A classic Australian adventure film that shows Aboriginal tribal life in Arnhem Land and an incredible journey through the Gulf of Carpentaria and up Cape York.
Well iam glad to report...that people r still practicing the bush lore in the topend till today.. My boy initiation will be next dry season 2022...yep but what a great historic show... bloody brilliant. My kids were so happy to c their own great grandfather in his natural element. .
Do it!! Please!! 😃 I remember watching this as a kid as well. The content like this is too valuable to lose and having hd versions would just be brilliant. 👌🏼 it’s actually a really great peek into aboriginal traditions and communities and even though it’s old, it’s still relevant.
I watched this in 1972 at high school in Katanning Western Australia. Having recently migrated from Great Britain, it was the most exciting and inspiring film I had ever watched. The respect Mal had for the Aboriginals was very encouraging to we who only encounter 'Town' Aboriginals. I've since spent time in the jungles of PNG (2016-2021) and have lived with the native people in their traditional houses. Eaten their food and hunted with them. No electricity, no shops, no radio, no telephones and you survive on your skill and knowledge or die. It is as close as I can come to Malcolms experience.
More of this should be shown to today's aboriginal people. They might actually get a true lesson about the help white man has given them in these brutally harsh conditions they lived. They dont tell you how they seek clothing. Weapons. Knife's. Supply drop off's ect. Education. Animals for guns..
The natural similarities between Northern Australia and FL are fun to see. Sandy soil, intense sun, and flat coastal topography lend themselves to these similarities.
it is MUCH hotter in the NT - for example i have been in tennant creek when it was 140 degrees, and night times under 0 - the desert country.This is set in Arnhem Land; not quite as hot and not as cold.
Land Rover has not been a reliable off road car for over 30 years unfortunately. There's a reason that they drive a Toyota in all of Malcolm's later films.
"The locals say it's sheer madness to try it now. The wet started 6 weeks ago, the rivers will be in flood, the track washed away". "We think about it ....... decide to give it a go".
They don't make tyres, cars, or men like that anymore, sadly.. what a fabulous adventure.. this certainly was a favourite show for possibly ever single Australian family to watch
This is incredible. Part 1 had comments turned off but it was wild to see and hear about how the aboriginal children were the last of their kind to live traditionally and by the time they were grown it would only be a distant memory. It feels as if being able to watch how the Native Americans lost their heritage via assimilation only through the lens of the aborigines
it's not exactly the same, i went up in 1999 and lived and worked among them forabout three years. In some areas they retained their cultural identity , their languages and ceremony, and others not. And there are still people walking in from the desert from time to time.
So good to see this. Malcolm used to call in and visit my dad when we were kids in Port Hedland in the late sixties early seventies. Who did the narration? It wasn’t Mal that’s for sure.
@wayseer..."we have feeling for animal and birds" Wouldn't it have been nice if the settlers (probably your ancestors) had the same "feelings" for aboriginals
I love watching these older shows but I have to say the things they do back then would get them in so much crap these days. All those school sharks left to rot along with the net for one. So much food in those sharks and that net can entangle other wild life well before it rots. How things have changed thats for sure.
@@jogillett8518 Agreed. I remember watching another where he had gotten bogged so used the winch connected to a spare wheel and buried in the mud. He had people standing on the tyre as he tried to winch the vehicle out. So many would be up in arms about "Standing in the Dead Zone" these days. I watch & create 4wd related content for CZcams myself and see so much of this happening, even simple things like a winch blanket and people jump in the comments complaining. Back in those days though it was normal practice. I still love watching these shows even if things are so different. People like Malcolm paved the way for others like myself to want to explore, they opened our amazing country up for so many to see.
@@MicksGarageDarts how true. We are looking at these shows filmed over 50 years ago with 2021 eyes and attitudes. When we know better we hopefully do better. Theres bound to be a few things that stick out glaringly by today's standards and the comments section of CZcams is the place to discover where you have failed😆 I'm not a 4wd kinda girl but I'm going to I go and have a look at your channel and see how it's done!! Cheers 👍🇦🇺
@@jogillett8518 I don't have much in the way of recoveries etc on my channel because I don't normally push to places I need to be recovered. I try to promote best practice (by today's standard) for everything I do though.
