Patu! Historic Nz Doco Screening
CutCutCut press release
Patu!
Historic Nz Doco Screening!
PATU! 8:30pm, Friday 30th, Paramount Theatre, Wellington
PATU! (NZ 1983) "A major
documentary of our time" 8:30pm, Fri most controversial, and
the most contested, event in recent New Zealand history was
the 1981 South African rugby tour. Half the country was
opposed to the tour, the establishment was determined the
tour would go ahead, and the result was a country divided
against itself almost to the point of civil war. This
incredible documentary shows what happened.
The actual filming was both dangerous and difficult and attempts to have the negative confiscated...[Merata Mita's] achievement is as impressive technically as it is effective emotionally. A major documentary of our time." - London Film Festival.
This one off screening of the 1983 documentary PATU! has been organised to raise awareness about the recent raids on activists across the country. PATU! documents the anti-apartheid protests in 1981 and has particular relevance in terms of the recent police raids and the Terrorism Suppression Act as John Minto recently pointed out.
"The proposed new law would have meant many of the civil disobedience protests from 1981 could have been classed as "terrorist activities". Actions such as the 40 people sitting on Rotorua airport runway, the invasion of the pitch in Hamilton and the blocking of the Auckland harbour bridge could all easily qualify. These anti-terror laws are George Bush's laws. They were never designed for New Zealand."
At the time of the tour John Minto was the national organiser of Halt All Racist Tours (HART).
PATU!
Produced by
Merata Mita
Year: 1983
Prod Co: Awatea
Films
Country: New Zealand
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CutCutCut:
Local Doco
Screening
The closure of a 60 year-old campground and subsequent beachfront occupation by tangata whenua at Opoutama, Mahia - to the debates raging over the Overseas Investment Bill in Parliament - The Last Resort investigates notions of land and business ownership, signaling the changing tides of sovereignty and self-determination in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
"Thought-provoking and poignant"
- Mark Orton, Otago Daily Times
"Moving and disturbing
in equal measures" - Margaret Agnew. The Press
"See this
film at least once"
-
ENDS