
'Closest thing to paradise': a rare insight into The Kimberley
A saltwater crocodile watches a group of wallabies drinking from the river it calls home. It strikes, missing, as the frightened wallabies frantically scale the steep and unstable riverbank.
All but one makes it. This wallaby jumps and it jumps, twisting its body mid-air in panic. The crocodile is still watching, waiting, but this time it's not alone. An eagle nesting nearby is attracted by the commotion. It swoops the wallaby, causing it to tumble into the water.
The crocodile strikes again - and this time it doesn't miss.
The eagle waits for the crocodile to start feasting and, as flesh, fur and bones are flung across the water's surface, grabs its share.
It's a confronting but fascinating start to wildlife documentary series The Kimberley, narrated by award-winning actor Mark Coles Smith, a Nyikina man from the lower Martuwarra (Fitzroy River) area.
The stunningly filmed three-part series explores the six distinct seasons on the Nyikina calendar - Lalin, Jirrbal, Willakarra, Koolawa, Barrakana and Willbooroo - through daring camerawork and cutting-edge cinematography techniques.
The Kimberley spans more than 400,000 square kilometres - three times the size of England - and is made up of sprawling savannas, towering gorges, rivers, tropical coastlines and desert. The remote region's rugged terrain provides a last refuge for countless rare mammals, reptiles and birds, including the world's smallest marsupial, and the largest and fiercest reptile, the saltwater crocodile.
"What we've got here is so special. I've grown up in what is, for me, the closest thing to paradise. The Kimberley," Mark says via phone from the ABC Kimberley's studios in Broome.
"The scale of biodiversity and the network of ecological systems here is unlike anywhere else in the world.
"The pristine tropical coastline, the savanna, the complex sandstone and limestone geology of the caves, the water networks that sustain life ... it's a real labyrinth of ecology and diversity here, and a time capsule for endemic species and for Australia as a whole.
"Australia's mammalian extinction rates are really sobering, so it's quite inspiring to know that in parts of the northern Kimberley, it's the only place on mainland Australia with no recorded extinction, even though that's changing every day as we continue to get encroachments impacting into the space."
Mark is a captivating orator who knows The Kimberley intimately. I ask him about saltwater crocodiles and their reputation for aggression.
"You know, they are tricky for me. I am now doing spear fishing, I am free diving to 20-metre depths up on the peninsula, and I come across some pretty big sharks, and that's not too bad for me," he says.
"I try to read them and judge the situation I'm in, but crocs are a whole other story. You would never see me in the water with a saltwater croc, or if one had been identified in a body of water.
"They are the only creature I'm aware of that will actively hunt you across several days, that will watch your behaviour, watch your habits, and then place themselves at a particular point on the riverbank.
"They are really cunning and they are really competent in what they do, whether that's taking livestock or feral creatures or native animals. They are adept killing machines. Apart from juvenile bull sharks, which can be quite aggressive, the saltwater estuarine crocodile is the one animal we all agree will actively try to kill us when we're in its habitat."
Mark swims contentedly in a waterhole in episode one. How did he know it was crocodile-free?
"The biggest thing will be the belly tracks, the belly marks. Our mob can tell what species is in the water from the belly marks on the river banks," he replies.
"With the smaller waterholes, it makes no sense for a creature of threat to be in there. There's nothing for it to eat, and it will get hotter during the day, which will make it uncomfortable. There's a myriad of signs to look out for."
I mention the documentary's soundtrack and am surprised to learn Mark himself had - unintentionally - composed and produced most of it.
"I produce hypnotic, ethereal, cinematic, electronic music under an artist name known as Kalaji, and all of my music is about The Kimberley, my mother's culture and our spiritual connection," he explains.
"I never once, when I was composing and producing those pieces, thought they would end up in a wildlife documentary. But the team asked if they could listen to some of my music, and fed it into different parts of the series, and they loved it.
"I was really proud to see my music recontextualised in that way."
Mark left The Kimberley in 2010 to move to Melbourne to study audio engineering and sound design. While there, his acting career unexpectedly "took off". Beneath Hill 60, Apple Cider Vinegar, Last Cab To Darwin, Sweet As, Kid Snow and We Bury The Dead are among his film credits to date. Television-wise, he is best known as Detective Jay Swan in series Mystery Road.