Old boy drinks Metho from 44 Gallon drums... Thats gotta send you blind. What an epic trip and done with great respect to the traditional owners OiOiOi.
It’s crazy how merely 2 years after the making of this documentary Australia introduced legislation outlawing the culling of saltwater crocodiles in 1971. By that point, there was only an estimated 3000 in the top end. Basically what the Indian tiger has sadly become now. Teetering extinction. It’s such a great success story that they protected their numbers and brought these fascinating animals back.
What an absolute gem of a find. I watched the first part and then this and I'm blown away. I can't believe I had to stumble across this guy myself? I've discovered there's plenty videos by him and his mate Dave. Subbed.
Haha this was like me and my friends first logging the bamboo by blown up radio stations from the war, then going to a clearing in the jungle to shape and lash the logs into rafts and canoes. Preparing paddles, gigs, atlatl, Hawaiian sling, and spearfish the old canals used In ww2. The water was clear and mahi mahi was seen. There was a blown up bridge we would freedive and look at. Watch for the barricuda! Love Guam!
Its pretty intresting to see this old footage, just the way of speech: 3:30...you feel that the vietnam war "wasnt that far away". Ive seen this series as a child in the 80/90s, now as a adult its such a different perspective...beautifull outtakes of gone days and gone people... ;(
@Bill Shwifty no one's been to space, you space cadet. We survived longer and the land was the same, no pollution, no drugs, no crime, no alcohol, no corruption, buhahahahaha you must be proud.
Life full of meaning. No 8h working days, no 7 day weeks, no pointless stuff to buy for the live given up at work for money. Every action had meaning, every second, every life. We have 1 moth holiday to mimic what they did every day of their life and even then we have to have lots off stuff to help us. Without the stuff we would just die in a day or two.
We do it to ourselves. Same reason the child settlers kidnapped by the native Americans never wanted to return to civilisation as it is so called. Man's natural state.
@@ragebait988 I wish I could. I would probably die in a couple days or weeks as I have no clue how to stay alive in that kind of environment. It takes a bit more than watching "how to" video on CZcams to survive and live of the land like this folks. One cut from coral could probably kill me, or just a cut of any kind.
Thanks I’ve never seen this man before is he English..? I used to watch the Bush tucker man in the 80s but these are great to watch...I was lucky enough to live in Oz for a year in the early 90s.. I remember being shocked on arrival as there were plenty of aboriginal people drunk living on the streets I never expected to see that it was sad..😢❤
Malcolm was an Aussie. North Queenslander if I'm not mistaken. There's a voiceover with a slightly English accent on this video for some reason. Malcolm had a pretty strong Aus accent Edit: I was mistaken. He was born in Victoria, died in Western Australia. No idea where I got Queensland from
As With The Leyland Brothers Trip Up To Cape York In 1972 This Trip To Cape York In 1969 By Malcolm Douglas And David Oldmeadow Would Have Been A Real Struggle And A Test Of Indurance For Man And Vehicle Especially In The Wet Season With River Crossings Like The Wenlock And Jardine Rivers To Contend With!🤔🤠🤠🚘🏞️🐊🐍🇦🇺
A time long gone now & real 4wheel drivers doing real exploration not like now with what is almost like a tiny home being towed behind them & all the Instra crap & CZcams videos that all the same people do, these guys were real explorers real men, so much love for the aboriginal people & communities 😊that land rover 😂 what a gem, the good old winch & that owl 😂 & now the Jardine river has a ferry crossing I guess 4 all the $90’000 4 wheel drives now
i am nearly 40 years old and i feel i've been lied to, i learnt more about the Aboriginals from this series than the last 30+ years of schooling. they speak nothing of the Culture of having many Wifes, Subincision, trading with Makasar, the application of the clay to make white faces by another member chew it? and then spit on someone's face to make a even coat, cave painting of settler ships and men with top hats- never seen that before, very interesting! the usage of their art in the white man world like Malangi's $1 note, the shear lack tools is mild blowing and what tools they do have, a lot of them seem to be introduced by settlers. the way of catching food and their uncherished idea of storing food for the winters amount of people wearing western clothing is a lot more than i thought, truly lost way of life and just lucky enough to have aspects record in film, 1000s cultures are gone now without clear record of them.
