New documentary examines Captain Cook's arrival from a First Nations perspective

Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky asks — in 2020, does Australia have a blurred history of Cook?

Steven Oliver presents a dynamic new documentary

Steven Oliver presents a dynamic new documentary, exploring Captain Cook's arrival from a First Nations perspective. Source: Supplied

Let's look at the arrival of Captain Cook's HMB Endeavour through First Nations’ eyes, 250 years on from its landing.

A new documentary has assembled some of the nation’s deadliest singers and songwriters, including A.B. Original co-founder Trials, rapper Birdz, acclaimed singer/songwriters Mo'Ju, Australian Women in Music Award winner Alice Skye, lyrical storyteller Mau Power, Butchulla songman Fred Leone and the legendary Kev Carmody, to create a modern-day songline for 21st Century Australia that tells the Indigenous story of connection to Country, resistance and survival throughout history.
AB Original Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky Trials
Daniel Rankine (AKA: Trials) in the recording studio filming Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky Source: Supplied


Presented and co-written by , the film takes the audience on an incredible and scenic journey across Australia from the cliffs of Kurnell to the Torres Strait. As he travels the land interrogating Cook’s legacy, he poses the question — in 2020, does Australia have a blurred history of Cook?

Directed by Steven McGregor (co-writer of Sweet Country and director of Black Comedy), the film sees a diverse group of Indigenous performers, known for their powerful music and perspectives, perform original songs that speak directly to the past and the future. Including Oliver's own powerful slam poetry.
Steven Oliver says that the film is about rejecting the solo narrative of Australian history.

“We live in a society where we’re often expected to accept a narrative and that one narrative is the ultimate truth," he said. "Ultimately though, there is never one truth."

"If you take parts of several truths and add them together, usually the truth is in there somewhere. It’s making people agree on it that’s the hard part. Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky offers an alternative truth from an Indigenous perspective and asks us to open our eyes to possibilities or different realities of truth and ignites further discussion that Australia still needs to have,” Oliver said.
Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky offers an alternative truth from an Indigenous perspective and asks us to open our eyes to possibilities or different realities of truth and ignites further discussion that Australia still needs to have
Director for Indigenous Content at SBS and NITV Channel Manager, Tanya Orman agrees that this is a ground-breaking documentary looking to reframe the one-way dialogue surrounding the history and legacy of Cook, particularly in 2020.

"It’s a bold, entertaining and engaging alternative history from a First Nations perspective; a standout film for Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians and First Peoples around the world,” she said. 

With the Australian National Maritime Museum participating as principal funding body, Screen Australia's Indigenous Department Investment Manager, Angela Bates says the project is also an important educational resource, as it is an entertaining watch.  

“It was a great pleasure to support and work in partnership with a major investor like the Australian National Maritime Museum, to provide an opportunity for Indigenous filmmakers and creatives to tell the story of Cook’s journey; as he chartered the east coast of Australia, from an Indigenous perspective through modern days song lines," she said.

"Our songlines have been deeply ingrained in our country and Australian history since the beginning of time and form part of our creation stories, and in doing so, dispels the myth that Captain Cook ‘discovered’ Australia. What better way to tell this story through music, which has the profound power to educate, heal and connect people.”



Looky Looky Here Comes Cooky
is available on SBS on Demand:





 

NITV's flagship News & Current Affairs show The Point explores the 250th year since Lieutenant Cook’s alleged ‘discovery’ of Australia, and asks how history can be decolonised.






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4 min read
Published 12 August 2020 1:28pm
Updated 1 September 2020 1:11pm


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