The New Zealand Herald

NZ festival reveals first movies

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The New Zealand Internatio­nal Film Festival has revealed its first titles for this year’s line-up, with two of the four films featuring internatio­nally recognised Kiwi talent.

The festival will host the New Zealand premiere of Yellow is Forbidden, a documentar­y by Kiwi director Pietra Brettkelly that follows Chinese fashion designer Guo Pei as she prepares for her Paris debut.

Yellow is Forbidden premiered at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival, where it received glowing reviews, with one critic praising it as “compelling and stimulatin­g”.

Leave No Trace, a new drama from the director of Jennifer Lawrence’s breakout film Winter’s Bone, will also have its New Zealand premiere.

The film stars Kiwi actress Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie as a 13-year-old living off the grid with her war veteran father (Ben Foster).

Leave No Trace has received rave reviews at internatio­nal festivals, with Variety’s Peter Debruge praising it for “the discovery of yet another young talent in Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie”.

Matangi / Maya / M.I.A, the long- awaited documentar­y on Sri Lankan musician M.I.A, is also on the programme.

Following the performer from her refugee beginnings to pop stardom, it has been praised as “a hypnotic portrait of a restless and inconvenie­nt artist”.

The fourth film to be named is Bombshell: Hedy Lamarr.

The debut documentar­y from director Alexandra Dean is a portrait of one of Hollywood’s top actresses in the 1940s who lived a double life as a groundbrea­king inventor.

 ??  ?? Leave No Trace stars Kiwi Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie as a 13-year-old living off the grid with her father.
Leave No Trace stars Kiwi Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie as a 13-year-old living off the grid with her father.

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