Nice. Real overlanding, not here's my "$120k sprinter that's about to tip over and I'm going to cook fajitas in my skottle in the parking lot of this campground tonight".
My mum always called me her "Wadjakin Waterlilly Princess" I was born in the top end, but lived all over Australia... Only place havent ventured too yet is Tasmania 🦅🪷💧
Then you see what’s going on now in Alice Springs. Rebel news seem to be the only ones game enough to actually interview the locals. The poor babies don’t have a chance, some with STI’s under one year old. Absolutely heartbreaking.
Congenital syphilis is due to poor poor preventive maternal care. It's now pretty standard to test the expectant mother for syphilis at least twice before birth. If it's found, she can be treated to help prevent passing it to her baby. Congenital syphilis has actually been a growing concern the last 5-10 years with an exponential increase in cases.
very nice documentary. while watching this i thought it would be the best for us, the modern people, when human race would not have evolved further then these aboriginals.
I sometimes wonder what Steve Irwin would have to say about Malcombs documentary style. I feel like they were very much the same, although Malcombs didn't have the luxury of money and was far more entrenched in the aboriginal tribes. Steve was opposed to killing even snakes, forget crocs!
@wayseer..."we have feeling for animal and birds" Wouldn't it have been nice if the settlers (probably your ancestors) had the same "feelings" for aboriginals
I myself am an old salty dog and to this day love the raping and pillaging of the sea! It sounds awful but I do far less damage to the environment in 1 year than commercial fishing does in a day. God ! I miss those days so much and hope when I die I can return to those days for eternity🙏🙏🙏🙏
Lol yet later in life he pissed at anything being left in bush here he waste sharks and leaves net. shows how much he grew but bet the natives would be pissed at all that dead food wasted
Well iam glad to report...that people r still practicing the bush lore in the topend till today.. My boy initiation will be next dry season 2022...yep but what a great historic show... bloody brilliant. My kids were so happy to c their own great grandfather in his natural element. .
That’s great, if you don’t mind me asking how are they so confident the crocs won’t get them when hunting in the water?, it’s very interesting to me
Never give up cuz.
:)
Alwayswasalwayswillbe 🖤♥️💛
@@dasmuss6174 no fear.
Epic man. Never lose pride in your ways. Coming all the way from Scandinavia to see the world shown in this film. Greetings 🇩🇰
@@dasmuss6174 huge balls of steel my friend. I couldn't even imagine jumping into those croc filled rivers and pulling snakes out. Absolutely amazing
Even in the most dire of situations the smooth jazz keeps playing 😃👍
This is so interesting and weirdly relaxing to watch. I'm thinking of restoring this footage to HD
Do it!! Please!! 😃 I remember watching this as a kid as well. The content like this is too valuable to lose and having hd versions would just be brilliant. 👌🏼 it’s actually a really great peek into aboriginal traditions and communities and even though it’s old, it’s still relevant.
@@mattyoung4336 Currently looking into it. Though I'm having trouble finding the original online
please do
I watched this in 1972 at high school in Katanning Western Australia.
Having recently migrated from Great Britain, it was the most exciting and inspiring film I had ever watched.
The respect Mal had for the Aboriginals was very encouraging to we who only encounter 'Town' Aboriginals.
I've since spent time in the jungles of PNG (2016-2021) and have lived with the native people in their traditional houses. Eaten their food and hunted with them. No electricity, no shops, no radio, no telephones and you survive on your skill and knowledge or die.
It is as close as I can come to Malcolms experience.
i need some of your life experience
What happens if you get ill?
@@ltisenotem You walk or are carried to help 3-4 days away or die.
I grew up watching Malcolm with my dad I loved everything about him what a legend. R.I.P
just recently started watching his shows, from Canada. honestly makes me want to visit.
