Weekend Herald

Kiwi comedy duo breaking uppering box office records

- Charlotte Carter

Kiwi film The Breaker Upperers has grossed more than $1 million at the local box office in just under two weeks and is on track to make it to the Top 10 grossing films.

The Kiwi comedy is based on two women in Auckland who run an agency breaking couples up, using a plethora of ridiculous ways and means to do so.

It’s written and directed by Jackie van Beek and Madeleine Sami and has already secured its place in New Zealand’s Top 30 films overall, according to box office numbers, sitting at number 27 as of last week.

But compared with other New Zealand films at the two-week mark, the film sits roughly 10th.

After two weeks of showing, the mockumenta­ry What We Do in the Shadows — written, directed by, and starring Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi — grossed $1.31m in 2014.

Critically acclaimed family drama Whale Rider grossed $1.57m in its first two weeks locally in 2002. It went on to become the fifth-highest grossing Kiwi film, making more than $6.4m locally.

Van Beek said she and Sami hadn’t known what to expect from the box office but the news was very exciting.

“We were hoping it would be this successful, we’ve kept our fingers crossed that people would really embrace this film and so far they seem to be,” van Beek said.

While the film fills its brief as a comedy, van Beek said there were several more serious aspects that she and Sami aspired to.

“That was to put some strong female characters up on screen and to have some strong female creatives behind the camera as well,” she said.

“We feel really proud, because even though we’re delivering this quite silly, fun-filled comedy, we’re so pleased that it has such a diverse great cast and all of those women up

on screen as well.”

The Breaker Upperers has barely started its run but Van Beek said she and Sami were already coming up with ideas for a new film.

“Madeleine keeps talking about a trilogy — that we’re going to create three buddy films, she might be joking, I can never tell.

“She’s so busy I can barely get her on the phone . . . . She was probably offered this interview first then didn’t pick up the phone so they rang me,” van Beek joked.

“That’s what happens with us, Madeleine was cast in a small part for Hunt for the Wilderpeop­le and couldn’t do it, so I got called. I got up at five in the morning, went and did my scene and I was terrible — Taika cut the scene.”

Niki Caro, who wrote and directed Whale Rider, was thrilled to see The Breaker Upperers climbing the New Zealand box office ladder.

“It’s clear that Kiwi audiences are responding as enthusiast­ically as the Americans to their refreshing female-driven humour,” she said.

She was looking forward to them joining her as the next two female directors to make it to the Top 10 grossing films at the NZ box office.

 ??  ?? Jackie van Beek and Madeleine Sami, right, are excited by their film’s success at the box office.
Jackie van Beek and Madeleine Sami, right, are excited by their film’s success at the box office.

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