Balibo filmmakers honoured in East Timor

Share This
+ Comment
0
The filmmakers behind the political film Balibo have been awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit in East Timor, in recognition of their contribution to the fledgling nation. (Balibo.com)

The filmmakers behind the political film Balibo have been awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit in East Timor, in recognition of their contribution to the fledgling nation. (Balibo.com)

The filmmakers behind the political film Balibo have been awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit in East Timor, in recognition of their contribution to the fledgling nation.

The filmmakers behind the political film Balibo have been awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit in East Timor, in recognition of their contribution to the fledgling nation.

President Jose Ramos Horta presented director Robert Connolly and Producer John Maynard with the medal at a special ceremony in Dili.

The event coincided with the country's 10th anniversary celebrations.

The film follows the story of six Australian journalists killed in East Timor in 1975 by invading Indonesian soldiers.

The Presidential Medal of Merit is a special honour that is only awarded to those who have made a great contribution to the country.

SBS became the first institution to receive the award for excellence in journalism earlier this year.

"For 20 years or more, I have always had fond memories and respect for this institution," Dr Ramos-Horta said.

Meanwhile the awards, which were also attended by the film's star Anthony LaPaglia, followed seven nights of screenings of Balibo, which has been dubbed into the Tetun language of the local population.

The film, about six Australian journalists killed in East Timor in 1975 by invading Indonesian soldiers, has been shown around the country on an inflatable screen, accompanied by Maynard and actor Tom Wright.
   
Maynard said it was a humbling experience to be able to show thousands of people in East Timor the movie, which is the first feature film made in the country.
   
"This was a once in a lifetime experience for us, as well as the Timorese audiences who were, for the very first time, seeing a feature film dubbed in their own language about events in Timor," Maynard said.
   
"Men, women and children were moved to tears as they sat on the ground and watched what was for many, part of a hidden history and for some, a painful memory."

Balibo is currently screening around Australia.

It has taken $643,093 so far at the box office but will expand to more than 50 screens from mid September.
 

Join the Discussion

Name
City / Suburb E.g. Artarmon, Sydney
Title
Comment
You have characters remaining.
Validation
What's this?
This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.
All submitted comments become the property of SBS. They are moderated, so we reserve the right to edit comments and remove HTML tags. Not all submitted comments will be published. Publication does not mean we endorse the opinions expressed. Please read our terms and conditions for more information.