will also get the chance to catch a whole heap of special screenings, ranging from a selection of African heritage cinema curated by the Melbourne Cinematheque, to a special screening of The Pearl Button with a live original score by Dirty Three guitarist Mick Turner.
For those of you having a tough time narrowing down what to see, here are five standout titles you can't afford to miss.
CHASING ASYLUM
This year's opening night film tears back the curtain on Australia's brutal immigration policies. Directed by Eva Orner, the Oscar-winning producer of Taxi to the Darkside, this confronting documentary explores the human cost of mandatory detention, combining interviews with whistleblowers — who risked jail to speak out — and sickening hidden camera footage from inside detention centres on Manus and Nauru. With Australia having been repeatedly condemned for its inhumane treatment of asylum seekers, Chasing Asylum could hardly be a better opening film, or more vital viewing in the lead-up the federal election. Opening night has already sold out, but there are multiple encore screenings scheduled with tickets still available.
THEY WILL HAVE TO KILL US FIRST: MALIAN MUSIC IN EXILE
When Islamic extremists took control of Northern Mali in 2012, they introduced a law banning all forms of music. This documentary — which has been selected as the spotlight film at HRAFF — tells the story of the people who refused to fall into line. Featuring a number of Mali musicians including international breakouts Songhoy Blues, as well as Brian Eno and Nick Zinner of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, They Will Have to Kill Us First explores music both as a form of cultural expression and a powerful weapon of resistance. And of course, the soundtrack is sure to be great.
DRONE
Winner of the Amnesty International Award at the San Sebastian Human Rights Film Festival, this English-language doco from Norwegian director Tonje Hessen Schei examines one of the murkiest issues in the arena of modern warfare. From the floors of video game conventions, where the U.S. military hunts for new recruits, to the streets of Pakistan, where the impact of drone strikes is felt first hand, Drone explores the morality of combat technology that allows us to snatch someone's life from halfway around the world.
HOOLIGAN SPARROW
Anyone who caught the recent Ai Weiwei exhibition at the NGV should make a concerted effort to see this covert doco about his fellow dissident, Chinese human rights activist Ye Haiyan, aka Hooligan Sparrow. Shot guerrilla style over three months by first time filmmaker Nanfu Wang, the film follows Sparrow as she campaigns for justice on behalf of six elementary school girls who were sexually abused by their principal. Rather than aid them, the government labelled the activists enemies of the state. So intense was the attention of the authorities that the footage had to be smuggled out of the country. Nanfu Wang will appear via Skype for a post-film Q&A.
THE STANFORD PRISON EXPERIMENT
A rare narrative film on the documentary-heavy lineup, this dramatisation of the notorious psychological experiment won the Best Screenplay award at the Sundance Film Festival last year. Featuring the likes of Ezra Miller, Tye Sheridan, Thomas Mann and Billy Crudup, The Stanford Prison Experiment concerns the attempts of Stanford University researchers to examine the causes of violence within the prison system. In order to do so, they recruited two dozen student volunteers, placed them in a makeshift jail, and randomly assigned them roles as either prisoners or guards. The results live in infamy even to this day.
Want more film? Check out our guide to what's in cinemas this month.