‘It was very disrespectful’: Dispute over Chris Hemsworth filming at sacred site (2024)

Production company Nutopia and the national parks service say permission was given by relevant landowners and elders, with cultural authority from all three tribes.

The dispute highlights the fraught territory for filmmakers seeking permission from traditional owners to film on Country and depict cultural practices.

‘It was very disrespectful’: Dispute over Chris Hemsworth filming at sacred site (1)

Hemsworth’s management said the actor was unavailable for comment and referred questions to the production company. Ruth Shurman, an executive producer at Nutopia, said the production employed an Indigenous cultural consultant, engaged extensively with the three nations, included Thunggutti elders and dancers in the ceremony, and Bellbrook mob had been scheduled to attend but did not turn up.

“Respect for First Nations culture has been a priority for our production team at every stage,” Shurman said.

A spokesperson for NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service said written support for the filming, including the location at Wrights Lookout, was provided by Thunggutti Local Aboriginal Land Council, Bularri Muurlay Nyanggan Aboriginal Corporation in Coffs Harbour, and Coffs Harbour Local Aboriginal Land Council. Bularri and Coffs Harbour land council declined to comment.

The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age do not allege wrongdoing by Hemsworth or any individual or organisation involved in the project.

Limitless, available on streaming platform Disney+, is about health and longevity. The fifth episode about memory shows Hemsworth and his friend Otis Hope Carey, a Gumbaynggirr-Bundjalung man, on a two-day bushwalk. They are shown walking through dense eucalyptus forest and riparian rainforest punctuated by dramatic rock escarpments, waterfalls and waterholes, ostensibly without modern navigational equipment.

The walk is book-ended by a welcome to Country at the start and a ceremony with Aboriginal dancers at the end.

‘It was very disrespectful’: Dispute over Chris Hemsworth filming at sacred site (2)

Nutopia, Ahoy and the national parks service have all rejected the suggestion there was filming at Serpentine. Ahoy said Serpentine was several kilometres away from the shoot location. The national parks website lists Wrights Lookout as a sacred men’s site. Ahoy said the decision to use the lookout and allow a mixed-gender film crew onto the site was an agreement between the three nations, involving initiated elders with strong cultural knowledge.

“We have a right to practise our culture on our Country and we do so in cultural safety and knowledge,” Ahoy said.

While the episode was about memory, the conflict has arisen in part because of the fracturing of cultural memory through colonisation.

‘It was very disrespectful’: Dispute over Chris Hemsworth filming at sacred site (3)

The location was billed in the television show as “a shared country between the three tribes”, but this is contentious. While it was traditionally used by all three nations, Thunggutti mob believe it is their ancestral Country with treaties in place for the other two mobs to access it for use according to traditional lore. Ahoy said it was Anaiwan land.

The Mid North Coast was wracked with frontier violence and heavily colonised in the aftermath of the first wave of dispossession, with Aboriginal people removed from their clans’ ancestral homelands and forced into government and church-run reserves – or missions. People from different clans and nations were purposely mixed, and government-sanctioned bans placed on cultural practices and the use of traditional languages. Residents could not leave the missions without permission from a government agent.

The Aboriginal community at Bellbrook was formerly one such mission.

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The other question is about who has the authority to speak for communities – a question that also arises in other fields such as mining and academia. This idea of representation is core to the debate about the Indigenous Voice to Parliament.

Thunggutti land council chairperson Lenny Wright, who lives in Melbourne and instructed the chief executive to write the letter of support, said the filming was discussed at a board meeting but no one knew Wrights Lookout would be a location until later.

Thunggutti man Kenneth Major said Wright should have known the culturally appropriate thing to do was to discuss the filming request with the wider community.

“Cultural responsibility does not run through the land council without the people,” Major said.

In emails seen by this masthead, Thunggutti man and Bellbrook local, Gus Holten, wrote to production company Nutopia and NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service expressing his community’s hurt over the lack of notification or consultation.

The national park service and the production company both informed Holten that elders outside of Bellbrook community provided them with the authority for the shoot.

Holten said there was an ongoing issue with “self-appointed” elders claiming they had the authority to speak for local communities.

“I don’t want to rubbish [Hemsworth], it’s good he wants to bring awareness of our culture to the world. He just has to do it the right way,” Holten said.

Holten said the filmed scene was a pseudo ceremony composed of a “a bunch of dance groups with members who weren’t initiated to the proper stage to enter such a location”. Holten said he is aware of Gumbaynggirr senior lore-keepers who were also not notified or consulted in the process leading up to the film shoot at the site.

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Holten said no dancers from his own mob attended because of the lack of cultural observation.

Indigenous human rights and policy adviser Jason Field, a Walbunja-Bidjigal man living on the NSW South Coast, said mining companies in particular have been accused of inciting tensions to get their way, but this kind of dispute was common even when efforts to gain consent were genuine.

“What often happens is there are multiple lines of authority and you can think you’re doing the right thing, but if you follow one line or even two you will find situations where someone will feel aggrieved because they weren’t consulted and they feel that they should have been,” Field said.

Field said cultural heritage services in Australia operated in a marketplace, and cultural rights could often clash with “personal interest in terms of being able to generate an income for yourself and your family”.

He said there were United Nations guidelines, such as the Nagoya Protocol, that could help guide best practice.

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‘It was very disrespectful’: Dispute over Chris Hemsworth filming at sacred site (2024)
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