For important COVID-safety and visitor information please see Visit Us
ISLAND OF THE HUNGRY GHOSTS
DOCO OF THE MONTH
Fri
21
Fri Apr 21 6:00 PM
Arc Cinema
Allocated Seating
94 Mins
2018| DCP | AUS, Germany, UK | D: Gabrielle Brady
Living on Christmas Island, therapist Poh Lin Lee spends her days talking to the asylum seekers who are held indefinitely on the island. Her attempts to provide some level of comfort to people with a growing sense of despair and an uncertain future brings her own place in the world into focus.
Meanwhile, the migration attempts of these asylum seekers is contrasted with the natural migration of crabs on the island, who move in their millions from the forest towards the ocean.
As these two types of migration continue to be pushed by unseen forces, the local islanders enact rituals for the spirits of people who died on the island without burial, making offerings for ‘hungry ghosts’ who wander in search of a place to belong.
‘It's a potent, profoundly moving approach to an extensively covered subject. And it's a timely reminder that a society must be judged by the way it treats the desperate and vulnerable’ – The Observer
Living on Christmas Island, therapist Poh Lin Lee spends her days talking to the asylum seekers who are held indefinitely on the island. Her attempts to provide some level of comfort to people with a growing sense of despair and an uncertain future brings her own place in the world into focus.
Meanwhile, the migration attempts of these asylum seekers is contrasted with the natural migration of crabs on the island, who move in their millions from the forest towards the ocean.
As these two types of migration continue to be pushed by unseen forces, the local islanders enact rituals for the spirits of people who died on the island without burial, making offerings for ‘hungry ghosts’ who wander in search of a place to belong.
‘It's a potent, profoundly moving approach to an extensively covered subject. And it's a timely reminder that a society must be judged by the way it treats the desperate and vulnerable’ – The Observer