When Will The Birds Return?

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  • Опубликовано: 20 дек 2014
  • From The Film Australia Collection. Made by Film Australia 1975. Directed by Bob Kingsbury, Brian Hannant, Greg Reading, John Shaw, Norman Godbold, David Haythornthwaite and John Noble. Immediately after the tragic events in Darwin in the early hours of Christmas Day 1974, where 65 people were killed, hundreds injured and thousands made homeless by Cyclone Tracy, film crews from Film Australia were sent by the government to document the aftermath and, later, to record the rebuilding of Darwin. Film Australia made four films covering this event: Cyclone Tracy, When Will The Birds Return?, Home Sweet Home and Tracy's Birthday. These films document not only the incredible level of destruction wrought by the cyclone but also the enormous humanitarian effort by the authorities and the courageous spirit of the residents in the face of such a large scale natural disaster and their determination to rebuild the city and their futures in it.
    2014 is the 40th anniversary of Cyclone Tracy. The first film made by Film Australia, Cyclone Tracy, can be seen here:
    • Cyclone Tracy - Darwin...
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 73

  • @juliestannard5538
    @juliestannard5538 Год назад +5

    This documentary should have won awards as should the people of Darwin. Shining example of courage under fire.

  • @moonshaker100
    @moonshaker100 3 года назад +9

    I was there, I was only 9 but the memory will be with me always,
    6 hours of absolute fear. My family were lucky, we all survived

  • @tonymellow9578
    @tonymellow9578 5 месяцев назад

    We moved to Darwin 1 month after the cyclone hit. My father was in the R.A.A.F and the people needed the help from all the defence services to help. I was 12 years old and there were so many houses that had been flattered and the people who dedicated their time and energy to rebuild the city. Thank You.

  • @davidcarr2649
    @davidcarr2649 5 месяцев назад

    I was 6 when Tracy hit Darwin. I lived in Sydney, and the news was loud and clear Xmas morning. The TV and radio coverage I still remember today. This documentary opened my eyes to the massive Australian effort to help the people of Darwin at the time. I'm actually glad that it takes away some of my pride towards giving away a Xmas toy that I had only just unwrapped. I wasn't a minority which was a good thing.
    Almost 50 years have passed, and there'd be people living in Darwin today, that have no idea that the city they call home, was once almost removed permanently by a tropical cyclone.

  • @ChrisStumer
    @ChrisStumer Год назад +2

    My dad was there in 1974, brought back a lot of memories for him.

  • @Patrick4959
    @Patrick4959 6 месяцев назад +2

    a touching video for everyone in Australia and next year it will be 50 years since ex Tropical Cyclone Tracy struck Darwin that very day in the NT (Northern Territory)

  • @chol4life165
    @chol4life165 2 года назад +2

    My science teacher showed me one of those cyclone tracy videos today. That siren 🚨 is still going and going in my head

  • @linmackerman1957
    @linmackerman1957 4 года назад +4

    Thank you for sharing this wonderful documentary about cyclone Tracy.

  • @siegridmatheve5048
    @siegridmatheve5048 Год назад +2

    Yes I was there, lived in Nightcliff, Progress Drive. Sheltered in the bathroom with my 12 month old son and my husband, I was heavely pregnant and was evacuated to Perth where I delivered 10 days after Tracy my twin girls very premature (32 weeks) we all survived. I am now nearly 80 years old and the memories are like yesterday.

  • @jasoncarpp7742
    @jasoncarpp7742 9 лет назад +14

    OMG! It's incredible, the devastation of Cyclone Tracy. I can't imagine living through something like this. And on Christmas Day, of all days.

  • @cokeguts8977
    @cokeguts8977 6 лет назад +7

    My stepfather told me about this documentary. This is the first time I've ever seen it. My mum and father and *so* many people I know were here for Cyclone Tracy but I wasn't. I'm a 1977 baby. 😎

  • @michelleriley8420
    @michelleriley8420 9 лет назад +13

    Thank you for sharing this film. It was good to see it again. Take a moment to reflect on the 66 lives that were taken that night and the emotional and physical scarring that affected many and still does to this day. I wish the media would not use that bloody siren. All survivors of Tracy hate it. Bad memories.

    • @C21L01
      @C21L01 6 лет назад

      Michelle Riley Not just Cyclone survivors.
      Since 1995 that siren has been used in the event of any impending danger. Its used Australia wide now as the Standard Emergency Warning Signal.
      I got to hate that sound during the Sampson Flat and Pinery Bushfires. 😣

    • @cokeguts8977
      @cokeguts8977 6 лет назад

      C21L01 I remember an ad that was on when I was little, here in Darwin, and that siren would sound at the start of that ad and mum *hated* the sound of that siren too. She was here for Cyclone Tracy, I wasn't.

    • @YokRzeznic
      @YokRzeznic 4 года назад +2

      Much more than 66.

