biggbird wrote:I still want to see Wildness, but have yet to discover where I can get it from. To be fair, I haven't looked very hard, but it sounds interesting.
biggbird wrote: Does one need to contact the ABC directly about it? Like I said, I really haven't looked that hard, just a cursory web search!
biggbird wrote:Down in Hobart town Drifting. Does one need to contact the ABC directly about it? Like I said, I really haven't looked that hard, just a cursory web search!
Nungulba wrote:Three years later(!) I'm chasing a DVD made by an ABC film crew a few years ago, based on the Huon piners who used to work on the Gordon River, back 100 years or so, last century. Some impressive scenery and several interviews/film footage featuring legendary West Coast timber-getters.
Does anyone know the title of this film and whether (or how) it is still obtainable???
Nungulba wrote:Thanks MickyB, I'll do a bit more research on this, and if successful I'll post the details here. "The Piners, The Miners" rings a sort of bell...!
biggbird wrote:Down in Hobart town Drifting. Does one need to contact the ABC directly about it? Like I said, I really haven't looked that hard, just a cursory web search!
MickyB wrote:Nungulba wrote:Three years later(!) I'm chasing a DVD made by an ABC film crew a few years ago, based on the Huon piners who used to work on the Gordon River, back 100 years or so, last century. Some impressive scenery and several interviews/film footage featuring legendary West Coast timber-getters.
Does anyone know the title of this film and whether (or how) it is still obtainable???
I think there is another doco called something like 'The Piners, The Miners' but can't find any info on it. I'm sure it was about the mines on the west coast and the loggers who cut the huon pines.
A party of four using rubber rafts take a summer journey down the undammed and unpolluted Franklin River, Tasmania.
The film 'The Last Wild River'—shot in 1977—documents Paul Smith and Bob Brown's trip down the Franklin River in Tasmania. At the time, the Hydro Electric Commission had not yet released plans for dams on the Lower Gordon and Franklin Rivers. By looking at the 1:100,000 topographical map, Paul surmised that the Gordon below Franklin Scheme would be next in line for damming. The likely sites for this were on the Lower Gordon, at the Great Ravine, and the Irenabyss—which would inundate the Franklin upstream, beyond the Lyell Highway. The Pieman hydro-electric scheme was already well advanced, but Paul believed there wasn't enough time to save this river. He thought it was best to focus on the Franklin, so that there was enough time for a campaign to develop and build up the necessary momentum to be successful. This was a lesson learnt from the Lake Pedder Campaign—which, in 1971-2, was gaining the necessary traction but needed more time... maybe two more years. Lake Pedder was flooded in 1972. Paul asked Bob to go down the Franklin with him, saying that no one else would do it—so Bob agreed.
In the early years of the campaign, Bob Brown showed 'The Last Wild River' whenever he spoke to groups of people about the campaign to save the Franklin. As a result, many people were inspired to see the river for themselves, embracing the adventure of the journey and the lure of wilderness. The Tasmanian Wilderness Society actively encouraged people to experience the Franklin. A booklet was produced—'A Guide for Franklin River Rafters'—that detailed all aspects of negotiating the river. Maps, equipment, rafts etc. were on sale at The Wilderness Society's retail outlet in the Hobart CBD.
Paul Smith’s film inspired several more films about the river, including 'Franklin River Journey' (1980) by Anne Whitehead and Bob Connolly, and 'Franklin Wild River' (1980) by Chris Noone, Stacey Gavrily and Michael Cordell. 'The Last Wild River' was one of the first ‘shots’ in the battle to save the Franklin—this was where the campaign really kicked off. After this, everything was possible. Ultimately, the movement that led to the dam's cancellation became one of the most significant environmental campaigns in Australian history.
Creators: Paul Smith and Amanda Stark.
tas-man wrote:I have just discovered on Youtube the complete 1977 film "The Last Wild River" featuring Bob Brown, Paul Smith, and Amanda Stark. I only found out about it a few years ago when helping to sort the Launceston Walking Club's archives for lodgement with the Queen Victoria Museum's Community History Collection. I came across correspondence about club member Bob Brown seeking financial support from the club to make a movie about the Franklin River. I subsequently found details of the film in the National film Archives, but there was no easy way to view the original film that had been deposited there. So discovering that the Wilderness Society have posted a copy on their Youtube Channel was a lovely surprise!
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