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Love and anti-refugee racism in rural Australia
Marking Time directed by Cherie Nolan, written by John
Doyle
By Richard Phillips
21 November 2003
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Marking Time, an Australian television drama set in
Brackley, a fictional rural town, examines a year in the life
of 19-year-old Hal Flemming, who meets and falls in love with
Randa, an Afghan refugee. Broadcast by the ABC on November 9 and
10, the mini-series is the first mainstream Australian television
drama that attempts to explore the impact of the Howard governments
anti-refugee policies on ordinary people.
Central protagonist Hal (Abe Forsythe) is a sensitive and thoughtful
youth who has just finished high school. He has decided to defer
a university education in Sydney and spend 12 months in the rural
town. He lives with his father, 45-year-old Geoff (Geoff Morrell),
an economics teacher and former athlete. Hals mother died
when the boy was five-years-old.
Hals coming of age and his first real love
develop against the backdrop of profound changes in world politics,
and he provides direct-to-camera commentary throughout.
This simple device and the effective use of contemporaneous television
news footage, help trace how key events impact on social relations
and the tempo of life in the rural town.
Marking Time opens during the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games.
A festive and optimistic atmosphere prevails in Brackley, situated
about 200 kilometres west of Sydney, and Geoff, who competed in
the 1976 Montreal Olympics, is among those chosen to carry the
torch through the town.
Although Geoff thinks that his son should spend the year travelling,
Hal hangs around Brackley, renewing his friendship with acquaintances
who dropped out of school at an early age and now spend much of
their time drinking and taking drugs. While he is more mature
and informed than his friends, Hal finds himself adapting to their
backwardness and caught up in situations he later regrets.
An unlikely event brings Hal into contact with 17-year-old
Randa (Bojana Novakovic), who attends the local high school. Randa
is part of a small Afghan community in the town whose members
are on temporary protection visas and awaiting decisions on their
refugee status applications. Most are employed at the local fruit
cannery.
Hal is smitten by Randa but unable to summon up the courage
to ask her out. He resolves, however, to find a way to win her
affections. When schoolboys pull off Randas hijab (headscarf),
Hal enlists friends to retrieve the scarf and reprimand the boys.
This provides another opening for the young man to make contact
and eventually, after a few weeks, he receives permission from
Randas father Hassan to take the girl on a date.
Hals friendsBullet and Shane, Tracy and Belindacrudely
ridicule his attraction to Randa. Lacking a decent education and
caught up in a cycle of alcohol, drugs and unemployment or low-paying
dead-end jobs, they have little time for the Afghan refugees.
In late August 2001, in the midst of Hal and Randas developing
relationship, the Howard government in Canberra denies entry to
460 asylum seekers rescued by the merchant ship Tampa and, aided
by the media, begins whipping up racist and anti-refugee sentiments.
A few weeks later, terrorists crash passenger aircraft into Americas
World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Prime Minister Howard seizes
on these issues to make border protection and the
fight against terrorism its central reelection strategy.
Government officials tell the media that Afghan refugees attempting
to enter Australia could be terrorists.
Geoff, his future wife Gemma and Hal are outraged at the governments
stance but the town is divided. Government and media propaganda
shape confusion and ignorance into dark suspicions about the Afghan
community and outright racism.
Tensions mount and when the US begins bombing Afghanistan,
Randas home is torched by unknown arsonists. Geoff offers
shelter to the family, which is gratefully accepted. But Randa
is discovered in bed with Hal the next morning. She feels humiliated,
her father is angry and hurt, and Geoff feels betrayed by his
son. Randa is forbidden from seeing Hal, and Geoff refuses to
speak to his son for several weeks. Hal and Randa, however, continue
to meet secretly.
As the federal election campaign progresses, the Howard government,
with Labor Party support, continues to play the anti-refugee card.
Brackleys local DJ attempts to stir up the situation against
the Afghan community. Hal and Geoff are members of a local Federation
Fruit Festival committee, but resign in protest when a couple
of small businessmen on the committee publish a web site with
the names and addresses of all Afghan refugees. Father and son
are denounced as elitists and do-gooders.
