The MÃÂoriland Film Festival is a festival of film and creative endeavours that supports and hosts MÃÂori and international Indigenous filmmakers and creatives. It is held annually in the KÃÂpiti Coast community of à Âtaki, in the North Island of New Zealand.
Set up initially to boost the local advancement of the à Âtaki community through connection to the wider world of Indigenous creativity and innovation, it is now an extended festival throughout the Wellington region. The vision of "Embed my native soul in film" describes the festival's intention to become the Native "Sundance Film Festival". The MÃÂoriland Film Festival support new local indigenous filmmakers including having a MÃÂoriland Rangatahi Strategy. This vision is for rangatahi (young people) to be creatively connected across the Indigenous world.
The festival started in 2014. Since then it has grown to be the largest presenter of Indigenous screen content in the Southern Hemisphere, with a year-round programme of events that include industry-focussed events, emerging technology (VR/AR/XR), a lecture series, NATIVE Minds, sound and stage performances, a full visual arts programme and Toi Matarau.
In the early 1920s Australian company Federated Feature Films Ltd proposed a New Zealand branch to produce feature films. A Mr Frank Moore visited on their behalf and suggested à Âtaki as a suitable place to establish a studio because of the townâÂÂs varied scenery and "potent actinic rays" (white light). The New Zealand Moving Picture Company (Maoriland Films) was established. Over six months, the company made three films: "Otaki Gorge Buller Lake", "Otaki Maori Life: Historic Otaki", and "Charlie's Capers" (a comedy starring a Charlie Chaplin impersonator). The dream for à Âtaki to be âÂÂThe Los Angelos (sp) of New Zealand's moving picture industryâ was fleeting due to the lack of support facilities for film in New Zealand at that time.
Libby Hakaraia has been behind the Festival since the beginning bringing a background in broadcasting, TV and film. She is passionate about local and Indigenous storytelling, and using contemporary tools to reach wider audiences. She argues that MÃÂori filmmaking is a way to empower our communities. It is a process that "our culture understands inherently. After all, we are merely lending images to stories we have always sharedâÂÂ. Taika Waititi was one of the first film-makers to present a keynote address at the 2014 festival and is supportive of the principles saying in his Oscar Best Adapted Screenplay acceptance speech for Jojo Rabbit: "I dedicate this to all the indigenous kids in the world who want to do art and dance and write stories; we are the original storytellers and we can make it here, as well". Other presenters in recent years have included Rawiri Paratene and Rena Owen.
Early on the Film Festival connected with other festivals and Indigenous groups including ImagineNative, the largest presenter of Indigenous films in the world, based in Toronto.