Anthology feature Kāinga explores what the concept of 'home' ('kāinga' in te reo) means to Asian-Kiwi families in Aotearoa. The writers and directors are Māori-Chinese, Chinese, Filipino, Indian, Iranian, Japanese, Korean, Malaysian, Myanma and Tamil Eelam. The film is split into eight ten-minute shorts and spans half a century. Each story is set in the same suburban house, and explores a different immigrant experience of New Zealand. Kāinga follows on from acclaimed anthology films Waru and the Pacific-spanning Vai. It is the first feature film to be made available in full on the Radio New Zealand website.
I often say inside me I have the coloniser, the indigenous and the settler and I have lived with that my whole life, trying to 'be at home' but feeling unsettled, all these kind of tensions and understandings about place that are inside me and I feel like that was something that my grandparents also experienced and my Mum's generation as well.– Writer Mei-Lin Te Puea Hansen on her mixed Chinese and Māori whakapapa feeding into her story in drama Kainga, RNZ, 20 August 2023
Made with development support from the NZ Film Commission and funding from NZ On Air
Interview with some of the crew and cast, Radio New Zealand, August 2023
Interview with directors Asuka Sylvie & Julie Zhu, WIFT NZ website, July 2022
Interview with composer Lauren King, Radio New Zealand, August 2023
Photos from Kāinga's world premiere, NZ International Film Festival website, August 2022
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