Feature films

What a line-up! This year at Misty Flicks, you’ve got the opportunity to see FIVE feature films.

Stranded Pearl

Directed by Ken Khan

Starring Aleisha Rose, Kristy Wright, Aunanda Naaido, Robert Reitano, Ray Woolf, Jagdish Punja, Richard Halpin, Aleisha Rose, Rawiri Paratene

A light-hearted romantic action adventure film filled with drama, action and comedy at every turn, as a woman learns that her life is half lived, after meeting a reclusive man who has closed himself off from the world to hide from the pain of his past.

Watch the trailer here

Suburban Fury

Directed by Robinson Devor

Suburban Fury explores the political, cultural and psychological influences on Sara Jane Moore, a 45-year-old divorced accountant and mother, who attempted to assassinate US President Gerald Ford with a handgun outside San Francisco’s St. Francis Hotel on September 22, 1975.

Sara Jane Moore lived the good life in a wealthy, deeply conservative San Francisco suburb from 1970 -1975. She remained largely isolated while war and social upheaval burned around her. Only after the kidnapping of Patty Hearst — who was the daughter of multimillionaire newspaper publisher Randolph Hearst (and a social acquaintance of Moore) — were her blinders ripped off. Moore became “woke” in a period of great social volatility — an era that directly foreshadowed MAGA, Black Lives Matter, MeToo, and the recent attempts to overthrow the US government — but not before she became an FBI informant who infiltrated (and later converted to) far-left political groups. In the end, Moore's struggle to integrate the forces of conservatism and revolution were so intense that a bullet flew within inches of an American president.

Interweaving rarely seen archival footage with an imaginatively staged dialogue between Sara Jane Moore, the informant, and Bert Worthington, her FBI control agent, Suburban Fury features exclusive access to Moore, who served 32 years of a life sentence, as she recounts how she went from a conservative suburban housewife to an FBI informant to a radicalized would-be assassin. A beguiling storyteller — confrontational, surprisingly vulnerable and often seemingly unreliable — Moore’s true nature, as well as the validity of political violence, are ultimately left up to the mind and heart of the viewer.

The Tavern

Directed by Matt Hicks, Brad Jackson

Starring Josh McKenzie, Matt Hicks, Tom Easden, Ryan Jackson, Dan Sage, Stuart Shacklock, Narina Riddle, Kylah Carree, Phill Palmer, Mick Innes, Andrew Lyall, Ben Lummis

Matt is a 29 year old slacker that works part time at his best friend’s famous older brother’s Cambridge Laundromat. Despite not being in his dream job Matt has a seemingly good life. He has a lovely long-term girlfriend Kelly (whose dad Phil conveniently owns the tavern), a tight knit group of mates, and a local tavern which keeps him entertained.

The Tavern is a run down, eye-sore frequented by few customers with only the annual stripper night drawing a crowd. When Matt and his mates enquire about the date of the stripper night, Phil tells them that it won’t be happening this year. He’s set to sell the pub to slick Ponsonby property developer Vick Preston who plans on turning it into an upscale food court called IFD (International Food District).

After a few beers Matt and his mates hatch a plan to buy the pub (with the blessing of Phil who ‘gives them a week’) with a series of bizarre fundraising ideas that test the strength of their relationships.

Watch the trailer here

The Reach

Directed by: Matty Thomas Taylor

The year she turns ninety-five, Stella starts to see ghosts of her dead loved ones, including her late husband Bill. They tell her to join them in crossing the Reach, an ice bridge that forms over the ocean between her home of Koati Island and the mainland during the winter.

Includes BEYOND THE REACH: a short documentary that tracks the origins of the project and the last year of production.

The Red Admiral

Directed by: Josh Hamblin

Josh Hamblin is an aspiring filmmaker based in Waikato, New Zealand. The Red Admiral is his first independent feature film. Think Alice in Wonderland, in the New Zealand bush.

A blue-collar worker falls into a magical world and finds himself embroiled in a battle with a violent butterfly.

 

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