Mark won a Helpmann Award in 2017 for best male actor in a play (The Drover's Wife).
"I'd done quite a bit of acting but I never believed it could mature into something tangible," he says.
"After 10 years in Melbourne, though, I realised how much I missed The Kimberley, and my family and my community and being a part of my culture, so I moved back.
"I wondered if the work I'd done on the East Coast over 10 years meant that I could work from The Kimberley, and over the last four years that seems to be the case, which is something I'm really proud about ... it's very hard to work in the arts, and to do it from such a remote place adds all these additional layers."
The Kimberley is a labour of love for Mark, and it shows.
"It was a privilege for me to be invited to create on this series. It has that international-standard picture quality, but it also has access to the human story inside the Kimberley landscape," he says.
"There are these beautiful vignettes of the people who call this place home, who are connected to this landscape, whether it's from a cultural point of view or from our National Parks and Wildlife Protection Service or our incredible ecologists.
"The mosaic that we end up creating is, I think, really unique for a wildlife series."
A saltwater crocodile watches a group of wallabies drinking from the river it calls home. It strikes, missing, as the frightened wallabies frantically scale the steep and unstable riverbank.
All but one makes it. This wallaby jumps and it jumps, twisting its body mid-air in panic. The crocodile is still watching, waiting, but this time it's not alone. An eagle nesting nearby is attracted by the commotion. It swoops the wallaby, causing it to tumble into the water.
The crocodile strikes again - and this time it doesn't miss.
The eagle waits for the crocodile to start feasting and, as flesh, fur and bones are flung across the water's surface, grabs its share.
It's a confronting but fascinating start to wildlife documentary series The Kimberley, narrated by award-winning actor Mark Coles Smith, a Nyikina man from the lower Martuwarra (Fitzroy River) area.
The stunningly filmed three-part series explores the six distinct seasons on the Nyikina calendar - Lalin, Jirrbal, Willakarra, Koolawa, Barrakana and Willbooroo - through daring camerawork and cutting-edge cinematography techniques.
The Kimberley spans more than 400,000 square kilometres - three times the size of England - and is made up of sprawling savannas, towering gorges, rivers, tropical coastlines and desert. The remote region's rugged terrain provides a last refuge for countless rare mammals, reptiles and birds, including the world's smallest marsupial, and the largest and fiercest reptile, the saltwater crocodile.
"What we've got here is so special. I've grown up in what is, for me, the closest thing to paradise. The Kimberley," Mark says via phone from the ABC Kimberley's studios in Broome.
"The scale of biodiversity and the network of ecological systems here is unlike anywhere else in the world.
"The pristine tropical coastline, the savanna, the complex sandstone and limestone geology of the caves, the water networks that sustain life ... it's a real labyrinth of ecology and diversity here, and a time capsule for endemic species and for Australia as a whole.
"Australia's mammalian extinction rates are really sobering, so it's quite inspiring to know that in parts of the northern Kimberley, it's the only place on mainland Australia with no recorded extinction, even though that's changing every day as we continue to get encroachments impacting into the space."
Mark is a captivating orator who knows The Kimberley intimately. I ask him about saltwater crocodiles and their reputation for aggression.
"You know, they are tricky for me. I am now doing spear fishing, I am free diving to 20-metre depths up on the peninsula, and I come across some pretty big sharks, and that's not too bad for me," he says.
"I try to read them and judge the situation I'm in, but crocs are a whole other story. You would never see me in the water with a saltwater croc, or if one had been identified in a body of water.
"They are the only creature I'm aware of that will actively hunt you across several days, that will watch your behaviour, watch your habits, and then place themselves at a particular point on the riverbank.
"They are really cunning and they are really competent in what they do, whether that's taking livestock or feral creatures or native animals. They are adept killing machines. Apart from juvenile bull sharks, which can be quite aggressive, the saltwater estuarine crocodile is the one animal we all agree will actively try to kill us when we're in its habitat."
Mark swims contentedly in a waterhole in episode one. How did he know it was crocodile-free?
"The biggest thing will be the belly tracks, the belly marks. Our mob can tell what species is in the water from the belly marks on the river banks," he replies.
