Adelaide (1966) | Life in Australia Series | 4K Restoration
May 16, 2025•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
PublishedMay 16, 2025
Duration20:51
Video IDXTT4OKwLSoM
Languageen
CategoryFilm & Animation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views45.1K
Likes1K
Comments79
Engagement Rate2.47%
Likes per 100 views2.29
Comments per 1K views1.75
Video Tags
#holdens#government#documentary#australia#nfsa#national film and sound archive#4k#adelaide 1960s#film australia#adelaide central market#south australian history#adelaide migration#white australia policy#vintage adelaide#australian cities#commonwealth film unit#australian immigration films#postwar australia#1960s lifestyle#archival australia
Description
Now in 4K! Life in Adelaide is a beautifully restored snapshot of South Australian life in the mid-1960s.
Directed by James Jeffrey and produced by the Commonwealth Film Unit for the Department of Immigration, it’s part of the Life in Australia series: Government-made films created to encourage (mostly British) migration through sunny, idealised portraits of Australian life.
In this version of Adelaide, the streets are tidy. The people are cheerful. The jobs are plentiful and the sun always seems to shine. From factory floors to football fields, the city appears secure, suburban and deeply self-assured – a carefully staged vision of the good life.
The 4K restoration brings out every detail. Letterpress signs. Lacquered hairstyles. The gleam of Holden hubcaps and polished verandahs. It’s a rich and polished view of mid-century Australia, but one with notable omissions.
Made during the final years of the White Australia policy, the film reflects a narrow version of the nation. There’s no sign of First Nations peoples. No real cultural diversity. No hint of the political and social changes already reshaping the decade. Women are shown mostly in domestic roles, and public life feels calm to the point of sedation.
Viewed today, it plays more like a mid-century sitcom than a documentary: a vivid time capsule that shows not just how Australia looked, but how it wanted to be seen.
🎞 From the Film Australia Collection of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA).
If you recognise any people or places featured in this film, we’d love to hear from you in the comments!
#LifeInAustralia #Adelaide #NFSA #AustralianHistory #VintageAustralia #FilmAustralia #1960sAustralia #MigrationHistory #WhiteAustraliaPolicy #HistoryInFilm #4KRestoration #PostwarAustralia #FirstNationsHistory