• Pheno Was Here

    Film

    Harry and Pheno, both young people in dead-end jobs, meet by chance one day and decide to rebel. They embark on a freedom binge, first painting graffitti then moving on to more daring escapades. A cop is soon on their tail, but he starts to falter when...

  • Kingi's Story

    Film

    Using Kingi's own memories, this film shows how the problems in his life led him into ineveitable conflict with the law. It is not until he is in the solitary confinement of a police cell that Kingi starts to think about his life. His relationship...

  • Pictures

    Film

  • Man of the Trees

    Film

    English conservationist Richard St Barbe Baker, here aged 92,  presents his ideas with a simple and desperate clarity: "We have to plant forest trees for our lives". He brings world attentiont to the alarming rate at which the world's...

  • The Art of Recovery

    Film

    Peter Young’s documentary celebrates the passionate artists and entrepreneurs who battled to protect the creative heart of their city amongst the ruins of post-quake Christchurch. After staid, conservative Christchurch was shaken to its...

  • Middle Age Spread

    Film

    Middle Age Spread was the feature debut from director John Reid (Carry Me Back), as well as the debut of cinematographer Alun Bollinger (Goodbye Pork Pie), writer Keith Aberdein (Utu) and editor Mike Horton (Once Were Warriors). Based on the 1977 play by...

  • Skin Deep

    Film

  • Angel Mine

    Film

    Angel Mine is director David Blyth's first feature film, for which he wrote the script as well. Angel Mine explores the ways in which consumerism and materialism govern lives in middle class suburbia, and how this affects the dreams and fantasies of...

  • Rose's Tale

    Film

    Rose's Tale is the debut short film from Michael Winkelman, a New Zealander who has been based in Bristol, England, for the last 15 years. The story is based on a friend's recounting of an actual experience with the location being transferred...

  • Blue Willow

    Film

    Director’s Notes – Veialu Aila-Unsworth “I have eaten many a hot meal off this plate design - either at my Great Aunt’s or during a student-flat dinner. It still makes me laugh to think that such an elegant plate, with such a...

  • Spooked

    Film

    In his new movie, Spooked, Geoff Murphy takes an intriguing series of events from 1992 New Zealand as his starting point and, making a daring imaginative jump, spins it to where all good 21st century conspiracies lead – Osama Bin Laden and the CIA...

  • Journey to Ihipa

    Film

    Director’s Notes - Nancy Brunning In 2004 I read an early draft of Journey to Ihipa. I said to myself, if I were a filmmaker, I’d want to direct this one. I had directed for theatre before but never for film, and what was important to me at...

  • Taua - War Party

    Film

    DIRECTOR’S NOTES "To date, old New Zealand has been portrayed in cinema as a dark and cold land of deep foreboding; the final frontier, a savage place of no return. My aim was to show ancient Aotearoa as a green, and heat filled land full of...

  • Redemption

    Film

    Teenagers Zig and Jaffa get totally wasted, and as always take the broken path from the house to Jaffa’s shed to play Redemption. They have discovered a way to take the violence and pain in their young lives and transform it into pleasure, healing...

  • Kehua

    Film

    The boy’s anxiety is further increased by his mother’s self-absorption in the break up of her marriage and her hurried return home. But it seems that there are stronger powers at play.  This young boy has a gift, a gift of ‘seeing...

  • The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls

    Film

    Celebrating their half century this year (2009), the Topp Twins have attained a unique status within New Zealand culture, and their fans range from hard core political activists, to sheep farmers and 'Ladies who Lunch'. Their ability to relate to...

  • Mokopuna

    Film

    DIRECTOR’S NOTES - Ainsley Gardiner The word ‘mokopuna’ has two meanings in the Māori language. Firstly, it is the physical reflection of your face, secondly it is the word for grandchild or descendent. It suggests that we are a...

  • How Far Is Heaven

    Film

    Auckland based filmmakers Miriam Smith & Christopher Pryor lived and filmed in Jerusalem for a year, spanning 2010/2011.  How Far is Heaven follows the journey of Sister Margaret Mary, the newest Sister to Jerusalem, who is a regular volunteer...