"With the smaller waterholes, it makes no sense for a creature of threat to be in there. There's nothing for it to eat, and it will get hotter during the day, which will make it uncomfortable. There's a myriad of signs to look out for."
I mention the documentary's soundtrack and am surprised to learn Mark himself had - unintentionally - composed and produced most of it.
"I produce hypnotic, ethereal, cinematic, electronic music under an artist name known as Kalaji, and all of my music is about The Kimberley, my mother's culture and our spiritual connection," he explains.
"I never once, when I was composing and producing those pieces, thought they would end up in a wildlife documentary. But the team asked if they could listen to some of my music, and fed it into different parts of the series, and they loved it.
"I was really proud to see my music recontextualised in that way."
Mark left The Kimberley in 2010 to move to Melbourne to study audio engineering and sound design. While there, his acting career unexpectedly "took off". Beneath Hill 60, Apple Cider Vinegar, Last Cab To Darwin, Sweet As, Kid Snow and We Bury The Dead are among his film credits to date. Television-wise, he is best known as Detective Jay Swan in series Mystery Road.
Mark won a Helpmann Award in 2017 for best male actor in a play (The Drover's Wife).
"I'd done quite a bit of acting but I never believed it could mature into something tangible," he says.
"After 10 years in Melbourne, though, I realised how much I missed The Kimberley, and my family and my community and being a part of my culture, so I moved back.
"I wondered if the work I'd done on the East Coast over 10 years meant that I could work from The Kimberley, and over the last four years that seems to be the case, which is something I'm really proud about ... it's very hard to work in the arts, and to do it from such a remote place adds all these additional layers."
The Kimberley is a labour of love for Mark, and it shows.
"It was a privilege for me to be invited to create on this series. It has that international-standard picture quality, but it also has access to the human story inside the Kimberley landscape," he says.
"There are these beautiful vignettes of the people who call this place home, who are connected to this landscape, whether it's from a cultural point of view or from our National Parks and Wildlife Protection Service or our incredible ecologists.
"The mosaic that we end up creating is, I think, really unique for a wildlife series."
A saltwater crocodile watches a group of wallabies drinking from the river it calls home. It strikes, missing, as the frightened wallabies frantically scale the steep and unstable riverbank.
All but one makes it. This wallaby jumps and it jumps, twisting its body mid-air in panic. The crocodile is still watching, waiting, but this time it's not alone. An eagle nesting nearby is attracted by the commotion. It swoops the wallaby, causing it to tumble into the water.
The crocodile strikes again - and this time it doesn't miss.
The eagle waits for the crocodile to start feasting and, as flesh, fur and bones are flung across the water's surface, grabs its share.
It's a confronting but fascinating start to wildlife documentary series The Kimberley, narrated by award-winning actor Mark Coles Smith, a Nyikina man from the lower Martuwarra (Fitzroy River) area.
The stunningly filmed three-part series explores the six distinct seasons on the Nyikina calendar - Lalin, Jirrbal, Willakarra, Koolawa, Barrakana and Willbooroo - through daring camerawork and cutting-edge cinematography techniques.
The Kimberley spans more than 400,000 square kilometres - three times the size of England - and is made up of sprawling savannas, towering gorges, rivers, tropical coastlines and desert. The remote region's rugged terrain provides a last refuge for countless rare mammals, reptiles and birds, including the world's smallest marsupial, and the largest and fiercest reptile, the saltwater crocodile.
"What we've got here is so special. I've grown up in what is, for me, the closest thing to paradise. The Kimberley," Mark says via phone from the ABC Kimberley's studios in Broome.
"The scale of biodiversity and the network of ecological systems here is unlike anywhere else in the world.
"The pristine tropical coastline, the savanna, the complex sandstone and limestone geology of the caves, the water networks that sustain life ... it's a real labyrinth of ecology and diversity here, and a time capsule for endemic species and for Australia as a whole.
"Australia's mammalian extinction rates are really sobering, so it's quite inspiring to know that in parts of the northern Kimberley, it's the only place on mainland Australia with no recorded extinction, even though that's changing every day as we continue to get encroachments impacting into the space."
Mark is a captivating orator who knows The Kimberley intimately. I ask him about saltwater crocodiles and their reputation for aggression.
"You know, they are tricky for me. I am now doing spear fishing, I am free diving to 20-metre depths up on the peninsula, and I come across some pretty big sharks, and that's not too bad for me," he says.
