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Review: The Most Fun You Can Have Dying

Review: <em>The Most Fun You Can Have Dying</em>

In adapting Steven Gannaway’s novel, début director/writer Kirstin Marcon goes down a much less-travelled, much more challenging alternative route…

DVD review: Rest for the Wicked

DVD review: <em>Rest for the Wicked</em>

Rest for the Wicked, which screened in cinemas last year and is now out on DVD, is a refreshing, home grown antidote for those who, like me, still feel clogged with saccharin after enduring the Gilbert and Sullivan-style theatrics of The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

Review: Te Hono ki Aotearoa

Helen Martin reviews Te Hono ki Aotearoa, screening at the World Cinema Showcase…

Review: Mental Notes

Review: <em>Mental Notes</em>

Jim Marbrook spent three years travelling the country, filming former institutions, most of which are now derelict and decaying – Seacliffe, Cherry Farm, Oakley, Ngawhatu, Sunnyside, Porirua, Tokanui and the egregious Lake Alice – in the company of two former psychiatric patients…

Review: Brother Number One

Review: <em>Brother Number One</em>

From conception to direction to cinematography to sound design to musical score to editing to participation of its subjects, this brilliant, artful documentary is the result of the combined efforts of many extremely talented and creative people. It is also, unmistakably, a film to ensure Annie Goldson remains among the roll call of the world’s most consummate documentary filmmakers…

Sione’s 2: Unfinished Business

<em>Sione’s 2: Unfinished Business</em>

The MacGuffin in the popular and successful Sione’s Wedding (2006) turned on the highly unlikely notion that a bunch of troublesome Samoan friends would be permitted to attend an important wedding only if they were each accompanied by a woman with whom they were in a serious relationship…

Two films about Christchurch

Two films about Christchurch

Elderly rest home inhabitants who comforted their carers, then later died from the stress of it all, a grieving family who lost a beloved husband and father, St John ambulance officers who thought the worst had happened after the first earthquake…

Review: Billy T: Te Movie

Review: <em>Billy T: Te Movie</em>

Reviewed by Helen Martin

Both times I saw Billy T: Te Movie the audience stayed on for the credits, savouring every last drop, delighted when the wait was rewarded with one last and very funny skit. It’s easy to see the reason for the wait. The subject matter of Billy T: Te Movie, described by co-producer Toby Parkinson as comedian Billy T James’s “career and his comedy as a reflection of the cultural shifts happening in the country” (Onfilm, August, 2011) is fascinating in itself. Add to that superb crafting in the storytelling…

Mana Waka

<em>Mana Waka</em>

A new print of this wonderful film is screening at this year’s New Zealand International Film Festival in recognition of the late Merata Mita’s work in documenting the heritage of Aotearoa New Zealand…

Film review: Russian Snark

Film review: <em>Russian Snark</em>

By Helen Martin

Having worked as a successful filmmaker in his native Russia, but disillusioned because post-glasnost “art of Soviet is dead”, Latvian Misha (Stephen Papps) comes to New Zealand with his muse, beautiful dancer wife Nadia (Elena Stejko), hoping to make a name for himself with great experimental work focusing on the human form…

Love Birds

<em>Love Birds</em>

In this ‘Kiwi romantic comedy’ a man’s partner leaves him because he’s ‘going nowhere’, has a one-night-stand with the man’s dodgy best friend, then attempts to lure the man back when he shows he has some spunk.

Edge Documentary Film Festival 2011

Edge Documentary Film Festival 2011

While documentary is becoming harder and harder to fund, New Zealand’s documentary makers are hanging in, as this year’s line-up in the Documentary Edge Festival shows.

The 9 NZ films in the programme, all with an interesting story to tell, all fine examples of the craft, are reviewed in alphabetical order below.

The Almighty Johnsons: Episode 2

It’s Episode 2 of this American Pie meets Xena Warrior Princess meets Jackass concoction and Axl still hasn’t figured out that the goddess he needs to hump is living in his flat and making big, wistful eyes at him. You’d think her name, Gaia, would give it away, but while Axl’s a student he doesn’t give the impression he’s well read.

The Almighty Johnsons

The Almighty Johnsons

Axl Johnson (Emmett Skilton) gets more than he bargained for on his 21st birthday as he survives: a pre-party murder attempt by a tattooed chick with muscles, a fast car and a big sword; an earthquake; and the news, delivered by his three older brothers in a forest (Muriwai?), that he is the Norse god Odin, in charge of such important things as souls, wisdom, victory and magic, and has a serious job ahead of him.

Predicament review

<i>Predicament</i> review

With the release of Predicament, all four of Ronald Hugh Morrieson’s novels have now all been adapted for film. Given that the author clearly holds a unique place in New Zealand literature, how did the filmmakers do?

The Box review

<i>The Box</i> review

Taking to the streets of New York with a handicam, a US$25 budget and an idea for a story, Kiwi director Peter Salmon (Letters About the Weather, Fog, Playing Possum, The Creakers), who was visiting, and his actor friend Rajeev Varma, who’d left NZ to live and work there a few months before, came up with The Box, a splendid short drama that was selected to screen in this year’s NZI FF and is doubtless destined for a long life on the festival circuit.

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