The Guardian (USA)

Muru review – New Zealand action-thriller paints police violence in broad strokes

- Luke Buckmaster

A quietly powerful and dignified performanc­e from Cliff Curtis is the heart of Tearepa Kahi’s New Zealand actionthri­ller Muru: a film that’s in no way quiet or subtle, and not intended to be. Curtis plays Taffy Tāwharau, the kind of cop who is, as they say, one of the good guys, filling in as a school bus driver and standing up to racist and misinforme­d colleagues.

Taffy is torn between different worlds and laws: his Māori heritage and remote TeUrewera community on one hand, and on the other, the uniform and badge to which he’s sworn allegiance. Australian film-makers have explored similar tensions recently in production­s including True Colours and Mystery Road.

Taffy’s level-headedness, decency and instinctiv­e resistance to extreme or irrational responses provides the message that not all police officers are “bad.” At the same time, the film is overlaid with powerful polemical commentary: about the police force as a diabolical political weapon and a reflection of the ongoing oppression of Indigenous peoples.

The film – which has been selected as New Zealand’s internatio­nal feature submission for the Oscars after premiering at Toronto film festival earlier this year – was inspired by reallife events such as the 2007 Urewera raids, during which police raided the community of the Tūhoe people in New Zealand’s north island under the mistaken belief that activist and artist Tāme Iti was building a domestic terrorist network.

The camera initially floats above a swampy forest, ensconced in thick white fog, reminiscen­t of a Vicki Madden production. Kahi then presents four title cards interspers­ed with short dramatic footage. The first draws a historical connection: “In 1916, the NZ government raided the people of Tūhoe and their prophet Rua Kēnana.” The second announces: “In 2007, the NZ government raided the people of Tūhoe and the activist Tame Iti.” The third is a disclaimer – “this film is not a recreation of the police raids against the people of Tūhoe” – and the fourth, after a dramatic pause, proclaims: “It is a response.”

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Perhaps that caveat was necessary because Muru is certainly presented in a re-enactment style: not jittery and frantic, like a Paul Greengrass film, but with an on-the-ground energy aspiring for gritty realism, notwithsta­nding some action movie tropes here and there. Certain elements seem intended to heighten verisimili­tude and strengthen the film’s connection to real-life events – such as the casting of Iti as himself.

By stating upfront that it’s not a reenactmen­t, the director lessens expectatio­ns of sticking to the facts. And by citing the 1916 raids as an additional inspiratio­n, he draws a throughlin­e across history in a rumination on police oppression both symbolic and rooted in painful actuality. The idea of a film crossing the space-time continuum to make statements about the impact of colonialis­m on Indigenous population­s was powerfully evoked in the recent anthology drama We Are Still Here.

Kahi oscillates between the elite forces organising the raid and quieter moments with Taffy in the remote Rūātoki valley, where he’s taking care of his sick father (who is friends with Iti). This builds a stop-start momentum, the director simultaneo­usly building and undercutti­ng tension. There’s no doubt that things are headed in the direction of climactic action, much of which is well-staged; Chris Mauger and Fred Renata’s cinematogr­aphy strikes a good balance between stylised compositio­ns and a rougher, edgier look.

Other elements are less impressive. An important event one hour into the runtime boils down to a misunderst­anding, but the staging is unclear and it left me wondering whether it was deliberate­ly or accidental­ly ambiguous. And while Curtis delivers an excellent, nuanced performanc­e in his portrayal of a cop trying to manage an impossible situation, the elite police characters are more simplistic – at times approachin­g cartoonish. Manu Bennett might as well have worn an eye patch for his rage-consumed performanc­e as the twisted and tough-as-nails Sergeant Kimiora; it doesn’t feel genuine.

The same can be said of some aspects of Kahi’s direction. He can’t resist showing a police officer performing a commando roll in one scene, and in another two characters fall out of a helicopter, both moments airlifted in from the multiplex action playground. It’s hard to incorporat­e these kinds of flourishes while still retaining a sense of realism and immediacy.

Kahi comes admirably close, though, and uses poetic licence – as well an arsenal of techniques from the action and thriller genres – for a noble purpose: speaking truth to power. Despite the spectacle, it’s the human faces, particular­ly Curtis’, that will linger most vividly.

 ?? ?? Tūhoe activist Tame Iti playing himself in Muru. Photograph: Chris Pryor
Tūhoe activist Tame Iti playing himself in Muru. Photograph: Chris Pryor
 ?? ?? ‘Torn between different worlds’: Cliff Curtis as Taffy in Muru. Photograph: Craig Wright
‘Torn between different worlds’: Cliff Curtis as Taffy in Muru. Photograph: Craig Wright

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