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thevillagedoco.tv is the official project website for the documentary It Takes a Village, produced by Roar Film. The film focuses on an innovative dementia-care model at Korongee Village in the Hobart suburb of Tasmania, Australia. Rather than being a general video platform, the site is a viewing, outreach, and action hub built around a social-issue documentary. Its goal is to encourage the public to rethink dementia care, moving away from a purely medicalized model toward one that gives greater weight to individuality, freedom, safety, and community connection.
The website offers access to a 56-minute documentary, along with several short films of around 9 to 10 minutes each. Topics include “What is dementia?”, “The importance of music”, “Lifestyle and personal history”, “Living spaces in care facilities”, and “Group activities and social isolation”. In addition to the films, the site includes a Get Involved section that encourages users to contact members of parliament, share the trailer, learn more about Korongee Village, volunteer, and support the social impact strategy through donations via Documentary Australia Foundation.
The main content does not list any clear pricing. The documentary can be made available for screenings via Vimeo, DVD, USB video file, or on-demand download, but the site does not disclose whether fees apply, what licensing prices are, or what terms apply to institutional screenings. The donation page clearly states that donations are handled through Documentary Australia Foundation and are tax-deductible in Australia.
The main strengths are its focused topic and strong public-interest value. The structure of the documentary and short films makes it suitable for public education, aged-care training, and community screenings. The site also goes beyond simply presenting content by offering paths for advocacy, volunteering, and donation, with a clear social-impact goal. The drawbacks are that the site is relatively concise and lacks detailed information on copyright licensing, download procedures, and fees. Its context is also strongly tied to Australia’s aged-care policy environment, so Chinese users may need additional background knowledge to understand and apply the content. There is no Chinese-language interface either.
It is suitable for family members of people living with dementia, aged-care professionals, public health researchers, social workers, documentary screening organizers, nonprofit organizations, and policy advocates interested in aging-related issues. For care training or university classes, the short chapter-style videos are especially practical.
The website itself may be accessible, but the videos rely on Vimeo, and social sharing includes platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, which are generally restricted in mainland China. Overall, it should be considered “partially restricted.” Browsing the text content should have relatively little impact, but watching videos or visiting external links may require a proxy environment.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on thevillagedoco.tv official site.
thevillagedoco.tv is an Australia Video provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 3.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach thevillagedoco.tv directly.