Probably a more historic collection of indigenous peoples ways than today's
More of this should be shown to today's aboriginal people. They might actually get a true lesson about the help white man has given them in these brutally harsh conditions they lived. They dont tell you how they seek clothing. Weapons. Knife's. Supply drop off's ect. Education. Animals for guns..
@@dazzabrah3208 yeah show current abo's , doing fuck all apart from drinking. sniffing petrol and raping.
@dazzabrah3208 you forgot the 3 biggest things they love above all else, centrelink, goonsacks and munny4dabusm8
Aboriginal people in the NT an QLD Top end still do what you seeing now
Not everyone gets hand out from the government there are still aboriginal men busting their guts working this land
The natural similarities between Northern Australia and FL are fun to see. Sandy soil, intense sun, and flat coastal topography lend themselves to these similarities.
it is MUCH hotter in the NT - for example i have been in tennant creek when it was 140 degrees, and night times under 0 - the desert country.This is set in Arnhem Land; not quite as hot and not as cold.
This is what I remember watching as a kid ❤
This man is inspiring we are from nz my family loves him r.i.p
This should be an advertisement for Land Rover. It’s amazing how they drove all that way through that rough terrain
Land Rover has not been a reliable off road car for over 30 years unfortunately. There's a reason that they drive a Toyota in all of Malcolm's later films.
"The locals say it's sheer madness to try it now. The wet started 6 weeks ago, the rivers will be in flood, the track washed away".
"We think about it ....... decide to give it a go".
They don't make tyres, cars, or men like that anymore, sadly.. what a fabulous adventure.. this certainly was a favourite show for possibly ever single Australian family to watch
This reminds me of my boyhood ! Carefree , not realizing the danger and living in paradise !
This is incredible. Part 1 had comments turned off but it was wild to see and hear about how the aboriginal children were the last of their kind to live traditionally and by the time they were grown it would only be a distant memory. It feels as if being able to watch how the Native Americans lost their heritage via assimilation only through the lens of the aborigines
it's not exactly the same, i went up in 1999 and lived and worked among them forabout three years. In some areas they retained their cultural identity , their languages and ceremony, and others not. And there are still people walking in from the desert from time to time.
So good to see this.
Malcolm used to call in and visit my dad when we were kids in Port Hedland in the late sixties early seventies.
Who did the narration?
It wasn’t Mal that’s for sure.
It might have been David Oldmeadow, his mate and the director/producer. David proposed to my mum, who declined at the time back in the late 60s.
We have feelings for the animals and birds,
It's called respect.
If you believe Darwins Theory of evolution.. survival of the fittest rings a bell here.
@@32degreestowing76 bet you'd be one I'd take, to improve the genepool
@wayseer..."we have feeling for animal and birds" Wouldn't it have been nice if the settlers (probably your ancestors) had the same "feelings" for aboriginals
@@zguitarmaster1 I'm wiradjuri not ab-original.
But thanks.
I love watching these older shows but I have to say the things they do back then would get them in so much crap these days. All those school sharks left to rot along with the net for one. So much food in those sharks and that net can entangle other wild life well before it rots. How things have changed thats for sure.
I was about to write this! I was disturbed hearing that indeed. How things have changed and for the better.
@@jogillett8518 Agreed. I remember watching another where he had gotten bogged so used the winch connected to a spare wheel and buried in the mud. He had people standing on the tyre as he tried to winch the vehicle out. So many would be up in arms about "Standing in the Dead Zone" these days. I watch & create 4wd related content for CZcams myself and see so much of this happening, even simple things like a winch blanket and people jump in the comments complaining. Back in those days though it was normal practice. I still love watching these shows even if things are so different. People like Malcolm paved the way for others like myself to want to explore, they opened our amazing country up for so many to see.
@@MicksGarageDarts how true. We are looking at these shows filmed over 50 years ago with 2021 eyes and attitudes. When we know better we hopefully do better. Theres bound to be a few things that stick out glaringly by today's standards and the comments section of CZcams is the place to discover where you have failed😆 I'm not a 4wd kinda girl but I'm going to I go and have a look at your channel and see how it's done!! Cheers 👍🇦🇺
@@jogillett8518 I don't have much in the way of recoveries etc on my channel because I don't normally push to places I need to be recovered. I try to promote best practice (by today's standard) for everything I do though.
