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Credits Distributed by Becker Entertainment Production companies Rumbalara Films Olsen Levy Showtime Australia Directed by Phillip Noyce Screenplay by Christine Olsen Based on Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence by Doris Pilkington Garimara Produced by Phillip Noyce Christine Olsen John Winter Starring Everlyn Sampi Tianna Sansbury Laura Monaghan David Gulpilil Kenneth Branagh Cinematography Christopher Doyle Edited by Veronika Jenet John Scott Music by Peter Gabriel DETAILS In 1931, two sisters – 14-year-old Molly and 8-year-old Daisy – and their 10-year-old cousin Gracie live in the Western Australian town of Jigalong. The town lies along the northern part of one of the fences making up Australia's rabbit-proof fence (called Number One Fence), which runs for over one thousand miles. Over a thousand miles away in Perth, the official Protector of Western Australian Aborigines, A. O. Neville (called Mr. Devil by them), signs an order to relocate the three girls to the Moore River Native Settlement. The children are referred to by Neville as "half-castes", because they have one white and one Aboriginal parent. Neville's reasoning is portrayed as: the Aboriginal people of Australia are a danger to themselves, and the "half-castes" must be bred out of existence. He plans to place the girls in a camp where they, along with all half-castes of that age range, both boys and girls, will grow up. They will then presumably become labourers and servants to white families, regarded as a "good" situation for them in life. Eventually if they marry, it will be to white people and thus the Aboriginal "blood" will diminish. As such, the three girls are forcibly taken from their families at Jigalong by a local constable, Riggs, and sent to the camp at the Moore River Native Settlement, in the south west, about 90 km (55 miles) north of Perth.