A skilled game hunter is hired by a biotech company to track down the last remaining thylacine, also known as the Tasmanian tiger. As he navigates the wilderness of Tasmania, he forms an unexpected bond with a young boy and faces various challenges including rival hunters and arson fires.
Howling III: The Marsupials is a horror-comedy film that follows the story of female werewolves who are actually marsupials. It takes place in Australia and explores themes of love, transformation, and supernatural power. The movie includes elements of comedy and horror, with werewolf curses, transformations, and a surprise ending.
Dying Breed (2008) is a horror/thriller movie set in Tasmania, where a group of survivors find themselves stalked by a backwoods slasher. As they try to escape, they uncover a dark secret hidden in the town. With elements of gore, suspense, and mystery, the movie explores themes of survival and the brutality of human nature.
The Tasmanian Tiger twists and turns depending on how it's seen. Sheep-killing beast or tragic victim of human induced extinction. Ancient painting on a rock or vivid ancestor spirit. Lost forever, or a timely reminder to respect the connection between human and animal, culture, nature and country. In stunning landscapes across Australia where Thylacines once roamed, people from wide-ranging traditions share their experiences: First Nations artists, rangers and custodians; biologists, bone hunters and archaeologists. Multiple insights combine to throw light on Australia's most wanted animal.
The original film of the Tasmanian tiger (also known as the thylacine) was shot by Australian zoologist David Fleay in 1933 on black-and-white film. Recently, this historic footage has been colorized and digitized by a team of international experts. You can watch the remastered footage of the last-known surviving Tasmanian tiger here. The thylacine, which resembled a medium-to-large-sized canid, had dark transverse stripes radiating from the top of its back. Sadly, the last known thylacine died in 1936 at the Hobart Zoo in Tasmania.
Recorded by pioneers as far back as 1805, the Tasmanian tiger has become an intensely mystifying Australian icon, whose entire existence has become the stuff of both fable and legend. This program investigates a chequered past and puts the speculation into perspective, taking into account the tragic culling and ‘bounty era’ where the carnivorous creatures were thought to be solely responsible for a considerable loss of farmers’ livestock. Balancing the facts with personal reflections from Tasmanian locals, scientists and other informed practitioners, The Tasmanian Tiger is a thought-provoking and revealing look at the extraordinary life and death of one of Australia’s most mysterious marsupials.
Join our team as they embark on a thrilling expedition to find evidence of the Tasmanian Tiger, a species believed to be extinct for decades. Follow their journey through the vast wilderness of Tasmania and unravel the mysteries surrounding this enigmatic creature.
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