The Northern Express Herald

Māori and Pacific films heading to Berlin International Film Festival

NZ Herald

Vai, from the producers of Waru, is heading to the Berlin International Film Festival. Photo / supplied

A number of Māori and Pacific films are heading to the Berlin International Film Festival this year to screen in a newly-created category celebrating indigenous storytelling in the South Pacific.

NATIVe – A Journey into Indigenous Cinema will screen 16 short and feature-length films at the Berlin festival, with a mixture of fiction and documentary.

On the line-up is Merata: How Mum Decolonised the Screen, Hepi Mita's documentary about his mother Merata Mita, a pioneer for Māori women in film-making. The documentary premiered at the New Zealand International Film Festival in 2018.

Vai, a new anthology film from the producers of Waru, brings together nine female Pacific film-makers and was filmed in seven countries: Fiji, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Cook Islands, Samoa, Niue and New Zealand.

The film looks at a journey of empowerment through culture via the life of one woman, Vai, played by a different indigenous actress in each country.

For My Father's Kingdom, a documentary by Vea Mafile'o and Jeremiah Tauamiti, follows the life of a Tongan man who dedicates his life and money to his homeland decades after his departure.

The 2017 drama One Thousand Ropes, starring Frankie Adams, will also screen, alongside a number of New Zealand-made shorts. The full programme can be found here.