NATIVe - Indigenous Cinema

Ngati

Supporting film: Turangawaewae - A Place to Stand

Sun, Feb 10, 2013
8.15 pm
Admission: 9 €

Turangawaewae - A Place to Stand

D: Peter Burger

New Zealand 2002, 13 min, English subtitles

An elderly man drifts through a city with bits of earth in plastic bags, trapped in his memories and completely lacking a sense of place or dignity. He rediscovers himself and his strength after returning home where he is finally able to plant his feet on ancestral soil.


Ngati

D: Barry Barclay

New Zealand 1987, 93 min, English subtitles

The first feature film to be both written and directed by Maori, Ngati depicts a post-colonial 1940s New Zealand, where the happy coexistence of whites and Maori is still an illusion. A young Australian doctor arrives in a coastal village, ostensibly to find his roots. Welcomed by the locals, he observes how they stand collectively, despite the impending closure of the local freezing works. If the factory is shut down, their main source of employment will dry up. Initially convinced that that he will impart his knowledge to the Maori, the doctor soon sees that he is the one who can learn from their traditions, ways of thinking and sense of community. This simple, absorbing story of finding one’s identity represents a milestone in Indigenous cinema.