The diverse range of projects produced and developed by CAAMA Productions has expanded dramatically since our inception.
We produce a wide range of genres which include:
- Children’s Television Programming
- Feature Length Special
- Short Drama
- Documentaries
- Language and Cultural Programming
- Community Service Announcements
- Music Videos
- Corporate Videos
Please browse the catalogue and preview our films.
- Drama
- Documentary
- Nganampa Awernekenhe
- Series
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Yeyekerte is a 26 episode magazine series produced by CAAMA Productions and commissioned by National Indigenous Television.
Yeyekerte is a word from the Southern Arrernte Nation and is of the Pertame country (South of Alice Springs). Yeyekerte means Storytelling.
Our series is about people, personalities and places. Each week we meet inspiring individuals and hear about the incredible unsung heroes in all aspects of life. Yeyekerte is about feeling good through our people’s eyes.
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Grounded is a 52 episode youth magazine series produced by CAAMA Productions and commissioned by National Indigenous Television.
Grounded is a variety show for teenage kids that live in community, bush town, or the city; where real people talk about their lives, share their dreams and show you what they’re made of. [More]
Pmarra Country is a nine episode country music magazine produced by CAAMA Productions and commissioned by National Indigenous Television .
Hosted by country music legend Warren H Williams, Pmarra Country features Aboriginal musicians who sing country music or sing about their country in their traditional languages.
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Bush Toys is a whimsical and historical journey into the art of Bush Toy making in the Central Desert of Australia.
Chris Wallace from Santa Teresa (also a lead member in the Ltyentye Apurte Band) creates and sells Bush Toys through Keringke Art Centre – mainly horses and riders but he’s also created helicopters and other stuff with motors. Bush Toys are made from scraps of metal, copper, tobacco and powdered milk tins, old horse shoes, small fragments of fabric and salvaged materials, stripped from car bodies found at rubbish tips. The copper wire is taken from wrecks (wiper, airconditioner motors) and stuffed with mattress foam, covered with surgical tape painted, lacquered and sold.
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Around a campfire Two Anmatjere Elders, Patsy and Jane Briscoe, sing and tell the epic-dreaming story of two young men who are forced into action when a clan of demon Cannibals devour their entire tribe and kidnap the young men’s mother and sister. Alone and outnumbered the young men defy all odds as they defeat the demons and reclaim their women.
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Situated south of Derby in the West Kimberley Jarlmadangah is a very unique community and is often hailed as ‘a model community’ for many reasons. One is the enterprising nature of two elders, John and Harry Watson.
In October 2007, the members of Jarlmadangah Community celebrated 25 years of a journey of self determination to fulfilment of a dream. 25 Years of building a strong family community based on ideals many communities around Australia have strived for but it seems very much that a recipe of success is in the hands of this community
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Ladies were dancing up in the Milky Way, and the baby fell down from a Coolamon, fell down there, and created that meteorite crater.
An emotive, traditional style Nganampa, about a Western Arrernte story. Auntie Mavis talks about the significance of the place; Googes Bluff, with a woman’s side and a man’s side, and its major significance to the Western Arrernte people. About the morning star, the evening star, the Milky Way and the Universe.
The style is poetic, beautifully filmed, with time-lapse shots of the night sky, helicopter shots, dawn and dusk, overlaid with the traditional song about the falling of the child, and the creation of the place, Googes Bluff.
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When Yuma and Kyanna meet up in the central Australian town of Alice Springs, they realise they could be long lost twins. They decide to trade places, with Kyanna heading to a beachside house in Sydney and Yuma trekking out to a remote Indigenous community. It’s supposed to be only for a night, but then things get tricky, and the fun starts …
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In the Heart of Australia, one of the harshest places on the planet, surrounded by breathtaking mountain ranges, the town of Alice Springs has become a haven for lesbians, a place where black and white women mix and mingle, confronting the challenges of loving across racial and cultural gaps.
Through the expert guidance of Destiny Attenborough, an Aboriginal mock anthropologist styled after the famed naturalist, this often hilarious film provides glimpses into the world of women who love women in Alice Springs, while Aboriginal lesbians provide insight on how they make, break and sustain love across racial and cultural gaps in a town like Alice. With a satirical and comedic eye, we explore the fascinating lives of some of these women.
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Agnes Abbott was born at Loves Creek Station in the 1930s. She lived in the bush with her Eastern Arrernte family, traveling across the parts of her homeland which are still accessible to the old people.
From her early years born and raised in the bush, learning the survival tools and the ways of their culture, Agnes life underwent many and expansive changes. More of her homelands became inaccessible to families for hunting, and finding new ways to live on or near the stations and the missions became imperative. Eventually, Agnes remained as a station worker.
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Dion Beasley is 15 years old; he lives with his Aunty in Tennant Creek and is an Artist.
With the help of a close friend and teacher; Joie Boutler, they have established a label for t-shirts and other apparel, called “Cheeky Dog”. It is hoped that this venture will create an income for him and in the future he will be able to create financial stability.
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