The New Zealand Herald

NZ Film Festival reveals local movie line-up

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THE LINE-UP of local movies screening at the New Zealand Internatio­nal Film Festival has just been announced and covers everything from the serious to the super(hero).

One of the pictures guaranteed to spark conversati­on is Maui’s Hook. This sobering film follows five families undertakin­g a hı¯koi from Parihaka to Te Rerenga-wairua (Cape Re¯inga) as part of their grieving process as they struggle with and process the suicide of someone close to them.

Uncompromi­sing by design, filmmaker Paora Joseph has blended documentar­y with fiction to create a movie that explores and exposes the raw pain of grief and loss.

In contrast, the silliness of director Tim van Dammen’s time travelling, superhero crime caper Mega Time Squad could be just the ticket. It follows a small-town criminal who dreams of moving to the bustling metropolit­an centre of . . . Paeroa. During a routine robbery, he nabs a mystical Chinese bracelet, which empowers him with the ability of time travel. Which is when things start going off the rails . . .

After its world premiere at the Moscow Internatio­nal Film Festival, where it won Best Actor, writer/ director Dustin Feneley’s character drama Stray plays on our screens. Set in Otago, Stray follows the “complex” relationsh­ip between two “damaged” strangers.

Bludgeon is also a worthy mention. Described as an “affectiona­te and funny documentar­y” this one dives into the competitiv­e world of medieval combat.

The doco follows members of the local community, who meet up to hack at each other with swords and battle axes with the hope of one day being selected to represent New Zealand on the world’s medieval combat stage.

Other local docos include Dancing with Atoms: Paul Callaghan, which details the life of the acclaimed physicist and science ambassador; Angie, about Centrepoin­t survivor Angie Meiklejohn; Merata: How Mum Decolonise­d the Screen, which celebrates the life of the pioneering indigenous film-maker Merata Mita.

The titleThe Heart Dances: The Journey of The Piano: The Ballet is a bit of a mouthful but is an accurate descriptio­n. This doco follows Czech choreograp­her Jiri Bubenicek and his twin brother and designer, Otto, as they adapt Jane Campion’s Academy Award winning movie The Piano into a ballet.

And last but far from least is the special screening of Buster Keaton’s silent-era, comedy classic The General. Screening at The Civic, the movie’s score will be performed live by the Auckland Philharmon­ia Orchestra. A rare treat indeed. Like Glad Wrap, folding iron tables and jangly country music, the last thing I want in my life right now is more Donald Trump. I want that festering political pimple popped as soon as possible. But then I heard about a Netflix doco called Trump: An American Dream, and I changed my tune. It’s a fascinatin­g backtrack over Trump’s haphazard career, detailing all of the deceit, divorce, dodgy dealings and dicey casinos you could imagine. I’ve watched three of the four episodes, but once it’s over, so’s my addiction. I swear.

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