The NFSA collection includes more than four million items, encompassing
sound recordings,
radio,
television,
film,
video games and
new media. In addition to
discs, films, videos,
audio tapes,
phonograph cylinders and wire recordings, the collection includes supporting documents and
artefacts, such as personal papers and organisational records, photographs, posters, lobby cards, publicity, scripts, costumes,
props,
memorabilia, and sound, video and film equipment. Notable holdings include: • The Cinesound
Movietone Australian Newsreel Collection, 1929–1975, a comprehensive collection of 4,000
newsreel films and
documentaries representing news stories covering all major events in Australian history, sport and entertainment from 1929 to 1975. Inscribed on the Australian Memory of the World Register in 2003. •
The Story of the Kelly Gang (1906), directed by
Charles Tait, is the first full-length narrative
feature film produced anywhere in the world, and was inscribed onto the International
Memory of the World Register in 2007. • The earliest surviving Australian sound recording, "The Hen Convention", a novelty song by vocalist John James Villiers, with piano accompaniment, recorded by Thomas Rome in 1896, inducted into the
Sounds of Australia. • The earliest surviving film shot in Australia,
Patineur Grotesque, footage of a man performing on
rollerskates for a crowd in
Prince Alfred Park, Sydney in 1896, shot by
Marius Sestier. • original costumes from Australian films such as
The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, ''
Muriel's Wedding, Elvis, Picnic at Hanging Rock, and My Brilliant Career''. A 2010 study compared the curatorial practices of accessioning and cataloging for NFSA collections and for
YouTube with regard to access to older Australian television programs. It found the NFSA to be stronger in current affairs and older programs, and YouTube stronger in game shows, lifestyle programs, and "human interest" material (births, marriages, and deaths). YouTube cataloging was found to have fewer broken links than the NFSA collection, and YouTube
metadata could be searched more intuitively. The NFSA was found to generally provide more useful reference information about production and broadcast dates.
NFSA Player In June 2023 the NFSA launched the NFSA Player, a new digital streaming platform for on-demand content. The first content collection,
Buwindja, was a curated selection of 17 titles reflecting the 2023 NAIDOC theme of
For Our Elders. In July 2024, NFSA Player made another 34 titles available for rent, including true crime and mystery, stories of postwar migration and early films from notable Australian artists and directors.
Video Games The NFSA announced plans to collect Australian-developed video games as part of its collection starting in 2019, with new titles to be added on an annual basis. In 2022 it joined with
ACMI and
The Powerhouse to acquire the hit multi-platform video game
Untitled Goose Game, created by Victorian game developers House House. In 2024, the NFSA published the first international video game preservation survey, in collaboration with
The Strong Museum of Play (US) and with the support of the
BFI National Archive (UK), and called for increased international collaboration and recognition to advocate for the needs of the video game preservation community.
Public Program The NFSA runs a public program from its Acton building, including new release and repertory cinema screenings at Arc Cinema, panel discussions and Q&As, conferences, audiovisual installations, festivals and live music. Free public spaces include The Library, restored in 2024 to house more than 280 items drawn from the full expanse of the National Film and Sound Archive collection, the Mediatheque, a lounge screening highlights from the audiovisual archive, and the Theatrette, which shows free documentaries on rotation.
Partnerships The NFSA is a foundation partner of Sustainable Screens Australia and a founding member of the Australian Media Literacy Alliance.
2023 Budget Funding / Revive In April 2023, the Australian Government announced an investment of $535 million over four years into eight National Collecting Institutions, including $31 million over the same period for NFSA. The CEO of the NFSA Patrick McIntyre said “The new funds will turbocharge our ability to increase discoverability and access to the national collection for all Australians.”
Fantastic Futures In October 2024, the NFSA curated and hosted the Fantastic Futures 24 Conference, the first in-depth Australasian examination of the challenges and opportunities of AI for the galleries, libraries, archives and museums sector.
Learning and Media Literacy The NFSA runs a student media literacy program, Media and Me onsite at its Acton headquarters, which examines storytelling through animation, advertising, gaming, social media, film and music and explores how media has evolved over time in its methods of influencing and persuading viewers.
Special collections • The Film Australia Collection contains a diverse range of more than 3,000 titles of Australian documentary and educational programs, spanning a century of Commonwealth
documentary and
docu-drama titles (1913–2008). •
Sounds of Australia (formerly the National Registry of Recorded Sound) is the NFSA's selection of sound recordings with cultural, historical and aesthetic significance and relevance, which inform or reflect life in Australia. It was established in 2007. Each year, the Australian public nominates new sounds to be added with final selections determined by a panel of industry experts. • NFSA Restores is the NFSA's program to digitise, restore and preserve, at the highest archival standards, classic and cult Australian films so they can be seen on the big screen in today's digital cinemas. • The Oral History Collection houses
oral history recordings. • The Non-Theatrical Lending Collection includes non-theatrical screenings, which take place on a non-commercial basis and are held by educational, cultural, social and religious institutions; community groups; churches; film societies; government bodies; hospitals; libraries; museums and galleries. • The Australian Jazz Archive, established in 1997, was developed in partnership with state-based volunteer jazz archives. It includes published and unpublished recordings of Australian jazz bands and musicians, as well as personal collections, and covers Australian jazz since 1920. ==Preservation==