1946 在澳大利亞逗留期間,在悉尼的碼頭工人協助下,秘密拍攝《印度尼西亞在呼喚》,記述澳大利亞碼頭工人拒絕為荷蘭船隻卸裝運往印度尼西亞的武器等情況。荷蘭當局不僅禁映這部影片,而且借口護照問題,對伊文思採取了進入國境的「懲罰性措施」。 Appointed by the Dutch government as a Film Commiss…1946 在澳大利亞逗留期間,在悉尼的碼頭工人協助下,秘密拍攝《印度尼西亞在呼喚》,記述澳大利亞碼頭工人拒絕為荷蘭船隻卸裝運往印度尼西亞的武器等情況。荷蘭當局不僅禁映這部影片,而且借口護照問題,對伊文思採取了進入國境的「懲罰性措施」。 Appointed by the Dutch government as a Film Commissioner of the Dutch East Indies, Joris Ivens was supposed make educational and informational films and to film the liberation of Indonesia. However, when he arrived in Sydney and found out that the Dutch government had no intentions to make Indonesia an independent country, but restore the pre-war colonial situation in Indonesia, if necessary with military violence, and this being in contradiction with the information he'd been given and the Atlantic Charter treaty, Joris Ivens resigned his post and made this film. He stated that the Dutch were not working on Indonesia's independence, but on a re-colonization of it. The film is clandestinely shot in the harbours of Sydney, where the port workers unions boycot the Dutch ships filled with military supplies and summon the workers to turn down labour on these ships.詳情