Three New Zealand Films to Screen at Toronto International Film Festival
Two New Zealand feature films and one short film have been selected to screen at the 2017 Toronto International Film
Festival (TiFF). Nic Gorman’s debut feature, Human Traces and anthology film, Waru, written and directed by nine Māori women, will have their premieres in the Discovery section of the festival. Short
film, Waiting, written by Samuel Kamu and directed by Amberley Jo Aumua will screen in the festival’s Short Cuts section.
“We are extremely pleased that such distinctive films have been selected to screen in Toronto this year,” says NZFC CEO
Dave Gibson. “Nic Gorman’s debut feature is a skillfully crafted thriller set in a place few people ever see. And with Waru, there has not been a narrative feature film helmed by a Māori woman since Merata Mita’s Mauri in 1988. Having a film made by nine wahine Māori screening in Toronto feels like a positive step toward addressing this
with the opportunities the festival can provide for these filmmakers.”
Waru, produced by Kerry Warkia and Kiel McNaughton, is a feature film made up of eight 10-minute short films around the
tangi (funeral) of a small boy named Waru who died at the hands of his caregiver. Each vignette is written and directed
by Māori women filmmakers, writer/ directors Briar Grace-Smith, Casey Kaa, Ainsley Gardiner, Katie Wolfe, Renae Maihi,
Chelsea Cohen and Paula Jones, director Awanui Simich-Pene and writer Josephine Stewart-Te Whiu. All the filmmakers,
except for Ainsley Gardiner who is in production, will be attending TiFF
Each of the eight vignettes was shot in a single day and tell their stories in a single, continuous shot in real time.
Waru was made with investment from Te Māngai Pāho, NZ On Air, Māori Television and the New Zealand Film Commission, and will
be released in New Zealand by Vendetta Films.
Written and directed by Nic Gorman and produced by Nadia Maxwell, Human Traces is a psychological thriller, told from three points of view, and set on a remote, sub-Antarctic island. The film stars
Sophie Henderson (Outrageous Fortune, Fantail, The Most Fun You Can Have Dying), Mark Mitchinson (The Hobbit, Siege, Bloodlines) and Vinnie Bennett (Fantail, Ghost in the Shell, Beyond the Known World). Mark Mitchinson and Vinnie Bennett will be in Toronto, with Vinnie an official TiFF 2017 Rising Star, and one of the
next generation of actors poised for international success.
Human Traces will be released in New Zealand and Australia by eOne Films. International sales will be handled by Clay Epstein at
Film Mode Entertainment with publicity by Lon Haber Inc. Human Traces was made with investment from the New Zealand Film Commission and Random Films.
Waiting, written by Samuel Kamu and directed by Amberly Jo Aumua, was made as a final project for Aumua’s bachelor of
performance and screen arts degree at Auckland’s Unitech. Set in South Auckland, the 12-minute film uses the brotherhood
and friendship of two unrelated boys to shine a light on the hunger for family connections experienced by youngsters
within Maori and Pacific communities. Amberly Jo Aumua will attend Toronto to support the screenings of her short film.
The Toronto International Film Festival takes place annually in September and is one of the world’s leading public film
festivals. It is universally regarded as an ideal platform for filmmakers to launch their careers and to premiere their
new work. In 2017, TiFF runs 7-17 September.
ENDS