Manawatu Standard

‘I want this to be the new Outrageous Fortune’

A web series about the South Auckland suburb of Papakura has become one of TVNZ’S most streamed shows. Chris Schulz asks its creators how it happened.

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Vince Mcmillan, the co-creator of hyperlocal TV series ’Kura, was scrolling through his Instagram feed recently when a message popped up. It said: ‘‘I love your show – can I be in it?’’ He did a double take. That message came from Vinnie Bennett, the Christchur­ch actor who has just hit it big with a starring role in the recordbrea­king American blockbuste­r Fast & Furious 9.

Bennett was pleading to appear in ’Kura,

Mcmillan and James Watson’s five-part web series about the Auckland suburb of Papakura that has quietly become one of TVNZ’S most popular Ondemand shows.

Like many, Bennett had seen ’Kura’s first season, loved it, and wanted a role.

For Mcmillan and Watson, who fielded similar requests from big-name local actors Grace Palmer and David de Lautour for their second season, it was another stunning moment among many.

‘‘It’s not like it’s a slick, sci-fi production with a moving camera and stunts,’’ says Mcmillan, who eventually managed to find a small role for Bennett. ‘‘We just didn’t have the budget. It’s a bit ropey. It’s simple.’’

That, along with an opening credit sequence that’s a shot-for-shot remake of The Sopranos with local Papakura landmarks doubling for New York, is part of ’Kura’s never-ending charm.

The first season, which followed the exploits of 20-somethings Billy-john and Hotene during their last week together in Papakura, won TVNZ’S New Blood competitio­n in 2018, which asked the public to choose one of five shortliste­d TV shows to be made.

’Kura won with 45 per cent of the vote and its first season, made with TVNZ and NZ On Air money of just $100,000, debuted at the beginning of last year. It quickly took off.

‘‘It’s rating up against Shortland Street and The Bachelor,’’ says Watson incredulou­sly. ‘‘It’s kind of unreal.’’

They blame that popularity on its hyper localised setting. ‘‘That’s what we found out – the more specific we got, the more broad appeal we have,’’ says Watson.

‘‘Papakura is just a representa­tion of what each [small] town in New Zealand is like,’’ Mcmillan says.

It also stems from the desire of Mcmillan and Watson, who met at a primary school in Bombay but grew up together in Papakura, to make a show that cast their home suburb in a different light.

‘‘Papakura gets a bad rap,’’ says Watson. ‘‘Type ‘Papakura’ into a news search engine and it’s always, ‘Fight at the local school’.’’

Mcmillan agrees, referencin­g the murders of pizza delivery driver Michael Choy and Countdown security guard Goran Milosavlje­vic as tragedies the suburb has become known for.

‘‘It has a dark past,’’ he admits, but says, ‘‘it also has a charm. There’s a bit of an underbelly there.’’

The pair wanted to make something that showcased the suburb they knew, the one they used to roam around from the age of 8.

They wanted to focus their lens on the people, the community, the local landmarks, the sense of humour, and the belonging that they felt growing up there.

‘‘We are tapping into reality, more than you realise sometimes,’’ says Watson.

Mcmillan: ‘‘We take credit for creating it but it’s all just sitting there. We just put the lights on it, the camera on it.’’

After winning the New Blood competitio­n, the pair used their industry contacts built up over their careers making music videos and ads to pull in favours. They quickly found that Papakura residents were eager to help them get their show made.

Full of local hot spots like the op shop, tattoo parlour, swimming pool and the infamous cowboy themed Stampede Bar, the pair were amazed at how quickly everyone rallied around their show.

‘‘Every location is a genuine place from our background,’’ says Watson, noting that even the homemade sign seen in the show’s pilot that says, ‘‘Haircuts $7/Massage $15’’ is real.

‘‘When we went to the swimming pools, they were like, ‘Come and do it [but] you’ve got to mention a ‘code brown’,’’ says Watson.

‘‘People love it, they love that there’s a show filming there,’’ says Mcmillan. ‘‘If you’re from there, you get it on another level.’’

However, the suburb’s representa­tives on Auckland Council were wary and asked to meet them, worried the show would portray Papakura in a negative way. They soon changed their tune.

‘‘Once I pitched it, it went from apprehensi­on to, ‘Oh my god, my daughter’s an actress – she’d love to be in it’.’’

Fame has affected the show in other ways. Phone numbers they couldn’t afford to blur out in ’Kura’s first season are called by fans.

The house that doubles as the show’s main setting has become a target for selfies and drivebys, with fans yelling out: ‘‘Is Billy-john home?’’

And on the Papakura Facebook group, locals fire up about minute details that they think ’Kura

has got wrong.

‘‘They say things like, ‘There’s no way Paul would keep the fish ’n’ chip shop open that late,’ and, ‘That’s not the exit to the pools – they’re driving the wrong way’. ‘‘They’re not wrong,’’ says Watson, ‘‘but there’s a few logistical things getting in the way of reality.

‘‘You assume people know it’s a drama but maybe it does transcend that a little bit.’’

The show’s popularity has done big things for

’Kura’s stars too. Since its first season aired, Dahnu Graham, who plays Billy-john, has scored roles in a Power Rangers TV series and appeared in local dramas The Gulf and Vegas.

Lionel Wellington, who plays Hotene, can also be seen on The Gulf, as well as Head High, Educators and Shortland Street.

A supersized second season of ’Kura debuts this week, with a bigger cast and budget fuelling six episodes of 20 minutes this time. Pressure? They’re feeling it, but Mcmillan and Watson have bigger dreams for their show.

They want to expand on the series, mention potential spinoff shows, and when Stuff suggests a movie, they nod their heads. ‘‘Six seasons and a movie,’’ jokes Watson.

Underneath the humour, they’re serious. The pair have their eyes set on another much-loved local series that had hyper-local appeal with a broad, fanatic fanbase. ‘‘I want this to be the new

Outrageous Fortune,’’ says Mcmillan, ‘‘the South Auckland version.’’

’Kura’s second season is screening now on TVNZ Ondemand.

‘‘We take credit for creating it but it’s all just sitting there. We just put the lights on it, the camera on it.’’

Vince Mcmillan

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 ??  ?? ’Kura creators Vince Mcmillan and James Watson. Main picture: The series stars Lionel Wellington, left, Scotty Cotter, and Dahnu Graham, right.
’Kura creators Vince Mcmillan and James Watson. Main picture: The series stars Lionel Wellington, left, Scotty Cotter, and Dahnu Graham, right.

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