The Land Has Eyes | |
Director: | Vilsoni Hereniko |
Producer: | Jeannette Paulson Hereniko Corey Tong Vilsoni Hereniko |
Starring: | Sapeta Taito Rena Owen |
Cinematography: | Paul Atkins |
Editing: | Jonathan Woodford-Robinson |
Music: | Clive Cockburn Audy Kimura |
Distributor: | PBS other international |
Runtime: | 87 minutes |
Country: | Fiji |
Language: | Rotuman English |
The Land Has Eyes (Rotuman: Pear ta ma ʻon maf) is a 2004 Rotuman film written and directed by Vilsoni Hereniko. It is the first ever (and so far only) feature film from Rotuma.[1]
The main character, Viki (Sapeta Taito), is a young Rotuman woman shamed as the daughter of a man wrongly accused of being a thief. She finds inspiration in a mysterious "Warrior Woman" (Rena Owen) from her people's legends.[2] [3]
The film was shot on Rotuma, homeland of director Vilsoni Hereniko.[4] Lead actress Sapeta Taito is Rotuman, and The Land Has Eyes is her first film appearance.[5] She had, in fact, never seen a film before acting in this one.[6] Rena Owen is best known for playing the lead female role in Once Were Warriors. The film also stars John Fatiaki as a corrupt court official.
The Land Has Eyes was presented at the Sundance Film Festival in 2004, as well as a number of other international film festivals.[7] It was Fiji's official submission to the 2006 Academy Awards.[3]
The Star Bulletin (Hawaii) praised the film, "made on a shoestring budget".[8] The Honolulu Advertiser noted that it "received an enthusiastic reception from the audience" at the Sundance Festival.[9] A reviewer for the Advertiser explained that "All but two cast members were recruited from Rotuma. Most had never seen a movie before, much less acted in one. When the film was finished, Hereniko brought it back to Rotuma, borrowed a sheet from the hospital to use as a screen, and showed it eight times around the island." The reviewer recommended the film, and concluded:
"Go see this movie if you have ever cringed over an outsider's misinterpretation of island culture. Go see this movie if you have ever cried over the systemic injustice visited upon poor, honest families. Go see this movie if your heart needs to hear that justice can prevail and that a force greater than all of us is watching and keeping score. Go see this movie if you want to be reminded that hard work leads to success. Go see this movie."[10]
A reviewer from the Seattle Weekly wrote:
"The film is weak in conventional narrative and production values. [...] Yet that very authenticity is what gives Land its power. Hereniko captures the everyday texture of Polynesian life: the clan connections that make nobody want to rock the boat [...], the tension between pagan and Christian beliefs, the power of ancient stories and rituals. [...] Land reminds us of the power of film to take us to another world."[6]
The Land Has Eyes received the "Best Overall Entry" award at the 2005 Wairoa Maori Film Festival, and the "Best Dramatic Feature" award at the 2004 ImagineNATIVE Film and Media Arts Festival.[11]