V přímořské vesničce Maormi odpradávna přežívá tradice volby Pána Velryb. Každá generace si volí svého vůdce, kterým se může stát pouze muž. Hlava komunity Koro, je zklamaný narozením vnučky. Začne hledat svého nástupce mezi cizími, protože vlastní krev ho zradila. Malá Pai je pro něj neštěstím. Když na pláži uváznou velryby, Koro je přesvědčený, že to znamená konec existence jeho kmene. Pouze do doby, dokud se jeden člověk nerozhodne obětovat, aby zachránil ostatní...
Film líčí osudy typické maorské dělnické rodiny s nezaměstnaným otcem, násilníkem a pijanem, a kdysi krásnou matkou neúspěšně usilující o štěstí svých dětí.
The Pa Boys is an energetic, uplifting road movie capturing the best of New Zealand's culture, beauty, talent and music, whilst exploring themes of identity, friendship and discovering your roots.
When an academic unearths a forgotten history, residents of the small township of Pukekohe, including kaumātua who have never told their personal stories before, confront its deep and dark racist past.
The film told the Māori legend of Hinemoa and Tutanekai. It is the first dramatic feature film produced in New Zealand.
Aroha depicts a young Māori chief's daughter who embraces the modernity of the Pākehā world (attending university in Wellington) while confronting her place with her own people (Te Arawa) and traditions at home. The NFU-produced dramatisation is didactic but largely sensitive in making Aroha's story represent contemporary Māori dilemmas (noted anthropologist Ernest Beaglehole was the cultural advisor). Watch out for some musical treats, including an instrumental version of classic Kiwi song, 'Blue Smoke' and a performance of the action song 'Me He Manu Rere'.
This 1972 documentary explores the world of a dying generation of Māori female elders or kuia — “the last of the Māori women with tattooed chins”. Narrator Selwyn Muru extols the place of the kuia in Māori culture, and of wahine tā moko. Among those on screen are 105-year old Ngahuia Hona, who cooks in hot pools, rolls a cigarette, and eats with whānau, and “the oldest Māori” Nga Kahikatea Wirihana, who remembers the Battle of Ōrākau during the land wars, and has outlived four husbands. Into Antiquity was an early documentary from veteran Wayne Tourell.