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  1. Jan 31, 2003 · Based on a true story, the film follows three Aboriginal girls who escape from a government camp and walk across the Outback to find their homes. IMDb provides cast and crew information, user and critic reviews, trivia, goofs, quotes, and more.

    • (30K)
    • Adventure, Biography, Drama
    • Phillip Noyce
    • 2003-01-31
  2. The State Barrier Fence of Western Australia, formerly known as the Rabbit-Proof Fence, the State Vermin Fence, and the Emu Fence, is a pest-exclusion fence constructed between 1901 and 1907 to keep rabbits, and other agricultural pests from the east, out of Western Australian pastoral areas.

  3. They make a daring escape and embark on an epic 1,500 mile journey to get back home - following the rabbit-proof fence that bisects the Australian continent - with the authorities in hot pursuit.

    • (145)
    • Phillip Noyce
    • PG
    • Everlyn Sampi
  4. Dec 25, 2002 · A film based on a true story of three aboriginal girls who escape from a government school and walk 1,500 miles across the outback. Roger Ebert praises the film's beauty, harrowing and heartbreaking scenes, and the final revelation of the historical injustice.

  5. After being swept up in an an integration program for Indigenous Australians, three girls vow to escape an abusive orphanage and return home. Watch trailers & learn more.

  6. A film based on a true story of three Aboriginal girls who escaped from a government camp and walked across the Outback to their home in 1931. They faced racism, hardship, and danger along the way, while being pursued by a white officer and a tracker.

  7. Rabbit-Proof Fence Synopsis. In Western Australia in 1931, three mixed-race Aboriginal children are forcibly abducted from their mothers at Jigalong, in the eastern Pilbara.