Peer behind the barbed wire drawn around people deemed threats to Australia's security during the two world wars. Civilians from enemy nations, even if born in Australia, were subjects of suspicion and locked away in internment camps as prisoners-of-war, some shipped from the other side of the world.
A former South Australian soldier's autobiography of events leading up to and during his seven year imprisonment in Afghanistan's worst prison, Pol-e-Charkhi.
The story of the Adelaide Gaol, told through the journal of its first Governor, provides an insight into the early life of Adelaide and South Australia.
Halted after only 6 days, this is a retelling of an infamous true life experiment in behavioural psychology that spiralled out of control when university students were placed in a simulated prison.
The first hard hitting prison film to come out of Australia in decades will have its South Australian premiere on 28 February 2014.