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1-32 of 32
- An Indigenous woman in Australia is thrust into the political limelight.
- A lawman apprehends a notorious outlaw and gives him nine days to kill his older brother, or else they'll execute his younger brother.
- An indigenous detective returns to the Outback to investigate the murder of a young girl.
- Romantic English couple meets a disarming American psychopath while vacationing in Australia.
- Back Roads is taking viewers to some of Australia's most interesting and resilient communities. The towns chosen for the programnme are full of colourful characters whose grit and good humour continues to uplift and inspire.
- The Lost Soldier follows a Texan Infantryman 6 months after the war in-search of the brother he lost in the carnage - revisiting and reliving the brutal realities of the Texas Revolution in the hope that he will uncover the answers he needs.
- Return of the Catalina is an epic documentary that follows a group of retired Aussie pilots and engineers as they fight restore a 70 year old PBY Catalina to life, in order to remember unsung pilots of WWII.
- Joey Lark (Sebastian Angborn; 500 Miles, The Elephant Princess, Sea Patrol) is running late. He's on his twelfth day in the truck straight, and while he might be three trips away from being able to buy his very own rig, on this trip he's not nearly as close to Winton as he needs to be. While battling the clock to appease his boss Jacko (Stephen Hunter; The Hobbit, Love My Way, Janet King) a strange voice begins to take over Joey's dilapidated UHF radio. The voice (Hunter McMahon; Kokoda, All Saints, Flotsam Jetsam) begins to taunt Joey, bringing up figures and events from his past. While the maternal dispatcher Victoria (Andrea Moore; Mental, The Man Who Sued God, Oscar and Lucinda) grows more and more concerned for Joey's state of mind, Joey is certain the voice is real, and when the mystery man states that Joey's girlfriend Olivia (Marica Lemm) is under his captivity Joey has no choice but to slam on the brakes and turn around to face his demons.
- Short
- TV Mini Series
- Deleted footage from Gone (2006).
- When a young boy is torn away from his pink strawberry milkshake, his world transforms into a video game escapade to reunite him with his beloved sugary drink.
- At the End is an Australian post-apocalyptic action/drama set in the barren outback of a future wasteland. It follows a man down to his last bullet, when he hears a scream.
- A young woman travels across Australia in search of a person from her past.
- Ben, a film student in town for the Winton Film Festival is star struck when he walks into the local shop and finds none other than renowned character-actor Roy Billing working behind the counter. Ben assumes that Roy must be in character for a new role, as he claims he's just the local shop owner and refuses to give him an autograph. The frustration grows as Roy is adamant he isn't who Ben thinks he is, while Ben believes the fame has just gone to his head. It all comes to a halt when a "real" celebrity enters the shop.
- After he is abandoned by his wife, David embarks on a trip to the Australian outback with his daughters. When the car blows a flat tyre and they become stranded in the desert, David must confront the tensions that lie between them.
- When an intoxicating friendship between two childhood friends becomes suffocating for one, a resurfacing old secret reveals the dark nature of their codependency.
- Heather Ewart visits the Western Queensland town of Winton, in Waltzing Matilda country. Heather spends a day at the races, goes digging for dinosaur bones and meets former Governor-General Dame Quentin Bryce.
- Tony heads for a journey across Australia, beginning his trip by boarding a sea plane to fly over Sydney before taking a sleeper train to a farm deep in the Outback where herding is done by helicopter. From there, Tony then heads to the north of Queensland to learn about the uncertain future facing the world-famous Great Barrier Reef.
- Seeking help from the locals for an iconic outback challenge - the dunny derby, their newfound friends must take their place on the 'throne' for a race across town.
- Heather Ewart finds there are many surprises in the tiny town of Boulia on the edge of the Simpson Desert about 1700km from Brisbane.
- A revolutionary farm management plan set up in the 1980s is paying dividends. Offers of Federal compensation have not subdued rural anger over new Queensland tree-clearing laws.
- We often hear how life is tough on the land as farmers struggle to make ends meet on properties that have been in the family for many generations. But they are not the only ones trying to make a buck in the bush, there is also a new breed of farmers, city dwellers who are choosing rural life. And while beef, sheep and grains still dominate Australia's agricultural economy many of these novice farmers are experimenting in alternative ventures on their very own bush blocks.
- Who can deny that the future of Australian agriculture depends on enthusiastic farmers? But with advancing technology, globalisation and new opportunities in the city ... the number of young people interested in a life on the land is dwindling. There is however a dedicated band of young farmers who are intent on showing farming is a viable choice.
- He's from one of Australia's most prominent family business dynasties. Now Peter Holmes a Court, the eldest son of Janet and the late Rober Holmes a Court is aiming to make his own mark in the corporate world. Holmes a Court's unashamed ambition is to create the world's largest cattle company, and like his late father, his approach is already making waves. Let's profile the man who aims to be Australia's new cattle King.
- It's been said that at its peak, Melbourne's wool stockpile alone would have filled the Melbourne Cricket Ground three times over. Aided by a low Australian dollar and a recovering wool market, nationally six hundred thousand stockpile bales have been cleared since the start of the year. It's ten years since the wool reserve price scheme collapsed leaving 4.7 million bales in storage so the end of the stockpile, not only marks a major milestone it also removes a major millstone from around the wool industry's neck.
- Nearly every farmer in the country has a collection of unregistered, unwanted, out of date and potentially dangerous chemicals in a shed somewhere on their property. Until now, paying a specialist to collect and destroy the chemicals has been the only way farmers could legally rid themselves of this burden, and reduce the threat to the environmentiroment. The cost though is so high, most farmers have just stored what they no longer need. After decades of waiting for a solution farmers finally have another option, and the best thing about it is - it's free.
- The good news comes from Queensland where widespread rain over central and western areas of the state has been described as 'the best in years'. The rain came from the tale-end of former cyclone 'Beni'.