'Muru': A hard-hitting M膩ori film shakes Aotearoa New Zealand

October 20, 2022
Issue 
Renowned M膩ori militant, Tame Iti, playing himself in the hard-hitting film Muru
Renowned M膩ori militant, Tame Iti, playing himself in the hard-hitting film Muru. Photo supplied.

Muru
Directed by Tearepa Kahi
Starring Tame Iti, Cliff Curtis, Jay Ryan, Manu Bennett
In M膩ori with English sub-titles
In cinemas

Muru is presented as a 鈥渞esponse鈥 to real events. It is not an exact replica, but communicates the sensations of a community under violent, racist attack.

As lead actor Tame Iti and writer/director Tearepa Kahi explained to 91自拍论坛, the R奴膩toki valley T奴hoe hap奴 community was attacked by government forces in 1916 and again by anti-terrorism police in 2007. The film dramatises the 2007 events but contextualises it within the earlier assault.

Muru is an exciting roller coaster ride that takes the audience through the M膩ori experience and unflinchingly exposes racism.

鈥淭he point of the film,鈥 Kahi said, 鈥渋s to ensure the protection of M膩ori communities and the T奴hoe community against this event ever happening again. Two times is too many. That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 a response, rather than a recreation鈥.

The film opens up broader issues that Kahi and Iti shared with GL.

The film shows the 2007 raid by hundreds of members of the Armed Offenders Squad and Special Tactics Group. The police were convinced that well-known activist, Tame Iti (who plays himself in the film) was operating paramilitary training camps in the mountains around R奴膩toki.

Having convinced themselves that evil was afoot, everything done by community members was fitted into the narrative. It was racist projection.

Iti was targeted because he was a renowned warrior for the M膩ori cause and a veteran of both the anti-Vietnam War and anti-Apartheid movements, which included some fierce street battles in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Muru shows the peaceable valley life being lived while the raid is being hatched in secret. In the whole film there are only a couple of sentences spoken in English.

The viewer is taken through the mutually-supporting, honour-based reciprocal relationships holding the community together. These complex ties are indecipherable for the cops spying with microphones, telephone tapping and video surveillance.

Local community police sergeant, "Taffy" Tawharau (Cliff Curtis), drives the school bus and takes the local Aunties to their regular health check-ups.

When he has to intervene to set a delinquent teenager back on the straight-and-narrow, he listens to the wisdom of community elders before taking action. The depiction of the role of the community police in R奴膩toki was accurate, Iti told GL.

Just as happened in the 2007 raid, in Muru, Taffy is kept in the dark about the raid and the drama centres around his efforts to stop the evolving disaster. Racist preconceptions compound official failures, leading to an attempted cover-up culminating in a fierce struggle to control the violence.

Iti told GL that Muru has had huge impact. 鈥淭he street is talking,鈥 he said. 鈥淓motionally, people are talking freely.鈥

鈥淧eople I don鈥檛 even know, on the street, they come and reach out to me. All kinds of people, they cry in front of me. I don鈥檛 know how many times I鈥檝e had to hug people.鈥

Both Iti and Kahi believe that New Zealand is ready for change. For a start the nation is ready to change its name to Aotearoa.

Kahi explained that the government at one point 鈥渞ebranded鈥 the country as 鈥淢iddle Earth鈥 after the country was used as the picturesque backdrop for the Peter Jackson聽Lord of the Rings films.

鈥淭he Middle Earthing of New Zealand was a commercial, touristic, exploitation exercise. The unanchoring of that means that there is a much bigger question to ask now: who are we?鈥

鈥淎otearoa speaks and Aotearoa is what we are ready for.鈥

[Watch the trailer for Muru .]

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