Premium Content:

Oranges and Sunshine (M)

Directed by Jim Loach

Margaret Humphreys (Emily Watson), a social worker from Nottingham, uncovered one of the most significant social scandals of recent times; the organised deportation of thousands of British children to Australia. Humphreys has spent years documenting the stories of some of the 130,000 children who were shipped to Australia from the mid 1950s up until 1970, and has written a best-selling book, Empty Cradles. She began her work in 1986 when nobody was aware of what the British and Australian governments had done, and the world certainly wasn’t aware of the abuse that many of these displaced children had suffered from those entrusted with their care.

- Advertisement -

Despite the personal toll, Humphreys is still racing against time trying to trace relatives, reuniting families and helping to mend fractured lives. Along the way she has unearthed plenty of lies, faced uncooperative authorities in both Britain and Australia, been threatened and finally gained some recognition for the deported children. On 17 November 2009, while Jim Loach (son of Ken Loach) was filming in Britain, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made a National Apology to the children who were uprooted from Britain. While filming in Australia on 24 February 2010, then British Prime Minister Gordon Brown gave an apology to the child migrants and their families.

Western Australia was the destination for 80% of these child migrants and Fairbridge, Bindoon and the Child Migrants’ Trust in Perth are all locations for this powerfully painful story. They were promised oranges and sunshine, and they got hard labour and life in institutions. At one of the first screenings in Perth, many of the former child migrants in the audience congratulated Jim Loach for bringing their story to the big screen. See this film to bear witness to the travesty that affected so many people’s lives.

Lezly Herbert

***

Latest

Spin It | New albums from Snail Mail, Arlo Parks, Deary, and Nightmares on Wax vs Adrian Sherwood

Here's four top albums that have just been released. Indie pop to dance floor dub.

Review | ‘All That’s Left Of You’ is an epic, devastating Palestinian family drama

This deeply personal and quietly devastating film by writer, director and main actor Cherien Dabis covers 75 years.

Review | ‘The Deb’ tells a modern Australian coming out story

The Deb | Dir: Rebel Wilson | ★ ★...

The Beta Band are touring Australia for the very first time

Catch the legendary Scottish band at Metropolis Fremantle this June.

Newsletter

Don't miss

Spin It | New albums from Snail Mail, Arlo Parks, Deary, and Nightmares on Wax vs Adrian Sherwood

Here's four top albums that have just been released. Indie pop to dance floor dub.

Review | ‘All That’s Left Of You’ is an epic, devastating Palestinian family drama

This deeply personal and quietly devastating film by writer, director and main actor Cherien Dabis covers 75 years.

Review | ‘The Deb’ tells a modern Australian coming out story

The Deb | Dir: Rebel Wilson | ★ ★...

The Beta Band are touring Australia for the very first time

Catch the legendary Scottish band at Metropolis Fremantle this June.

Review | ‘Father Mother Sister Brother’ is exceptionally boring

Jim Jarmusch’s latest offering is an anthology: three stories centred on fractured families and parent–child relationships.

Spin It | New albums from Snail Mail, Arlo Parks, Deary, and Nightmares on Wax vs Adrian Sherwood

Here's four top albums that have just been released. Indie pop to dance floor dub.

Review | ‘All That’s Left Of You’ is an epic, devastating Palestinian family drama

This deeply personal and quietly devastating film by writer, director and main actor Cherien Dabis covers 75 years.

Review | ‘The Deb’ tells a modern Australian coming out story

The Deb | Dir: Rebel Wilson | ★ ★ ★ ★ Rebel Wilson is known for her crude comedy in films such as Pitch Perfect...