Black Panther Woman (Rachel Perkins, 2014), which premiered at the Sydney Film Festival and aired on SBS this January, opens with Marlene Cummins pottering in the kitchen of her housing-commission flat in Sydney. These images are intercut with archival footage of Black Panther protests in Queensland in the early 1970s. Immediately, we are presented with a stark juxtaposition – a domestic, stereotypically female scene, and a public, tumultuous fight for rights.
‘Us women were on the front line, too. Some of us, we paid a price,’ she says.
Cummins was a member of the little-known Black Panther movement in Queensland, which lasted for less than a year after being founded in December 1971.1 Her voiceover introduces what can be taken as the manifesto of the documentary: ‘I’ve been told, “Marlene,…
