Adopted by a big, lively and spirited kangaroo family of traveling wrestlers, Teo’s life is pretty great. But when mysterious visions lead him to a faraway land, Teo is forced to rediscover his roots and embark on an epic journey to save his homeland from impending destruction.
Writing
Indigenous-led storytelling that doesn't pander
Production
Thylacine design actually researched, not cartoonish

Director
Chantelle Murray
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The thylacine holds specific significance in Palawa culture; the film consulted Tasmanian Aboriginal elders for the spiritual elements.
Celeste Barber recorded her wrestling scenes motion-capture first, then voice—apparently she 'went method' and accidentally bruised a technician.
No ratings yet
Sign in to join the discussion — comments are spoiler-gated to your watch progress.
Discussion starters