Blood Brothers – Broken English

Clip 3: Elvis is alive

1 min 22 sec

Taken from the documentary Blood Brothers – Broken English (1993)

Original title classification not known – this clip chosen to be PG

A video which normally appears on this page did not load because the Flash plug-in was not found on your computer. You can download and install the free Flash plug-in then view the video. Or you can view the same video as a downloadable MP4 file without installing the Flash plug-in.

Availability of the complete title

Please be aware that this clip may contain the names, images and voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who may now be deceased.

Curator’s clip description

Voice-over sums up the fate of both Dixon and Stuart over black-and-white stills of the two. Then we cut to the present day Max Stuart, driving along in his home country, now much older. He philosophises about what people think of his guilt or innocence.

Curator’s notes

The black-and-white footage of the docu-drama and the historical footage, is contextualised by the colour footage of the actual Max Stuart. Now an elder living back on his own country, Stuart fulfills an imporant role in his community. He ends this story by saying that there are those who believe he is innocent, and those who believe he is guilty. Broken English while based on the real-life case of Max Stuart, is also an opportunity by the filmmakers to state the inequality of the Western legal system to those people for whom English is not their first language, and in this, is about much more than Max Stuart and the plight of Aboriginal people in courts of law.

Romaine Moreton, curator

australian screen