Oliver Howes

Oliver Howes Trailers

Let the Balloon Go Trailer

Most Popular Oliver Howes Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Let the Balloon Go Trailer (1976)

16 December 1976

In 1917 rural New South Wales, a young boy with polio struggles to break free of his overprotective mother.

The Human Face of Japan Trailer (1982)

16 March 1982

The world continues to look to Japan as a highly industrialized, future-oriented country that has retained much of its ancient tradition.

Tonten's Journey Trailer (1974)

19 March 1974

A Pidgin language drama based upon the emergence of Papua New Guinea as an independent nation. A young coastal man, Tonten, is searching for his missing brother.

On Sacred Ground Trailer (1980)

01 January 1980

On Sacred Ground looks at the story behind the Noonkanbah dispute, the well-publicised Aboriginal struggle to stop mining in the Kimberley region of Western Australia in the late 1970s.

Three to Go Trailer (1971)

01 March 1971

This anthology film brings together three stories—"Michael", "Judy", and "Toula"—each centered on a young Australian confronting personal and social choices about their future.

Three To Go: Toula Trailer (1970)

01 March 1970

Toula, a young woman from a Greek migrant family living in Sydney, struggles to balance her family’s expectations with her own desire for independence and a modern Australian identity.

The Human Face of the Pacific. A Place of Power in French Polynesia Trailer (1983)

01 January 1983

A Tahiti is a rugged, forest-clad South Pacific island, surrounded by coral reefs. Its traditional Polynesian way of life has been swamped over the years by foreign influences, particularly that of France.

The Human Face of the Pacific: New Caledonia. A Land in Search of Itself Trailer (1983)

01 January 1983

New Caledonia is a country divided. The largest community is Melanesians, self-styled “Kanaks” who make up 43 per cent of the population.

The Human Face of the Pacific: Atoll Life in Kiribati Trailer (1983)

01 January 1983

The Republic of Kiribati is one of the most isolated places in the Pacific and because of this it has been possible for its people to retain much of their traditional way of life.