
Cousins follows a Māori family over more than half a century
COUSINS (Ainsley Gardiner & Briar Grace-Smith, 2021)
Angelika Film Center
18 West Houston St.
Opens Friday, July 2
www.angelikafilmcenter.com
www.arraynow.com/cousins
The Māori film Cousins is a heart-wrenching story of an indigenous family in New Zealand (Aotearoa) torn apart by colonialism and bigotry as they try to hold on to their traditions. The film, directed by the award-winning Māori duo Ainsley Gardiner and Briar Grace-Smith, opens in the mid-twentieth century with Mata (Te Raukura Gray) in green, Makareta (Mihi Te Rauhi Daniels) in blue, and Missy (Keyahne Patrick-Williams) in red playing on a lush landscape of rolling hills and a twisting river. “Three cousins,” a narrator says in Māori. “Their paths woven across time. Their lives separate. Their lives converge. They separate again. This is how it must be.”
The scene cuts to the modern day, as Mata (Tanea Heke), walking down a city street, stops at a corner, waits for the light to turn green, slowly removes her shoes while reciting a nursery rhyme in her head, and begins to cross only when the red walk sign starts flashing, as if she is inviting danger. Wandering through an outdoor market, she appears to be homeless and broke. Meanwhile, Markareta (Grace-Smith, who also wrote the screenplay) and Missy (Rachel House) are fighting the government’s attempts to take some of their land — and wondering where Mata is. Sent to an orphanage by her father (Jack Sergent), Mata was “adopted” by a white New Zealander, Mrs. Parkinson (Sylvia Rands), who changed her name to May Parker and used her as a servant, keeping her away from her family, who have been searching for her for fifty years.
Gardiner and Grace-Smith go back and forth between three central time periods, following the cousins as children, young adults (with Ana Scotney as Mata, Tioreore Melbourne as Markareta, and Hariata Moriarty as Missy), and in the present as they try to maintain their heritage in a world that wants to pass them by. Awarded the 2021 People’s Choice for Best Feature Drama at the Māoriland Film Festival in New Zealand, Cousins, adapted from the 1992 novel by Patricia Grace, is infused with many elements of the Māori way of life, including whakapapa (unbreakable genealogical links), kaupapa (philosophy), whānau (family), kaitiaki (guardianship of the land), Te Ao Māori (world view), whenua (land), and Tikanga Māori (cultural practice), treating them with honesty and respect, not othering them. It was shot in Te Waiiti Marae on Lake Rotoiti with the guidance of Muriwai Ihakara, who plays Wi, and the local Ngāti Hinekura and Ngāti Pikiao people, many of whom appear in small roles.
Raymond Edwards’s cinematography is gentle and beautiful, accompanied by composer Warren Maxwell’s subtly emotional score. The nine actresses who portray the three cousins are exceptional, but Gray, Scotney, and Heke stand out as Mata, who rarely speaks, overwhelmed by her childhood trauma; Heke’s eyes are particularly haunting. By the end of the film, which runs July 2–9 at the Angelika, you’ll feel like you’re part of the family, feeling their pain and love as tears well up.