The Kimberley region in Australia's far northwest has one of the highest suicide rates in the country], with the vast majority being young Indigenous men].
Mark Coles Smith (Mystery Road: Origin, The Clearing, Savage River), a proud Nyikina man and actor who grew up in the Kimberley, returns to interrogate these alarming suicide statistics and meet remarkable people making a real difference in its prevention in Keeping Hope – a special one-hour documentary premiering Sunday 10 September at 8.40pm on NITV and SBS On Demand, on World Suicide Prevention Day.
This is a subject close to Mark’s heart – his best friend tragically took his own life when they were in their 20s. Keeping Hope follows his intensely personal search for answers and, hopefully, solutions.
On his journey, Mark travels across the Kimberley to some of the areas experiencing the highest suicide rates and speaks with professionals, community leaders and his own family to explore what’s being done in communities, and what is still needed. He also faces up to his own loss and questions how others can learn from it.
“People who die young are frozen in time," said Mark Coles Smith. "With those who take their own lives, it’s difficult to properly celebrate their lives because when talking about them, feelings of guilt and remorse inevitably arise. They become statistics and painful memories.
“Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have experienced the impacts of suicide in some way. Keeping Hope will ignite timely and critical conversations about suicide in Australia and what we want to change in the future.”
People who die young are frozen in time.Mark Coles Smith
Keeping Hope is a Joined Up Films production for NITV. Principal production investment from Screen Australia in association with Screenwest and Lotterywest.
For director Tyson Mowarin, it was important that the film capture the sounds of Country, and of people; families and children doing everyday activities.
“In directing this documentary, I wanted to explore why youth in these communities are taking their lives and what we may be missing. Mark connects with people, sits with them and yarns with them informally.
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Keeping Hope is available to stream for free on , with captions available in English and subtitles in Arabic, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean.
STREAM FREE AT SBS ON DEMAND
Keeping Hope