Our Planet, the People, My Blood
brief strong injury detail
Director(s)Daniel Everitt-Lock
Production year2026
Release date05/03/2026
Genre(s)Documentary
Approx. running minutes84m
CastClaudia Peterson, Rebecca Long-Bailey, Susie Boniface
Our Planet, the People, My Blood
brief strong injury detail
This documentary investigates the ongoing human and environmental consequences of nuclear weapons testing around the wor ...
This documentary investigates the ongoing human and environmental consequences of nuclear weapons testing around the world.
language
discrimination
injury detail
theme
violence
threat and horror
sex
drugs
brief strong injury detail
Classified Date:
23/02/2026
Version:
2D
Use:
Cinema
Distributor:
True Perspective Films
language
There is infrequent use of strong language ('f**k'). Milder terms include ‘shit’ and ‘bloody’.
discrimination
There are occasional references to the testing of nuclear weapons on Indigenous lands, resulting in illnesses, deaths and displacement.
injury detail
Footage of the aftermath of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki includes distressing images of civilians - mostly children - being treated for severe burn wounds. The sequence includes a close-up image of a young child's badly damaged hand.
theme
Throughout the film there are upsetting references to the health consequences of radiation exposure, including cancer, miscarriages, stillbirths, and serious congenital disorders in children. Interviewees occasionally become distressed while speaking about loved ones and neighbours who have died due to cancer and other illnesses. The verbal detail is not graphic, however.
Classified date23/02/2026
LanguageEnglish
language
discrimination
injury detail
theme
violence
threat and horror
sex
drugs
Director(s)Daniel Everitt-Lock
Production year2026
Release date05/03/2026
Genre(s)Documentary
Approx. running minutes84m
CastClaudia Peterson, Rebecca Long-Bailey, Susie Boniface
brief strong injury detail
Classified Date:
23/02/2026
Version:
2D
Use:
Cinema
Distributor:
True Perspective Films
language
There is infrequent use of strong language ('f**k'). Milder terms include ‘shit’ and ‘bloody’.
discrimination
There are occasional references to the testing of nuclear weapons on Indigenous lands, resulting in illnesses, deaths and displacement.
injury detail
Footage of the aftermath of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki includes distressing images of civilians - mostly children - being treated for severe burn wounds. The sequence includes a close-up image of a young child's badly damaged hand.
theme
Throughout the film there are upsetting references to the health consequences of radiation exposure, including cancer, miscarriages, stillbirths, and serious congenital disorders in children. Interviewees occasionally become distressed while speaking about loved ones and neighbours who have died due to cancer and other illnesses. The verbal detail is not graphic, however.
Classified date23/02/2026
LanguageEnglish