1968-71: The Pictures That Moved, Paddington Lace and The Passionate Industry Both
The Pictures That Moved: Australian Cinema 1896-1920 (1968) and
The Passionate Industry: 1920-1930 (1971) were documentaries portraying the evolution of the Australian film industry the movies were a compilation of different excerpts of newsreels, features and photographs of the addressed periods. She also interviewed several actors who played or participated in these pictures. The two films were chosen to be among the Official Selections (Out of Competition category), at the
30th Cannes Film Festival, in 1977. She also wrote
Paddington Lace (1970), a film that depicts one of Sydney's oldest suburbs,
Paddington, a place that eventually became "Sydney's
artist colony".
1975-77: Caddie and The Picture Show Man She eventually left the Film Unit and the documentary field in order to pursue the fiction route. The film is both a critique of the male-dominated society and its scrutiny on women, and a highlight on the implications of being a working-class single-mother during this period in time. The film was done as part of Australia's participation in the
International Women's Year.
Caddie (1976) received a total of $390,000 in funding ($50,000 from the government) for its production. The film won 3 feature awards at the
18th Australian Film Institute Awards. Long's script was nominated for
Best Original Screenplay, but lost to
Fred Schepisi's
''The Devil's Playground''. Long founded the company
Limelight Productions in 1975 and under its name, she continued to tackle subject matters related to the film industry. She started working on a script revolving around the adventure of a picture showman who travelled across the countryside to bring motion pictures to those who could not access them. The screenplay eventually became
The Picture Show Man (1977) which she also worked on as producer. Additionally, the film was also her reaction to
Caddie, "[she] wanted something light-hearted" She worked as a producer with Margaret Kelly on
Puberty Blues (1981), an adaptation of
Kathy Lette and
Gabrielle Carey's book of the same name. The film is a coming of age story that follows two teenage girls in their important life stage. The feature also tackles different themes such as sex, drugs, school, etc. She was involved in
Silver City (1984) which was directed and originally written by
Sophia Turkiewicz. After having seen the young filmmaker's previous work
Letter from Poland (1978), Long tried to bring one of Turkiewicz's other scripts, written in 1974, to the screen. After several modifications done on the original screenplay, Long decided to bring Australian playwright
Tom Keneally on board to help forge a story. Eventually, on their eleventh draft, they got green-lit with a story that depicted the Polish post-war refugees' journey to Australia, after World War II, focusing on a time that greatly shaped the nation's current multiculturalism. The film addressed different themes such as identity, assimilation, culture, and ultimately, revolved around the refugees’ relation and interaction with their new home. The film screened throughout Australia, Europe and the United States. ==Other roles==