Old boy drinks Metho from 44 Gallon drums... Thats gotta send you blind. What an epic trip and done with great respect to the traditional owners OiOiOi.
It’s crazy how merely 2 years after the making of this documentary Australia introduced legislation outlawing the culling of saltwater crocodiles in 1971. By that point, there was only an estimated 3000 in the top end. Basically what the Indian tiger has sadly become now. Teetering extinction. It’s such a great success story that they protected their numbers and brought these fascinating animals back.
you can NEVER make these evil things extinct they just swim in from Indonesia and the Coral Sea
@@stuarth43 Evil ?
It's awesome someone videoed all this.
Nice jazzy music while a 5 metre croc is being gutted, its must be the sixties when gay meant happy and a pansy was a flower
Apserlotley loved that thank you
This is up there ..Best on you tube
thanks for the upload, was really entertaining.
Love that dog staying in the shadow of that horse smat feller that one a real survivor
Masterpiece in many ways -thank you
What an absolute gem of a find. I watched the first part and then this and I'm blown away. I can't believe I had to stumble across this guy myself?
I've discovered there's plenty videos by him and his mate Dave. Subbed.
Not sure how that land rover was able to handle those balls of steel
Awesome documentary the abc should do a reunof these films
Haha this was like me and my friends first logging the bamboo by blown up radio stations from the war, then going to a clearing in the jungle to shape and lash the logs into rafts and canoes. Preparing paddles, gigs, atlatl, Hawaiian sling, and spearfish the old canals used In ww2. The water was clear and mahi mahi was seen. There was a blown up bridge we would freedive and look at. Watch for the barricuda! Love Guam!
Its pretty intresting to see this old footage, just the way of speech: 3:30...you feel that the vietnam war "wasnt that far away". Ive seen this series as a child in the 80/90s, now as a adult its such a different perspective...beautifull outtakes of gone days and gone people... ;(
How anything survived is a miracle!
Survived and flourished.
@Bill Shwifty no one's been to space, you space cadet.
We survived longer and the land was the same, no pollution, no drugs, no crime, no alcohol, no corruption, buhahahahaha you must be proud.
@Bill Shwifty I love sleeping in the dirt, I love fishing, hunting, living life..
You must be proud.
Life full of meaning. No 8h working days, no 7 day weeks, no pointless stuff to buy for the live given up at work for money. Every action had meaning, every second, every life. We have 1 moth holiday to mimic what they did every day of their life and even then we have to have lots off stuff to help us. Without the stuff we would just die in a day or two.
We do it to ourselves. Same reason the child settlers kidnapped by the native Americans never wanted to return to civilisation as it is so called.
Man's natural state.
Go live like that then.
@@ragebait988 I wish I could. I would probably die in a couple days or weeks as I have no clue how to stay alive in that kind of environment. It takes a bit more than watching "how to" video on CZcams to survive and live of the land like this folks. One cut from coral could probably kill me, or just a cut of any kind.
@@oneofusallYou're not really selling it then..
@@brandon27025 hopefully, as I'm not selling anything.
At 13:17 Jingaloo has an amazing face.
I read this as Jigaboo.
Thanks for uploading these
Hes livin my dream
brilliant
Truly a stinking job, I have had those before
Those were the days .
Man who picked this fire music
Earth is such a wonderful planet. Species have come and gone, billions of years of natural selection
Fantastic old video
They don’t make them like they used to
#Land Rover
2024
So now we finally know where Covid came from. Thanks Dave 🤪
Well it was the end for the dog . You guys live to travel a lot more
Wonder where the old Beasty ended up? History making machine.
It’s in Broome at the Malcom Douglas croc park
Pity they didn’t have heart worm tablets for the old dog back then 😢
They obviously had a better land rover than the Leyland brothers 😂😂
That's real Aboriginal jazz man !