At the same time, Randa and Hassans refugee status application
is rejected by the Immigration Department and they are directed
to leave the country by the end of the year.
Hal hopes electoral defeat of the Howard government will stop
Randa and Hassans deportation. But when the government is
returned with an increased majority, Hal plans to thwart the deportation
order by eloping with Randa. This scheme, however, fails and the
family is deported.
The television mini-series ends with Hal deeply shocked and
dismayed. In just 12 months the young mans illusions in
Australia as a democracy, providing a fair go for
all, are shattered. Angry and feeling an outcast in his own land,
he resolves to travel to Pakistan and Afghanistan and find Randa.
Notwithstanding some obvious weaknesses, Marking Time
is an intelligent and compassionate work. It represents an encouraging
change from the diet of mind-numbing police shows, insular kitchen-sink
dramas and cynical comedies about Australian working class families
currently dominating local television. Director Cherie Nolan elicits
strong performances from Abe Forsythe, Bojana Novakovic and Geoff
Morell.
Some of the supporting characters, particularly Hals
friends, however, are stereotypes or cartoonish. This is not the
product of weak acting, but of problems of script and character
development. Hals friends reflect the difficulties confronting
oppressed rural youth, but too often Marking Time uses
them for comic relief. This approach is tedious and typical of
much Australian film and television productiona tendency
to avoid any genuine probing of the complex and contradictory
relationship between character development and social life.
But, overall, scriptwriter John Doyle (a.k.a., Rampaging Roy
Slaven), a well-known local television comedian/sports commentator
should be commended for the drama. His understanding of anti-refugee
racism in Brackley is healthy and unequivocal. Doyle draws a clear
distinction between the backwardness and confusion of Hals
friends and the real perpetrators of such poisonthe political
establishment, the media and their local representatives.
Hal and his father Geoff are clearly alter egos for Doyle and
seem to reflect changes in his own political outlook. Changi,
a six-part series about Australian prisoners of war during WWII
and Doyles only other television drama, failed to challenge
the political status quo and reinforced a range of Australian
national myths.
Like the characters he has created for Marking Time,
Doyle is clearly shocked by the cruel and inhumane social and
political atmosphere created by the government and mass media,
particularly over the last two years.
In comments prior to the screening of Marking Time,
Doyle said he was inspired to write the story in protest against
the anti-refugee hysteria whipped up by the Howard government
and the support given to it by the opposition Labor Party.
It [2001] was a bleak period for the government. They
had to pull a rabbit out of the hat. Over the horizon bobbed the
Tampa and this was seized on by the government. The election issue
then became border protection and who could be the hardest, who
could be the harshest against these unfortunate people.... The
whole thing was orchestrated by spin doctors.
The Labor party, he continued, were weak of heart and
even weaker of stomach, who got into lock step with government
policy. They werent game to lose the election, which they
were going to do anyway, on a matter of principle.
... I hope those who watch [Marking Time] will
see that there are advantages to being informed and great disadvantages
and dangers of being ill-informed or misinformed because it makes
the community vulnerable to being abused by those who would seek
to govern us.
In another interview he said: It seemed to me democracy
can only work in a climate of information, where people are informed
and not misguided. It is a very fragile nationalist outlook thing
and when information is choked off from a community they will
often make errors of judgement.
Marking Time covers a lot of groundtoo much, perhaps.
But better to have attempted to tackle racism and the political
establishment head-on than avoid them, as other directors of locally
produced films have done in the past two years. One hopes that
Doyle continues to artistically grapple with these and other vital
political and social questions.
See Also:
We're living in strange times
Marking Time scriptwriter speaks with WSWS
[29 November 2003]
Intimate moments, genuine
protest
[22 September 2003]
An interview with Tom Zubrycki,
director of Molly & Mobarak
[22 September 2003]
Australian general
election: Both parties stoke anti-immigrant prejudice
[9 October 2001]
Why the Tampa refugees
should be free to live in Australia
[31 August 2001]
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