    • @bury_the_elite65294
      @bury_the_elite65294 4 года назад +1

      I've read comments by people from the US & Canada saying that Australia's SEWS is much, MUCH scarier than that of their respective countries. One person even described our SEWS as, "nightmare-inducing". IMHO a very accurate description. Every year when bushfire season comes here in Victoria, if there is a major bushfire, they play that bloody SEWS at the start of every emergency bulletin. They had a slightly different (less scary) one in the early 1990's, I wish they'd go back to that one...

    • @TrickyMario7654
      @TrickyMario7654 4 года назад

      WeControlEverything YouSeeAndHear What did that old bushfire siren you’ve described sound like?

  • @batmanstewiecnard2lennysun548
    @batmanstewiecnard2lennysun548 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for posting this.

  • @bensmall6548
    @bensmall6548 3 года назад +2

    A similar event happened here in America in 1992. It was Hurricane Andrew. It had a small size like Tracey, it hit during nightfall, people underestimated its severity, and it devastated the area it hit. Only Andrew was much stronger since it had winds over 265 kph at landfall.

  • @racheljennings1688
    @racheljennings1688 7 месяцев назад +1

    Such strong people 😮

  • @PaulB19677
    @PaulB19677 2 года назад +1

    Everybody should have to watch this to realise just how fortunate we all really are, but how it could easily be taken away from us. Be grateful, and heed from others misfortune and how to act to help others if you are able.

  • @qldsafari
    @qldsafari 3 года назад +5

    Excellent recollection, brings back memories of how people used to be.
    Unlike the miserable bastards today

  • @annettereynolds1995
    @annettereynolds1995 4 года назад +4

    We lived in Newman at the time. I remember this very well. The town took in refugees and we all donated food, blankets and clothes. I think it's still Australia's biggest natural catastrophe.

    • @nickwilliams6621
      @nickwilliams6621 3 года назад +2

      Oh definitely. If it wasn't for Tracy though, the houses in Darwin wouldn't have been built to be more cyclone resistant. We're pretty good nowadays when it comes to Cyclones.

  • @lenwaugh
    @lenwaugh 2 года назад +1

    A terrifying, drawn-out nightmare that none who when through it will forget. Though it will soon be 50 years since it occurred, many survivors are still affected by viewing films of Tracy.

  • @cookie5335
    @cookie5335 2 года назад +2

    Amazing how they all had suitcases all packed up ready to go

  • @bydrgDownunder
    @bydrgDownunder Год назад +1

    I was 7 at the time and Cyclone Tracy represents my most vivid memories as a kid.
    In the current day, natural disasters are becoming more extreme and frequent.
    Context is that this occurred nearly 50 years ago, and a lot has changed since.
    There are also some constants such as resilience and on the down-side, looting.

  • @marklewfatt4374
    @marklewfatt4374 7 месяцев назад +1

    I lived in Nightcliff clematis street n I was 5 when the cyclone hit, I still hate Xmas I remember so much the wind sounded like a jet plane taking off

  • @castlemania08
    @castlemania08 8 лет назад +5

    The sitar soundtrack sounds great with just a bit of eeriness

  • @mitch19636
    @mitch19636 6 лет назад +7

    Wonderful historic film. I hope the likes of tracey never returns again.

    • @Patrick4959
      @Patrick4959 4 года назад

      nature itself is completely unpredictable you never know they may get one any time in December soon which is our Australian Summer Season

    • @bury_the_elite65294
      @bury_the_elite65294 3 года назад

      One that springs to mind is Yasi, January/February 2011, a Category 5, which made landfall between Cairns & Townsville, Qld.
      www.bom.gov.au/cyclone/history/yasi.shtml

  • @wolf-xs7fn
    @wolf-xs7fn 3 года назад +8

    Although it's been a number of years since cyclone Tracy hit Darwin it's still very sad to watch the video an see how brutal Tracy was to the people of Darwin

    • @JohnLee-pt5jz
      @JohnLee-pt5jz Год назад +1

      Yes I agree, I was 11 at the time living in Sydney, we didn't hear about till the afternoon on Christmas day.

  • @cookie5335
    @cookie5335 2 года назад

    Duping delight. She can't stop smiling

  • @brentbiel5425
    @brentbiel5425 5 лет назад +2

    It's interesting to hear the people say it's more like a hurricane than a cyclone. I guess they didn't really have much history to base the destructive forces of a cyclone on at the time.

    • @YokRzeznic
      @YokRzeznic 4 года назад +4

      For a long time, people didn't realise they were the same thing essentially. I remember being young and having the idea that hurricanes were far bigger and stronger than a cyclone.

    • @traemaxwell
      @traemaxwell 4 года назад +1

      A Tropical Cyclone and A Hurricane are the same thing. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone that occurs in the Atlantic Ocean and northeastern Pacific Ocean, and a typhoon occurs in the northwestern Pacific Ocean; in the south Pacific or Indian Ocean, comparable storms are referred to simply as "tropical cyclones" or "severe cyclonic storms".

