During World War I, a Samoan slave-soldier and a Turkish (Ottoman) soldier fighting on opposite sides find common ground and friendship despite language barriers and cultural differences.
Thousands of years in the future, a young girl tries to find medicine for her ailing father in a horrifying dystopian future where Aboriginal and other Indigenous peoples are deported to off-world colonies as slave labour by a Nazi-like regime, founded after a war between the global north (led by the US) and the global south (led by China) devastated the planet and wiped out 80% of the human population.
After her mother was assaulted in a racist attack by state security officers, an activist and graffiti artist plans to burn down Cooks' Cottage with the help of a new friend.
An Indigenous man living in the Northern Territory, where it is illegal for Aboriginal people to purchase alcohol, finds himself targeted by white police when he tries to buy a six-pack of beer.
[5] Luke Buckmaster, writing in The Guardian, gave the film four stars out of five, calling it "elegantly constructed... unquestionably memorable and, at times, a thrilling achievement".