  • The Most Fun You Can Have Dying

    Film

    The Most Fun You Can Have Dying is a debut feature for both writer/director Kirstin Marcon and producer Alex Cole-Baker. The film is based on the well-reviewed 2003 debut novel ‘Seraphim Blues’, written by Steven Gannaway. The film...

  • Fantail

    Film

    Set almost entirely in a petrol station, Fantail was shot on location in South Auckland, New Zealand. Fantail is the passion project of director Curtis Vowell, producer Sarah Cook and writer/actress Sophie Henderson.  It was funded through the New...

  • Anzac Tides of Blood

    Film

    Like the Anzacs 100 years ago Sam Neill journeys across oceans, seeking an answer to why a legend was born in Turkey on 25 April, 1915. Why our two island nations, separated by sea, still celebrate a botched military expedition. Submerging...

  • Mahana

    Film

    From the author of Whale Rider, the screenwriter of Master and Commander and the producer and director of Once Were Warriors comes a profound and enduring tale of rural family life.

  • Tama Tu

    Film

    Every culture has its stories and its heroes. For us, the men of the 28 (Māori) Battalion are legendary. These were soldiers who owed no allegiance to a flag but fought and died in their thousands because they were warriors at heart. When they fought...

  • Patu Ihu

    Film

    DIRECTOR’S NOTES -SUMMER AGNEW “In any culture a tangi (funeral) reminds us that the relationship between life and death is intricate. A tangi is when the living and the dead come together equally, in the whare nui (meeting house) to ensure...

  • Whakatiki

    Film

    Kiri, an overweight Māori woman, takes a trip to the Whakatiki River where she spent many summers as a girl. With her goes her husband Dan, his friend Seb and beautiful newcomer, Josie. The place awakens powerful memories for Kiri, and as...

  • Sleeping Dogs

    Film

    A state of political unrest prevails in New Zealand - with strikes, riots and rationing. The Prime Minister has set up an anti-terrorist force of "Specials" - supposedly to restore law and order. Smith (SAM NEILL) is too busy with his...

  • Te Rua

    Film

  • The Speaker

    Film

    Director’s Notes - Te Arepa Kahi FORESHORE AND SEABED 2005 in New Zealand was election year. The National party had been making little traction on Labour’s command of Government for some time, but in election year, tactics and...

  • Poi E: The Story of Our Song

    Film

    Poi E is the latest chapter in director/writer Tearepa Kahi’s exploration of New Zealand’s musical history. His first film, Mt Zion, was a fictional story inspired by his musician father and his whānau in the 1980s. This film is the true...

  • River Queen

    Film

    River Queen is an original story by director Vincent Ward (Vigil, The Navigator, What Dreams May Come), who wrote the screenplay with Toa Fraser (Bare, No 2).    The film stars double Academy Award-nominated Samantha Morton (In...

  • The Tattooist

    Film

    THE TATTOOIST was made by Singaporean and New Zealand co-production partners, from a New Zealand-originated script on locations in New Zealand and Singapore. The story centres on Samoan spiritual beliefs, in which the barrier between our world and the...

  • Tracker

    Film

    It's 1903: South African farmer Arjan can Diemen has lost everything - his wife, children, farm and home - in the brutal Boer War in which he fought against the colonising British.  Arriving in New Zealand, he is immediately hired by Major...

  • Kimi and the Watermelon

    Film

    Kimi lives inthe country with her grandmother and her Uncle Tau. One day at the end of summer, the big bus from the city gobbles up Uncle Tau and takes him away. Before he leaves, he promises to return when the watermelon is fully grown. The...

  • Turangawaewae / A Place To Stand

    Film

    Director’s Notes - Peter Burger "In this film I wanted to capture the complexity of the idea of turangawaewae. For those Māori today, who no longer live in the place where their ancestors have lived for centuries, it becomes important to...

  • Kerosene Creek

    Film

    DIRECTOR’S NOTES - Michael Bennett “Making Kerosene Creek was both a great honour and a significant challenge for me. As a Māori writer and director, this film provided a unique opportunity to explore one of the most significant...

  • The Justice of Bunny King

    Film

    Bunny King (ESSIE DAVIS) is a mother of two, who is best described as a rough cut diamond with a sketchy past. Attempting to leave this past behind, she works intersections as a squeegee bandit using her quick wit to charm money from motorists....