• Home
  • About
    • Nomad Films
    • Helen Newman
  • News
  • TASTING PLATE
  • Projects
    • Documentary
    • Theatre
    • Projection
    • Adverts/explainers/everything else
  • Stills
    • Treasured
    • Understorey
    • Projection stills
    • Apna Ghar, India
    • Living On Landfill
    • Timor-Leste
    • Cambodia's Daughters
    • VR DOCO - GUWAYU
    • LONG TABLE
    • DownPour - A4 Circus Ensemble
    • Flying Fruit Fly Circus
    • Creating a New Normal - After Black Saturday
  • Feedback
    • Client Feedback
    • Viewer Feedback
  • Links
  • Contact

Nomad Films

  • Home
  • About
    • Nomad Films
    • Helen Newman
  • News
  • TASTING PLATE
  • Projects
    • Documentary
    • Theatre
    • Projection
    • Adverts/explainers/everything else
  • Stills
    • Treasured
    • Understorey
    • Projection stills
    • Apna Ghar, India
    • Living On Landfill
    • Timor-Leste
    • Cambodia's Daughters
    • VR DOCO - GUWAYU
    • LONG TABLE
    • DownPour - A4 Circus Ensemble
    • Flying Fruit Fly Circus
    • Creating a New Normal - After Black Saturday
  • Feedback
    • Client Feedback
    • Viewer Feedback
  • Links
  • Contact
  • Menu

ANZAC film to screen at Wodonga Cube April 25th

April 17, 2015

The last few months Nomad Films has been gathering the stories of local community members whose sons, brothers and fathers served in the first world war. 100 years on the impact of the war on these families still carries a strong emotional narrative that is both poignant and powerful. The completed short film 'Homefront Stories' will screen on ANZAC day 9pm at Wodonga Cube.

The Prime News interview about the film can be viewed here

← ANZAC film tells the story of Wodonga during World War OneFilming in India, 2015 →

A sidebar of those who inspire...


'Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage'

- Anais Nin

Over the years I've been filming I've had plenty of moments to ponder the truthfulness of this simple quote by Anais Nin - a woman who lived passionately and with courage.

Regularly I film people of courage but not always do I see their lives expanding, at least in a physical sense. However, I think this is where the courage lives - in the lives of people who, facing incredible odds, continue to create community, share resources, laugh at stupidness, and love with honesty.

It is always humbling to be welcomed in the lives of courageous people. 


Lou

Lou and Helen adjusted.jpg

Many moons ago the universe gave Lou to me. Little did I know at the time she was to become my life long friend, source of endless inspiration, wise mentor, adopted mother, daughter and sister.  Lou is an internationally respected authority on the difficult subject of Intimate Partner Sexual Violence (IPSV) and her amazing work can be viewed via her website


Laughter...

Poke tongue out adjusted.jpg

This little girl seemed to excel in pulling the best faces that would crack me up while I was filming workers on the Mae Sot rubbish dump on the Thai/Burma border. Filming lives that are so vulnerable and exposed often leaves me feeling like a cheap voyeur. It was good to sometimes put the camera aside and just pull faces together.  


Asylum Seeker Resource Centre

ASRC-Logo-Colour.jpg

When I first became involved in filming refugee stories the ASRC was a place where I saw the perfect mix of head and heart in responding to refugee needs. Founder, Kon Karapanagiotidis was, and still is, a power house of vision and inspiration. Since 2001 the ASRC has grown to be Australia’s largest asylum seeker organisation delivering services to over 1,200 asylum seekers at any one time through programs such as material aid, health, legal, counselling, casework and foodbank.