Ngā Whanaunga Māori Pasifika 2015
Ngā Whanaunga Māori Pasifika 2015
A
collection of Maori and Pasifika films curated by Wairoa
Maori Film Festival and Pollywood Film
Festival
The Wairoa Māori Film Festival is proud to continue its relationship curating short films for the New Zealand International Film Festival. In this regard, eight Māori and Pasifika short films have been selected for the Ngā Whanaunga Māori Pasifika Shorts Programme for 2015.
Now in its fourth year in the NZIFF programme, The Ngā Whanaunga Māori Pasifika Shorts Programme features short films from New Zealand, Hawaii, Samoa and Tuvalu. Curated by Leo Koziol (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāti Rakaipaaka), Director of the Wairoa Māori Film Festival, with guest co-curator Craig Fasi (Niue), Director of the Pollywood Film Festival, this year's collection makes a fantastic addition to the 2015 NZIFF programme.
The 2015 Ngā Whanaunga Māori Pasifika Shorts Are...
Taniwha
NZ 2015 | 3
mins | Director: Mika (Ngāi Tahu,
takatāpui)
We open with waiata from Māori
magician Mika, another divination, an expression of the
spirit of Taniwha! — LK
Ma
NZ 2014 | 16 mins |
Director/Screenplay: Nikki Si’ulepa (Samoan) | Producers:
Ngaire Fuata (Rotuman), Nikki Si’ulepa
When a
grandmother discovers one of her precious toys is missing,
she takes matters into her own hands. Ma is a no-nonsense
kind of lady who knows exactly what she wants. Never
underestimate Ma! — CF
Islet
Tuvalu
2015 | 11 mins | Director/Producer/Screenplay: Andrew John
Fakaua Ponton (Tuvaluan)
A 13-year-old boy must
navigate the expectations of his ultra-conservative
community. The first full Tuvalu language short drama shot
in Tuvalu, Islet is a comic tale of a boy who gets hold of a
naughty magazine that gets a hold on him. — LK
Coral
NZ/Samoa 2015 | 15 mins |
Director/Screenplay: Giacomo Martelli | Executive Producer:
Maea Tamasese (Samoan) | Producers: Steve Finnigan, Grant
Baker, Fuimaono Alex Wright (Samoan)
A fisherman
finds something disturbing in a forbidden lagoon. Shot fully
in Samoan, this native noir tale of Tangaroa intrigue, death
and mystery lingers with you long after it ends. —
LK
Lāhainā Noon
USA 2014 | 14 mins |
Director/Screenplay: Christopher Kahunahana (Hawaiian
Kānaka Maoli) | Producer: Patricia
Buskirk
Three short stories are woven together
during a yearly tropical solar phenomenon when the sun
passes directly overhead and objects cast no shadow.
Hawaiians believe that during the sacred time of Lāhainā
Noon the sun rests on the brain and for one minute your mana
magnifies. — CF
Netta Jones
NZ 2015 |
12 mins | Director: Pablo Araus Lobos | Producer/Screenplay:
Rachel Morris (Te Aupōuri)
During WWII, as
Awanui is on high alert fearing a Japanese invasion,
16-year-old Netta falls for a Māori soldier stationed
there. Rachel Morris’ story of her grandmother beautifully
depicts the landscape of Far North Awanui where a tale of
wartime mixed-race love takes place. — LK
Mrs Mokemoke
NZ 2015 | 9 mins |
Director/Screenplay: Li Gent Xin | Producer: Tia Barrett
(Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāi Tahu)
Mrs Mokemoke
loves her husband, but he’s more interested in her
inheritance.A mind-expanding mashup of Lindauer portraits,
silent-era storytelling, film noir and Kubrickian intrigue.
— LK
Elevation
NZ 2015 | 14 mins |
Director/Screenplay: Tihini Grant (Te Arawa) | Producer:
Lara Northcroft (Te Arawa)
Trapped in an
elevator, a white supremacist and a Māori gang member
confront their issues and come out better men, or not. In
this dark comedy, a common hate creates an unlikely union.
— CF
NZIFF programmes will be available in Auckland from Tuesday 23 June, in Wellington from Friday 26 June, in Dunedin from Tuesday 7 July, and in Christchurch from Tuesday 14 July with other centres to follow.
ends