Promotional stills from Once Were Warriors (1995), directed by Lee Tamahori based on the novel by Alan Duff, personal collection.
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Promotional stills from Once Were Warriors (1995), directed by Lee Tamahori based on the novel by Alan Duff, personal collection.
Once Were Warriors was screened at the Venice Film Festival on 2 September 1994, after playing in 4 theatres in New Zealand in May (it was released in the US in March 1995.
Riwia Brown adapted Alan Duff's 1990 debut novel for the screen and Lee Tamahori directed (in his feature debut).
Once Were Warriors was a commercial and critical success, and is often considered to be the best New Zealand film of all time.
||September BPC: Just One Word|| 29. Recap. Hey so fun fact, y’all, but when you catch the Sads a couple weeks into the month and Cannot Do Anything Else, it’s possible to read a metric fuckton in efforts to escape from your own head. This is also how you end up watching the entirety of Stranger Things in a twenty-four hour period. I do not recommend the process for most people, but the books were good and so was the show! If anyone wants to freak out about Sleeping Giants or my daughters Nancy or Eleven, hit me up.
Once Were Warriors
Once Were Warriors Written by Livvy O'Brien "The film’s unflinching portrayal of violence and cultural disintegration, coupled with its powerful performances, delivers a haunting and moving narrative. Its exploration of personal and collective..."
Directed by: Lee TamahoriDistributed by: Footprint Films Written by Livvy O’Brien 95/100 As the credits began to roll, I sat in silence, ruminating on the film I had just watched. Once Were Warriors is a profoundly powerful and confronting film that delves deep into the struggles and resilience of a Māori family. It is a brutal but essential watch, and unfortunately, it is a reality for many…
Over the last month I've had the chance to attend Booktown and hear two NZ authors talk. First up was Alan Duff most famously known for Once Were Warriors. Alan makes no bones about his refusal to toe the line and play nice. And its hard not to see how he riled up the literary circle with his bluntness. Though one of my colleagues took it as tongue in cheek, honestly he came across as just a cranky old man a wee bit full of himself. By the time he declared himself the absolute best writer NZ has ever produced we were kind of done. On the other hand Elizabeth Knox was a delight! I have only read The Vintner's Luck series and did not love it. So I was pleasantly surprised to find she was warm, engaging, thoughtful and nerdy. She easily covered about 20 different topics in her conversation and Q and A in a witty, humble manner. Simply the kind of person you just want to sit and continue chatting with over a few cups of tea. Now I need to give her books another go!
How Not To Write About Disability
This morning at work they had this article from the herald printed out. And...it really has to be read to be believed because it is just this perfect textbook example of how you shouldn’t approach disability. There is just SO MUCH wrong with this that I have to go through it bit by bit pointing out exactly what’s wrong with it and how egregiously wrong it is.
Like it starts like:
Your latte with soya not as perfect as yesterday's? Are your suburb's capital gains at a lower percentage than what you think is an inferior suburb?
Well, sit at an outside bar or cafe table and observe your fellow First Worlders and be glad.
The guy in his mid-20s in a wheelchair - you wonder was it a car crash, a rugby tackle or a collapsed scrum? How does he look at the future when his every dream is crushed? Think he cares about your coffee quality, how much unearned money you made from your house? He's just trying to stay sane.
Maybe he was born with a disability? Maybe he’s always used a wheelchair? Maybe he’s cool with it?
The overweight, unattractive 19-year-old girl buddies? What are their thoughts if not downright permanently miserable?
They want a partner, not a physical copy of each other. Eating is their comfort. Like talking and laughing loudly is.
But at home alone the mask falls off and misery takes over, along with the packets of never-satisfying sugary treats. She didn't ask to be unattractive. She can't help nature's cruel partner-selection process. Her life effectively stopped from week one of school, experiencing the cruelty of other kids.
And that cloud formation had changed shape - But only if you're looking for that sorta thing.
last line of Once Were Warriors by Alan Duff
Once Were Warriors