"I try to read them and judge the situation I'm in, but crocs are a whole other story. You would never see me in the water with a saltwater croc, or if one had been identified in a body of water.
"They are the only creature I'm aware of that will actively hunt you across several days, that will watch your behaviour, watch your habits, and then place themselves at a particular point on the riverbank.
"They are really cunning and they are really competent in what they do, whether that's taking livestock or feral creatures or native animals. They are adept killing machines. Apart from juvenile bull sharks, which can be quite aggressive, the saltwater estuarine crocodile is the one animal we all agree will actively try to kill us when we're in its habitat."
Mark swims contentedly in a waterhole in episode one. How did he know it was crocodile-free?
"The biggest thing will be the belly tracks, the belly marks. Our mob can tell what species is in the water from the belly marks on the river banks," he replies.
"With the smaller waterholes, it makes no sense for a creature of threat to be in there. There's nothing for it to eat, and it will get hotter during the day, which will make it uncomfortable. There's a myriad of signs to look out for."
I mention the documentary's soundtrack and am surprised to learn Mark himself had - unintentionally - composed and produced most of it.
"I produce hypnotic, ethereal, cinematic, electronic music under an artist name known as Kalaji, and all of my music is about The Kimberley, my mother's culture and our spiritual connection," he explains.
"I never once, when I was composing and producing those pieces, thought they would end up in a wildlife documentary. But the team asked if they could listen to some of my music, and fed it into different parts of the series, and they loved it.
"I was really proud to see my music recontextualised in that way."
Mark left The Kimberley in 2010 to move to Melbourne to study audio engineering and sound design. While there, his acting career unexpectedly "took off". Beneath Hill 60, Apple Cider Vinegar, Last Cab To Darwin, Sweet As, Kid Snow and We Bury The Dead are among his film credits to date. Television-wise, he is best known as Detective Jay Swan in series Mystery Road.
Mark won a Helpmann Award in 2017 for best male actor in a play (The Drover's Wife).
"I'd done quite a bit of acting but I never believed it could mature into something tangible," he says.
"After 10 years in Melbourne, though, I realised how much I missed The Kimberley, and my family and my community and being a part of my culture, so I moved back.
"I wondered if the work I'd done on the East Coast over 10 years meant that I could work from The Kimberley, and over the last four years that seems to be the case, which is something I'm really proud about ... it's very hard to work in the arts, and to do it from such a remote place adds all these additional layers."
The Kimberley is a labour of love for Mark, and it shows.
"It was a privilege for me to be invited to create on this series. It has that international-standard picture quality, but it also has access to the human story inside the Kimberley landscape," he says.
"There are these beautiful vignettes of the people who call this place home, who are connected to this landscape, whether it's from a cultural point of view or from our National Parks and Wildlife Protection Service or our incredible ecologists.
"The mosaic that we end up creating is, I think, really unique for a wildlife series."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
01-06-2025
- Perth Now
'I had my time': Mark Hamill rules out Star Wars return as Luke Skywalker
Mark Hamill doesn't intend to return to 'Star Wars'. The 73-year-old star first played the role of Luke Skywalker in the original movie 'A New Hope' back in 1977 but has no wish to return as the protagonist as he would prefer franchise bosses to focus on the "future" with different characters at the heart of the stories. In an interview with Mark said: "I am so grateful to George (Lucas) for letting me be a part of that back in the day, the humble days when George called 'Star Wars' the most expensive low-budget movie ever made. "We never expected it to become a permanent franchise and a part of pop culture like that. But my deal is, I had my time. I'm appreciative of that, but I think they should focus on the future and all the new characters." Mark's last significant appearance was as a force ghost in the 2019 sequel trilogy flick 'The Rise of Skywalker' and he joked that it was impossible for him to return after the ghostly truth about his alter ego was revealed in the 2017 picture 'The Last Jedi'. He said: "(I) disappeared in ('The Last Jedi'), I left my robes behind. And there's no way I'm gonna appear as a naked force ghost." Hamill confessed last year that he felt the "heart was gone" from 'Star Wars' following the tragic passing of his co-star Carrie Fisher, who portrayed Princess Leia, at the age of 60 from a sudden a cardiac arrest in 2016. Recalling the moment he learnt of Carrie's death, he said: "My wife (Marilou York) came into the bedroom - she gets up earlier than I do - I was still asleep. She had tears rolling down her face saying that Carrie had … "It forever altered how I reacted to 'Star Wars' in general. The heart was gone. I don't talk about it because I don't like reliving it." Mark also paid tribute to Carrie for bringing an "effortless feminism" to the sci-fi franchise by standing strong against the villainous Darth Vader and taking command of both Luke and Han Solo (Harrison Ford). He said: "I thought that it was effortless feminism to have the Princess be far from a shrinking violet. "She was tough, she was telling Darth Vader off to his face - she was not intimidated by Darth Vader in the slightest. "'I thought I recognised your foul stench' … I mean, wow! Pretty mouthy, huh? "And when we rescued her, she made chumps out of Luke and Han: 'You call this a rescue? Gimme that gun!' "And she made us look like two stooges. I thought, 'That's effortless feminism', because it's not apologetic, it's just showing a woman is as [capable] as any man."


