Once Upon a Time in Cabramatta (2012)

Once Upon a Time in Cabramatta
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Drug themes and infrequent coarse language

Actors:

Once Upon a Time in Cabramatta is the untold story of how the Vietnamese community overcame the odds and found their place in multicultural Australia.

The story begins with the landmark decision of Prime Minister Fraser to open Australia’s doors to thousands of refugees at the end of the Vietnam War. It is a moment in history that finally buries the infamous White Australia Policy and transforms a nation.

The years that follow are as dramatic as they are turbulent - a people struggling to find their place in a foreign land. In this one tiny Sydney suburb, the 80s and 90s see the arrival of street gangs, a heroin epidemic and the first political assassination in Australia’s history.

The Vietnamese people are vilified and demonised. Cabramatta it seems represents all that is wrong with Asian immigration. What’s more, the community exists against a political backdrop that is fractured, the universal support for multiculturalism a distant memory.

But as the century draws to a close there is a remarkable turnaround. The Vietnamese people finally find their voice – speaking up to claim their rightful, democratic place in their adopted home. Cabramatta is a community transformed. Australia, a continent changed forever.

DVD
Status: Normal
Run time: 156mins
Origin: AUSTRALIA
Aspect Ratio: 16:9

Member Reviews (3)

3 Member Reviews
Cairo49
says
Very interesting but I doubt that we as a Nation have learnt from past mistakes.
Posted Wednesday, 20 February 2013 See my other reviews
PeterF
says
Very insightful doco about multiculturalism in Australia, and the crutches the human race seem to crave. Highly recommended.
Posted Wednesday, 28 November 2012 See my other reviews
fiona
says
Really interesting insight into the experience of the Vietnamese that came to Australia after the war, the first wave of asian migrants after the white australia policy was stopped. Sad to see what happened in these times, and opens the debate on how migration should be handled. Well worth seeing
Posted Tuesday, 1 May 2012 See my other reviews