Screened as part of NZIFF 2018

Paul Callaghan: Dancing with Atoms 2018

Directed by Shirley Horrocks Aotearoa

Shirley Horrocks, cine-biographer of many notable New Zealand artists, delivers an invaluable survey of the work and legacy of one of our most exceptional scientists and public figures.

103 minutes DCP

Rent

Director/Producer/ Screenplay

Photography

Craig Wright

Editor

Steven Mountjoy

Sound

Tony Parkinson

Research

Roger Horrocks
,
Shirley Horrocks

Production Manager

Lani-rain Feltham

Cartoons

Dylan Horrocks

Sound mix

Dick Reade

With

Jim Callaghan
,
Shaun Hendy
,
Kim Hill
,
Dr Andrew Coy
,
Dr Robin Dykstra
,
Dylan Horrocks
,
Bill Manhire
,
Dr Petrik Galvosas

Sir Paul Callaghan, physicist, science communicator, entrepreneur and 2011 New Zealander of the year, died in 2012, of cancer, when he was in his prime. As well as doing research into nuclear magnetic resonance, he was writing books, giving public lectures and sharing his vision of a prosperous and predator-free New Zealand – “a place,” he said, “where talent wants to live.”

Shirley Horrocks, who met Callaghan while making her 2012 film Venus: A Quest, focuses here on his life in science. Through big brother Jim, classmates, colleagues and Callaghan himself – in a series of interviews filmed in 2010 – we journey from Callaghan’s childhood in Whanganui, to his work at Massey University, then to Victoria University of Wellington and the MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology. There are dramatisations of schoolboy high jinks and footage from Callaghan’s trips to Antarctica.

Callaghan’s life, and the film, takes a turn after his move to Wellington, where he applied himself beyond physics to art–science collaborations, economics and conservation. “Suddenly it became OK for scientists to work with artists,” says physicist Shaun Hendy about his former mentor. Poet Bill Manhire, cartoonist Dylan Horrocks, broadcaster Kim Hill and Weta Workshop’s Richard Taylor are among those who describe how Callaghan expanded the conversation between science and wider society and rallied people to his causes, many of which continue after his death.

Anyone who knew Paul, or was affected by his work, will want to see this tribute. — Rebecca Priestley