Screened as part of NZIFF 2017

Waru 2017

Directed by Briar Grace-Smith, Casey Kaa, Ainsley Gardiner, Katie Wolfe, Chelsea Cohen, Renae Maihi, Paula Jones, Awanui Simich-Pene Aotearoa

Eight Māori female directors have each contributed a sequence to this powerful and challenging feature which unfolds around the tangi of a small boy who died at the hands of his caregiver.

88 minutes DCP

Rent

Producers

Kerry Warkia
,
Kiel McNaughton

Screenplay

Briar Grace-Smith
,
Casey Kaa
,
Ainsley Gardiner
,
Katie Wolfe
,
Chelsea Cohen
,
Renae Maihi
,
Paula Jones
,
Josephine Stewart-Te Whiu

Photography

Drew Sturge

Production designer

Riria Lee

Costume designer

Lindah Lepou

With

Tanea Heke (Charm)
,
Roimata Fox (Anahera)
,
Ngapaki Moetara (Mihi)
,
Awhina-Rose Ashby (Em)
,
Maria Walker (Kiritapu)
,
Kararaina Rangihau (Ranui)
,
Merehaka Maaka (Hinga)
,
Acacia Hapi (Mere)
,
Antonio Te Maioha (Tapu)
,
Miriama McDowell (Bash)
,
Amber Curreen (Titty)

World Premiere

The directors will be in attendance for a Q+A following both screenings.

A sisterhood of Māori female directors bravely share their insights into the complexity of child abuse, in a sequence of eight short films that seamlessly become one. At the centre of their stories is Waru, a boy killed at the hands of a caregiver. His tangi, set on a small rural marae, is the centrepiece of the film, but there is an underlying disturbance of heavy themes touching on culture, custom and shame.

We see a single death through the differing lenses of the extended family, community, and in one sharp sequence, national media too. Waru weaves multiple reactions and offers a glimpse into the events that ensue upon the killing of a child and the conflict created among loved ones. 

As Waru’s grandmothers, Kararaina Rangihau and Merehake Maaka deliver electrifying performances, demonstrating their skill in the art of karanga. As their wailing and laments call on their ancestors to safely take their mokopuna, a challenge for his body unfolds.

Māori humour isn’t absent, and neither are the subtexts within the banter, leaving me to wonder if our ability to laugh in times of sorrow is a cloak to mask our pain. Antonio Te Maioha and Miriama McDowell are powerful in challenging roles, which left me questioning if I would have the same courage to intervene.

The subject could hardly be heavier, but this is a hugely important film. Unless we are willing to be tested, we have no chance of reducing our shameful child abuse rate here in Aotearoa. It’s a film everyone in the family should see and talk about. — Mihingarangi Forbes, Māori Issues Correspondent, RNZ/The Hui