Perth Now
27-05-2025
- Perth Now
RAF pilots 'too scared' to speak out over UFO encounters
Royal Air Force (RAF) pilots have reportedly seen UFOs during flights but are staying tight-lipped for fear of being grounded, sacked or worse. Documentary filmmaker Mark Christopher Lee says he's been contacted by several British military pilots who claim to have had real-life run-ins with mysterious unidentified aerial phenomena - or UAPs. But despite the extraordinary nature of what they saw, they're keeping their mouths shut. Mark told the Daily Star newspaper: "We have military pilots who have had real-life encounters with UAPs. I have spoken to them. What they say is incredible." However, these top guns are only prepared to spill the beans under strict anonymity. The filmmaker said: "They fear the consequences if they were to go on the record. Will they be fired, ridiculed, demoted – even prosecuted – for speaking out? These are their fears." Mark added that other military personnel and even police officers are scared to speak up about strange sightings in the skies. He said: "What will happen to their families? "It's frustrating because unless someone goes on the record, puts their name – and potentially rank – to an event it is impossible to judge and difficult to properly investigate." The filmmaker claims that the British public is being "kept in the dark" about UFOs. Mark said: "Information about extraordinary events is being withheld from them." The RAF has yet to comment on the claims.


Perth Now
20-05-2025
- Perth Now
Green Day made Blink-182 a better band, says Mark Hoppus
Mark Hoppus found Blink-182's rivalry with Green Day to be "weird". The 53-year-old musician "grew up listening to Green Day" and was a huge fan of their music during his younger years, but friction developed between the bands during their co-headline Pop Disaster Tour in 2002. Mark - who stars in Blink-182 alongside Tom DeLonge and Travis Barker - told NME: "That was very strange because I grew up listening to Green Day. I literally waited for the day that 'Dookie' came out, and I was in line waiting to buy it. "I was a huge fan, then we're touring with them, but it was a weird thing where Green Day were dipping at the time and Blink were ascendent. "We were billed as co-headliners, but Blink were closing every night, and that was a strange sensation for us. Headlining over your idols is a little strange." Mark likened the dynamic to sporting rivals going head-to-head for victory. The bassist also feels that the rivalry made Blink-182 "a better band". He explained: "It's like athletes: we could be on different teams, but when we get on the field we're going to try and kick your a**. "We didn't come with that attitude, but they did. They blew us off the stage the first few nights and we were like, 'Oh s***, we have to up our game'. "Then it was this battle back-and-forth about who could put on the better show and who could win people over. It definitely made us a better band." Mark joked that the rivalry inspired Green Day to make 'American Idiot', their 2004 album that featured hits like 'Wake Me Up When September Ends' and 'Boulevard of Broken Dreams'. He quipped: "I think I inspired them so much they were like, 'We have to kill Blink-182 with an awesome album called 'American Idiot'." Meanwhile, Mark recently claimed that Blink-182 have found a "common goal". The chart-topping rock band reunited after Mark was diagnosed with cancer in 2021, and the group now cherish the time they spend together. Mark - who is now cancer-free - told The Independent: "Everybody really respects and cherishes one another. "We all love Blink and what we built, and we don't want to mess that up anymore. We have a common goal."