The trailer for this feature film
An excerpt from this feature film
The credits for this feature film
Director Rob Sarkies interview
A featurette about the real Aramoana Massacre
Honouring Aramoana featurette
The making of Out of the Blue
Matt Sunderland interview
Karl Urban interview
Paul Glover interview
Tandi Wright interview
Simon Ferry interview
Behind-the-scenes footage from the making of the film
It's a powerful piece of work, made more so by a fierce restraint in its delivery. Its makers have shaped a narrative from the haphazard events of that day — and a little before in scenes showing the solitary and angry Gray approaching breaking point — but without making this run to a conventional thriller timetable.– Russell Baillie, in a five star review of Out of the Blue, The NZ Herald, 5 October 2006
Like Steven Spielberg’s historical epics, the film shows the nastiest incidents from a great distance, or cuts away before a bullet’s impact to show an onlooker’s shocked reaction. The director confronts horror without wallowing in it, a strategy befitting a film that’s not about how people die, but how they live.– Reviewer Matt Zoller Seitz in The New York Times, 19 October 2007
I felt there was a real chance with this story to explore the smaller details of people's lives, in a way that could only be interesting if those lives were about to change forever.– Director Robert Sarkies in an interview for website Fangoria, 2006
I've just had my hips done . . . hang on, it might take me a bit.– Helen Dickson (Lois Lawn) to Chris (Bruce Phillips), after Bruce has been shot
I find it very hopeful material in the end because what it's about is ... I'm going to cry ... is about extremely ordinary people coping in an extraordinary situation. And I find that really it gives me heart because I see the way that they coped. And they did cope extraordinarily. And it makes me think, well, maybe that's how I'd cope.– Actor Tandi Wright (who played Julie Anne Bryson) in the behind-the-scenes featurette
People were understandably nervous about the fact that a film was being made about that event because everyone, I think, had this image of the worst version of the film that could be made about it. The great thing for me personally is that I knew that we weren't making that, so I was able to stand up for the film from the start and be very genuine about my intent and not feel like I was bullshitting anyone. I also knew that when the film came out, they would see that, and that's exactly what happened.– Director Robert Sarkies in an interview with NZ On Screen in 2012
It's certainly not my job to judge him in any way, and I certainly came out of the whole process with a lot of empathy for him.– Actor Matthew Sunderland on playing David Gray, quoted in the making of featurette
[Robert] Sarkies’ film faced some backlash in pre-production — notably from Chiquita Holden, whose sister, father, and father’s partner were all killed in the Aramoana attack. Holden questioned the filmmakers’ right to tell her family’s story; but, Sarkies says, her stance changed over time. She ended up working closely with the production, and was one of the community representatives who read the script before production.– RNZ show The Detail, 2021
Director Robert Sarkies grew up near the town and radiates a warmness around its community: his film opens with a swell of tension as the town goes about its business in the hours before the killing, making for unbearably intimate viewing.– Guardian reviewer Cath Clarke in a three star review, 14 March 2008
...an inspiring film on a bleak subject, an account of everyday people who struggle to protect their loved ones from horror while processing and judging their own reactions to it.– New York Times reviewer Matt Zoller Seitz, 19 October 2007
The man said the ambulance is on its way . . . and the police are on their way too, so you'll soon be out of it.– Helen Dickson (Lois Lawn) returns to the injured Chris Cole (Bruce Phillips)
Out of the Blue Quotes I played that scene like the little boy was alive, still in my arms ... That's the only way I could do it.– Actor Paul Glover on the police car scene in Out of the Blue, in his video interview (see video player descriptions)
[Cinematographer] Greig [Fraser] and I wanted to infuse the world of Aramoana with life. So anytime you see kids running about, or families — and there's a lot of that in the film — the camera's always handheld and energetic . . . . The camera is living along with the characters. Whenever you see David Gray, by contrast, the camera is usually static; it's completely still. The only time we ever put the camera on a tripod was when we were shooting David Gray.– Director Robert Sarkies, quoted in the making of featurette
For director Sarkies, the 36-day shoot was at times gruelling as he contended with unpredictable weather, a large cast and a very tight schedule.– NZ Film issue 80, September 2006, page 4
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