Career
In the late 1960s, after two years of fruitless university studies, he went travelling in outback Australia, the Pacific Islands and South East Asia. During this period he worked as a farm hand, salesman, cowboy, a roughneck on oil rigs, and as a maritime seaman. He also taught himself photography and dreamt of becoming a photojournalist.
Wanting to make documentary films, he moved to Sydney where the Australian Broadcasting Corporation employed him as an assistant gardener. He later became a cinematographer for that organization. From 1974 until 1979 he lived in Papua New Guinea, which was in the process of decolonisation.
He worked for the newly independent government, teaching documentary filmmaking skills to Papua New Guineans. His first film, Yumi Yet - Independence for Papua New Guinea, was completed in 1976, and it was widely acclaimed. Retrospectives of O'Rourke's work have been held at the Amsterdam International Documentary Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, the Institute of Contemporary Art in London, the Pacific Film Archive in San Francisco.
And in other cities, including Freiburg, Honolulu, Los Angeles, Marseille, Melbourne, New Delhi, New York, Singapore, Taipei, and Uppsala. Dennis O'Rourke was the father of five children. He died of cancer on June 15, 2013 while producing and directing I Love a Sunburnt Country..., which is a feature film on the subject of being Australian, as seen through the poetry and poetic imagination of 'ordinary' people.
In 2007 O'Rourke was awarded damages by the ACT (Australian Capital Territory) Supreme Court for defamation by an Aboriginal rights activist, who had accused O'Rourke of unscrupulous conduct during the filming of Cunnamulla. O'Rourke also received damages from Nationwide News Pty. Ltd. after these comments were published in The Daily Telegraph and The Australian newspapers.