Thanks I’ve never seen this man before is he English..? I used to watch the Bush tucker man in the 80s but these are great to watch...I was lucky enough to live in Oz for a year in the early 90s.. I remember being shocked on arrival as there were plenty of aboriginal people drunk living on the streets I never expected to see that it was sad..😢❤
Malcolm was an Aussie. North Queenslander if I'm not mistaken. There's a voiceover with a slightly English accent on this video for some reason. Malcolm had a pretty strong Aus accent
Edit: I was mistaken. He was born in Victoria, died in Western Australia. No idea where I got Queensland from
They haven’t changed still drunk
@@timothy6283idiot
140,000 miles in the Landrover and he ends with a Toyota, sounds like a bit sponcering going on there.
It’s a Toyota Land Cruiser
Interesting take on the Mission. No doubt Malcom change some of his views later in life.
As With The Leyland Brothers Trip Up To Cape York In 1972 This Trip To Cape York In 1969 By Malcolm Douglas And David Oldmeadow Would Have Been A Real Struggle And A Test Of Indurance For Man And Vehicle Especially In The Wet Season With River Crossings Like The Wenlock And Jardine Rivers To Contend With!🤔🤠🤠🚘🏞️🐊🐍🇦🇺
Gidday gidday cool name
Peninsularites live up north at the Gulf of Carpentaria and Queenslanders south of of that, in the same huge State of Queensland.
Fascinating To See Normanton Queensland Back In 1969! I've Been There Twice In 1992 And 2000!🤔🤠🚘🏞️🌴🐊🐟🇦🇺
i worked in croydon. love the gulf country.
THESE kids digging for water lilly bulbs in the swamp are incredilble knowing there are crocs in there.
A time long gone now & real 4wheel drivers doing real exploration not like now with what is almost like a tiny home being towed behind them & all the Instra crap & CZcams videos that all the same people do, these guys were real explorers real men, so much love for the aboriginal people & communities 😊that land rover 😂 what a gem, the good old winch & that owl 😂 & now the Jardine river has a ferry crossing I guess 4 all the $90’000 4 wheel drives now
Fascinating but the supermarket is so much easier!
Malcolm Douglas was the real deal.
God forbid being a diabetic back in those days. 23:57 On ya Dave
some luis and clark stuff for sure
i am nearly 40 years old and i feel i've been lied to, i learnt more about the Aboriginals from this series than the last 30+ years of schooling. they speak nothing of the Culture of having many Wifes, Subincision, trading with Makasar, the application of the clay to make white faces by another member chew it? and then spit on someone's face to make a even coat, cave painting of settler ships and men with top hats- never seen that before, very interesting!
the usage of their art in the white man world like Malangi's $1 note, the shear lack tools is mild blowing and what tools they do have, a lot of them seem to be introduced by settlers.
the way of catching food and their uncherished idea of storing food for the winters
amount of people wearing western clothing is a lot more than i thought,
truly lost way of life and just lucky enough to have aspects record in film, 1000s cultures are gone now without clear record of them.
Some of the hunting "ethics" will give any "bunny-hugger" nightmares!
Tonight I will have nightmares about it.
I love all this except for the missionaries schools. Looks a hard yet rewarding life. Love from UK 😘
currently living in gove nhulunbuy NT
33:12 this is hilarious, I can still hear people in rural towns saying this today
I learnt to drive in the exact same model of land rover. Almost wish I kept it....
Где ты живешь?
Nice. Real overlanding, not here's my "$120k sprinter that's about to tip over and I'm going to cook fajitas in my skottle in the parking lot of this campground tonight".
Wonder if that V8 is still out there somewhere.
My mum always called me her "Wadjakin Waterlilly Princess" I was born in the top end, but lived all over Australia... Only place havent ventured too yet is Tasmania 🦅🪷💧
Then you see what’s going on now in Alice Springs. Rebel news seem to be the only ones game enough to actually interview the locals. The poor babies don’t have a chance, some with STI’s under one year old. Absolutely heartbreaking.
What a beautiful culture they have. 😂
@@ragebait988 Had. There are still a handful of traditional indigenous communities and I hope they remain.
