Bunjil Place

Māoriland Mini Film Festival

Bunjil Place is proud to partner with the Māoriland Film Festival and Asia Topa to present two evenings of Pasifika live performance and indigenous films from across the globe.

Screenings

Event Details

Category

Screenings

Event Starts

Mar 1, 2025 19:00

Event Ends

Mar 2, 2025 17:10

Add to Calendar 03/01/2025 12:00 AM 03/02/2025 12:00 AM Australia/Melbourne Māoriland Mini Film Festival Bunjil Place is proud to partner with the Māoriland Film Festival and Asia Topa to present two evenings of Pasifika live performance and indigenous films from across the globe.
Venue

Bunjil Place

Location

2 Patrick Northeast Drive

Māoriland is celebrated for its manaakitanga and community spirit. Presented on the Outdoor Screen at Bunjil Place this cinematic experience under the stars not to be missed.

Tickets are just $10 and include a complimentary beverage on arrival.

*Note the event will be moved indoors if there is bad weather.

Tickets: $10 per night 

Saturday 1 March, 7.00 pm

Uproar 

 

Sunday 2 March, 3.00pm

Māoriland Short Films

 

Uproar (M),

Paul Middleditch, Hamish Bennett, 2023, 110 minutes

UPROAR is a story about connection and finding your place in the world. It is the story of 17-year-old Josh Waaka (played by Julian Dennison). Set in Dunedin in 1981, a rugby-obsessed country is divided over the arrival of the South African Springboks team, sparking nationwide protests. Under pressure from home and school to conform, Josh, who has never felt like he fits in anywhere, is inspired by the protests to find his own voice. 

 

Short Film Program

Ta’i

Mii Taokia, 2023, 6 minutes

Ta’i lives in a world that is both beautiful and dangerous. The Pacific islands that were once teeming with life are now being destroyed by the island eaters. These machines are massive, towering beasts that consume everything in their path, leaving nothing but barren wasteland in their wake. The people who once lived on these islands are now scattered, living in small communities and constantly on the move to avoid the island eaters.

Tuia Nga Here

Heriata Erana Rurehe, 2023, 12 minutes,

16-year-old Hiwa returns to her rural home from boarding school to discover her grandfather is terminally ill and unable to continue his life work of land conservation. Coming to terms with the shifting dynamic in her family Hiwa notes that younger brother Potiki has inherited their grandfather’s affinity for the environment. When Potiki goes missing while in search of a cure for their grandfather, they both realize their role as the next generation of guardians for the land and their family.

Telesia 2 the world

Telesia Ruth Solomon Tanoai, 2023, 20 minutes

Telesia has been learning Chinese to advocate for her people on climate change issues faced in the Pacific. Follow her journey to China to represent NZ at the 2023 International Chinese Bridge Speech Competition amongst 110 students from around the world.

Marahoro

Sofía Rodríguez Pizero, 2023, 16 minutes

“Marahoro” is the amusing and heartwarming coming of age story of 15-year-old Marahoro’s typical summer routine in his island home, Rapa Nui. Having a rough time balancing his father’s wishes for him to become a rapa nui folk artist and his own calling from the voices of the sea, the spirited young boy finds the strength in an ancient rapa nui holler to challenge his father’s harshness, showing him that his son can find his own place in the world and honor his culture in his own way, surfing the perfect ocean waves of Rapa Nui.

Mahika Kai

Kieran Ampetyane Satour, 2023, 10 minutes

Against the astonishing terrain of Wanaka — embracing wild vast lakes, glaciers and mountains and dotted with widely trodden resorts — the film follows a family of Kai Tahu cultural conservators and knowledge-holders on their mission to rehabilitate a degenerating landscape by regenerating their traditional cultural practices of mahika kai (food gathering places). In a story of active tautiakitaka (guardianship), Paulette Tamati Elliffe, Komene Cassidy, and their tamariki. Tumai Cassidy draws on the wisdom of their ancestors to restore both traditional Maori food sources like tuna (eel) or the Weka (bird) and the language intrinsic to these practices. In this journey, they overcome the destructive rupture of nature from culture, past from present, and language from the landscape that has accelerated the parallel disconnection from and decline of their whenua (land). These regenerative practices are extensions of a deep connection to and understanding of place. In caring for Country, we strengthen both the landscapes and ourselves: healthy water systems, nutrient-rich soil, thriving animals and plants all contribute to the health and well-being of our communities — creating a resilient, thriving future for all.

Kutcha’s Koorioke – Birdz

John Harvey, 2022, 6 minutes

Kutcha takes Birdz, and Uncle Jack to meet up with Fred Leone at the Corroboree Tree for a powerhouse performance of ARIA award winning song ‘Bagi-la-m Bargan’, a song from a young warrior’s perspective as he prepares to defend his country.

“Patiently waiting for someone I ain’t never seen before They say he’s a captain of men, but he don’t believe in our lore. From the land of the white skin He’s self-righteous, a murder without license With the spear, I’m the nicest Thinkin’ that I might just wait ‘til night hits”

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