‘The Interior’ begins as a film about a family expedition that took 120 horses from Victoria to Darwin in 1872, and the recreation ride the filmmaker’s family makes. During the editing of the film, the filmmaker finds out about a conflict with an Aboriginal group that happened on the first journey. She decides to find out what happened and travels back to the centre of Australia with her father. An Anmatyerr woman takes over the storytelling. The documentary deconstructs the white narrative and investigates the storytelling traditions that have existed in Australia for thousands of years.
Hannah Moore is an award-winning filmmaker committed to social justice and inclusive storytelling. Her short films have played at national and international festivals and on SBS Television. She has been mentored by Béla Tarr and the late Abbas Kiarostami and supported by the Ian Potter Cultural Trust, Film Victoria, the Dame Joan Sutherland Foundation, Media Resource Centre (SA) and the Jim Marks Postgraduate Scholarship. Recently, she undertook a director’s attachment on Halifax: Retribution. She is currently developing a feature film, Fear of Songs, that was selected in 2020 for the Cine Qua Non Lab and is writing the series, Everything is Fine, produced by Easy Tiger and with the support of Film Victoria, about teens in out-of-home care. Her connection to community and extensive experience with marginalised young people, as well as in juvenile prisons, has greatly influenced her work.