Congenital syphilis is due to poor poor preventive maternal care. It's now pretty standard to test the expectant mother for syphilis at least twice before birth. If it's found, she can be treated to help prevent passing it to her baby. Congenital syphilis has actually been a growing concern the last 5-10 years with an exponential increase in cases.
41:08 can't believe he didnt warn him about the trailer earlier lmao
Interesting Images Of A Sadly Fast Disappearing Traditional Aboriginal Way Of Life!🙂🛶🏞️🐊🐢🇦🇺
The saddest part is what we able to see here is just like a grain of sand.
@@jxmai7687 Absolutely Correct Just A Smidgen!🤠🧔🚘🏞️🏝️
If it wasn’t for the efforts of Malcolm we wouldn’t even have this smidgen. What an absolute gift to Australia.
@@dantheman6159 So True Malcolm Was A Pioneer Into Remote Australia Like The Leyland Brothers Well Said!🤠🧔👍🚘🏞️🏝️🏜️🇦🇺
Anyone know where the land rover is today?
OG 4wd action
Stirring stuff, boys only stuff!
What's with the 'boys only' comment? HUH
righto mate proper naughty boy stuff, boys only stuff yep
@@thomasfarris7866 proper hectic stuff mate, boys only of course
@@lynlavelle8042 So you agree it's stirring stuff though?
destroy the patriarch.
very nice documentary. while watching this i thought it would be the best for us, the modern people, when human race would not have evolved further then these aboriginals.
Yes starving and living in dirt must be an amazing way of life.
It's funny that you think you're more evolved.
@@simony2801 These people were living a far more peaceful life than you or I ever will.
@@xDootify you’re more than welcome to try it.
Is there aN album with music used in these documentaries??
Hope...this life with nature didnt die out...
Still alive, buy dying every day.
Destroyed by western society.
Look up
"Black as" web series :)
Steve Irwin tried hunting stingrays once and that didn’t go to plan RIP
20:50 Why was it preferable to let all those sharks rot, rather than eating some? Are they that bad? It was still food…
How the hell did you get all Malcolms movies ? And uploaded them to you tube?
I sometimes wonder what Steve Irwin would have to say about Malcombs documentary style. I feel like they were very much the same, although Malcombs didn't have the luxury of money and was far more entrenched in the aboriginal tribes. Steve was opposed to killing even snakes, forget crocs!
@wayseer..."we have feeling for animal and birds" Wouldn't it have been nice if the settlers (probably your ancestors) had the same "feelings" for aboriginals
Sad to see sharks dying needlessly.
Nah they were asking for it. You couldn’t hear it in the video but they were talking shit
I myself am an old salty dog and to this day love the raping and pillaging of the sea! It sounds awful but I do far less damage to the environment in 1 year than commercial fishing does in a day. God ! I miss those days so much and hope when I die I can return to those days for eternity🙏🙏🙏🙏
You're still part of the problem if you're raping and pillaging though just because it's on a smaller scale doesn't make it any better you W⚓
Educational 👍🤠🐨🦘
Malcom should be required watching in schools
Voluntarily moved into the mission. 😆😆😆
Full bloods 😆
Beauty
when 4x4s were simple, I owned these vintages, now I have a disco 4 and can not go THERE
Land rover are more concerned making cars for single mums in the city than making actual cars nowadays. It's sad.
"to help the Aboriginals integrate" Who was the unwanted guest?
Fulfill your true self 🦁👑🦄
How come the commentary didn't say "Malcolm"?
Because it's not him narrating it!
Yes, some changes since 69', I don't suppose anyone would call a grown man ''boy'' to his face these days.
Be what you want to be 🐢
I wonder if Dave is still kicking
I know Malcolm is gone .
He died in 2018
Lol yet later in life he pissed at anything being left in bush here he waste sharks and leaves net. shows how much he grew but bet the natives would be pissed at all that dead food wasted
Why didnt he go in the dry season??
Too hot. Too dry.
He lives on salt beef and damper
And metho 😅
Did Irwin do any research at all?