×
Screen Australia acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and recognises their continuous connection to culture, community, land, waters and territories.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this website contains images, voices and names of people who have passed.
Last updated: (unknown)
Personal listings are uploaded to The Screen Guide by the featured individual. Screen Australia makes reasonable efforts to maintain the quality of this information in accordance with the Screen Australia Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Profiles the dramas behind the scenes of the world's largest Tasmanian Devil sanctuary and discovers the secrets of a man who is a 'devil whisperer'.
Australia's Great Barrier Reef is an icon, one of the natural wonders of the world and the largest living structure on our planet. This 3 part series explores its full 2,000km length and the complexity of all its life. It will reveal the secret of the reef - how it was created, how it works, the intricate relationships between its inhabitants and how climate change and other factors might shape its future.
A series exploring the interaction between people and wildlife on a range of Australia's truly spectacular islands.
A one-hour HD natural history documentary portraying a year in the personal lives of eight Koalas. Featuring previously unknown science, some surprising and fascinating natural behaviours and a dedicated scientist who wants to decipher the 'Koala Code'.
Magical Land of Oz offers a blue-chip, continent-wide series ranging from the land’s highest snow peaks to the depths of the frigid and wild southern seas; from its last populations of wild numbats to its largest diorama of giant cuttlefish. It’s a land of diverse beauty that delights and surprises. The series both entertains and deepens our understanding of how the natural world is made up of not just unique species, but distinct individuals, whose lives are far from predictable.
The Douglas Mawson Antarctic Expedition of 1912 is one of the most amazing feats of endurance of all time. Although his two companions perished, Douglas Mawson survived, but how? In a bold historical experiment, adventurer Tim Jarvis retraces the gruelling experience, with similar meagre rations, primitive clothing and equipment to uncover what happened to Mawson physically—and mentally—as a man hanging on the precipice of life and death.
Australian Federal Police find adventure and challenges in the region as they join the multinational police force known as the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI) and embark on a tour of duty to East Timor. This series follows several Australian Federal Agents deployed to the Solomon Islands, where they patrol the streets of the capital Honiara, the remote and dangerous Weather Coast and outer islands that rarely, if ever, see law enforcement. In the final episode we are reacquainted with Australian Federal Agent Dave Elson who makes a tour of duty to Dili in East Timor after the recent unrest.
'Whitefella' Larry Gray, becomes the student of master hunter and tracker, Datjing Burarrwanga, on a barefoot journey through the islands of northeast Arnhem Land.
WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BRENDA HEAN? tells the remarkable story of Brenda Hean- one of the first leaders of an environmental political party in the world- whose fight to save Tasmania's Lake Pedder lead to her mysterious disappearance in 1972. Thirty-five years later a filmmaker undertakes a quest to discover the truth.
Olegas Truchanas and Peter Dombrovskis were perhaps Australia's greatest wilderness photographers. Their work became synonymous with campaigns to protect Tasmania's natural heritage. They shared many things, including a bond that was more like that of father and son. Both came from Baltic Europe and migrated to Tasmania, where their passion for nature became a crusade to save an environment under threat. Both died in the wilderness, doing what they loved, and left a legacy in extraordinary images. Their philosophy was simple and remarkably effective - if people could see the beauty of Australia's wild places then they might be moved to save them.
Third party web links are provided for your convenience only. Screen Australia is not responsible for and does not endorse any Third Party Sites' use, effect or content or any associated organisation, product or service on the third party site.
I understand, take me to
Cancel