Connolly made his first
feature film as producer,
The Boys in 1998, which had its world premiere in competition at the
Berlin International Film Festival. His first film as director,
The Bank, was produced by his former mentor and later business partner at Arenafilm
John Maynard. and has been nominated for or won numerous Australian and international awards (see lists below).
Balibo In 2009, Connolly directed
Balibo, which he co-wrote with
David Williamson. The film examines the politically fraught deaths of Australian-based journalists the
Balibo Five and
Roger East during the Indonesian invasion of
East Timor in 1975. Maynard produced the film, which starred
Anthony LaPaglia in the lead role of East.
Balibo was the first feature to be shot in
East Timor.
Indonesia continues to maintain that the Balibo Five died accidentally in crossfire as its troops battled East Timorese
Fretilin rebels, a version of events accepted by successive Australian governments. But the film depicts the young journalists, who were working for Australian TV networks and presumed their nationality afforded them protection, being slaughtered on the orders of Indonesian military chiefs to prevent news of the invasion reaching the world. Connolly refuses to apologise for his film's hardline stance, stating that an Australian coroner found in 2007 that the journalists were executed as they tried to surrender to Indonesian forces. He said: "It's quite clear the journalists were murdered... The current Indonesian and Australian (Government) point of view that they were killed in
crossfire is quite frankly absurd. I'd imagine the film will be confronting because it represents something contrary to the official view." He points out that the
East Timorese Truth and Reconciliation Commission found that up to 183,000
East Timorese people died as a result of the conflict, when the total population was only around 600,000, while both the
Australian Government under the
Liberals and the opposition
Labor Party were focused on oil and gas resources and regional influence. ==Themes and views==