RED MATILDAS returns to screens big and small in a stunning 4K digital restoration, forty years after its original 16mm national cinema release across Australia. This award-winning 1985 documentary, to be preserved for streaming, community and educational audiences, captures the spirit of three remarkable women who challenged inequality and militarism during one of the most turbulent periods in modern history.
Through the stories of May Pennefather, Joan Goodwin and Audrey Blake, Red Matildas explores Australia during the Great Depression: a time of mass unemployment, hunger, and the rise of fascism at home and abroad. It was a period that stirred many into political action, and these women placed themselves at the front lines of global struggles for peace and justice.
May, a nurse, left Australia in 1937 to volunteer in Spain, tending to the wounded in the fight against fascism in the country’s civil war. Joan, a university graduate and activist, joined the Communist Party, campaigned for workers’ rights, and helped International Brigade volunteers on their journey to Spain. Audrey, politicised at school by the ideals of socialism, joined the Young Communist League and, by twenty, travelled to Moscow with her young family.
Though they came from different backgrounds, their stories converge in a shared vision of equality, dignity and resistance. Together, they reveal a hidden history of Australian women’s political activism—an oral history that challenged the official, male-dominated narratives of the time.
Red Matildas is more than a historical record. It is a powerful reminder of the enduring struggles for peace, justice and women’s rights, and of the courage it takes to stand against war, poverty and inequality. Resonating deeply with today’s world of social upheaval, economic hardship and conflicts in Europe and the Middle East, the film invites new generations to rediscover the passion and conviction of women who refused to remain silent.