    • @nickwilliams6621
      @nickwilliams6621 3 года назад +3

      @@traemaxwell We know that now, yeah. But this was in 1974 during a time when the CAT system didn't even exist.

  • @michaellynch574
    @michaellynch574 3 года назад +1

    Michael Sinclare old darwin family knew lots a people produced a graph of the wind speed he got from people he knew i saw it the wind that went throught darwin christmas 1974 blew 216 knots which equates to 416 kilometers BUT the wind speed was still climbing when the measuriing instrument was destroyed

  • @renegadejaxon4159
    @renegadejaxon4159 5 лет назад +2

    13:55 😢

  • @misstsunami
    @misstsunami 7 лет назад +2

    M.J.Smith Is My Grandpa! My 2 Aunties,My Uncle And My Mother (Plus M.J.Smith and Grandma) Where All Alive But I Wasn't Born Yet.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  7 лет назад

      Wow! Thanks for letting us know. They went through some tough times.

    • @Griffin_63
      @Griffin_63 6 лет назад

      Fennekin Princess was that the man at about 4 minutes in in the green shirt. I hope everything turned out alright for him and the family.

  • @michellematthews2113
    @michellematthews2113 2 года назад

    Same as ginger cat I hope someone gave the cat a home

    • @Seagullias12
      @Seagullias12 2 года назад

      I don't know about cats but the authorities ordered the shooting of all dogs. Prevention of them eating spoilt food and spreading disease and also the danger of attacks.

  • @michaellynch574
    @michaellynch574 3 года назад +1

    Anew warning system had just been adopted and 8DN was having a loverly time with it they would play something and then the screeching warning and so onn on on but rarely anything new it gave people the sh1ts and we turned it off as new info was not forthcoming NOT A GOOD TIME

  • @kayd6890
    @kayd6890 3 года назад +1

    Watching this in 2021 and none of this makes sense!

  • @annienorton425
    @annienorton425 6 лет назад +2

    WHY DIDN'T DARWIN START EVACUATING LATE MORNING CHRISTMAS EVE WHEN THE WEATHER BUREAU FIRST DETECTED TRACY BEFORE IT WAS A CATEGORY 4, AT LEAST NOTIFIED THE R F D A FOR POSSIBLE OUTCOME AT ALICE SPRINGS FIRST

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  6 лет назад

      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @cokeguts8977
      @cokeguts8977 6 лет назад

      Annie Norton Cause they were all too busy getting pissed and partying. 😂🙌

    • @castlemania08
      @castlemania08 4 года назад +3

      The residents of Darwin had grown complacent; previous storms had either come close and moved away or were only weak prior to Tracy so the general consensus was that it would do the same as the others. How wrong they unfortunately were

    • @YokRzeznic
      @YokRzeznic 4 года назад

      How don't you know by now?

    • @nickwilliams6621
      @nickwilliams6621 3 года назад +2

      Remember that this was in 1975, and the CAT system had not yet been 'invented' so to speak.
      If it wasn't for Tracy, Darwin wouldn't have their houses built to a more 'cyclone resistant' standard.
      Titanic had the iceberg, The Hindenberg had its hydrogen gas, the car seatbelts had their victims, and Darwin had Cyclone Tracy. This is a learning curve mate. Don't forget aswell that there was a near miss from a previous cyclone some 10 days prior, and this all took place on Christmas Eve. and the news staff only had a 'skeleton crew' because of the holidays. I wouldn't blame the people for being negligent.
      We also have less cyclone [hurricane] related deaths than USA. Cyclone Yasi for example was more powerful than Katrina and 1.5x the size, and had no cyclone-related deaths recorded. Yeah, we party hard, but we're built like a brick-shithouse lol. It takes alot to fuck up an Aussie's day.

  • @michellematthews2113
    @michellematthews2113 2 года назад

    Chicken should not been left like that hope got rescue

  • @AussieTVMusic
    @AussieTVMusic 9 лет назад +1

    Wasn't 87 killed not 49?

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  9 лет назад +2

      ***** The official toll is now 65 people killed. The synopsis for this film was written at an early stage after the cyclone.

    • @AussieTVMusic
      @AussieTVMusic 9 лет назад

      Ah OK thanks

  • @cookie5335
    @cookie5335 2 года назад

    How did they get the figures. And where is everyone.
    It's a shanty town

  • @SvenNumberSeven
    @SvenNumberSeven 3 года назад

    OM MANI PADME HUM

  • @tommylawton5196
    @tommylawton5196 5 лет назад +1

    Stupid music ruins it

    • @Seagullias12
      @Seagullias12 2 года назад +1

      Remember it was produced in 1975: that music was pertinent as it ties in with the guy in the film playing his Sitar to calm the traumatised victims.