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WAIHEKE COLLECTIVE FILM FESTIVAL

RANGINUI: Call of the Ice

Host: PutiPuti Productions, with Professor Rangi Mamatua
Māori astronomer Rangi Matamua and language expert Mataia Keepa travel into Antarctica at the height of winter, braving -50°C temperatures and months of darkness to watch the ice and sky. Their journey weaves science and mātauranga Māori together, honouring a grandfather’s promise and reading a rarely seen world in a new way.

Director

Julia Sartorio

CAST

Rangi Matamua • Mataia Keepa

RATING

VA
E

Documentary content

RUNTIME

1h 20m

COUNTRY

Aotearoa/NZ

GENRE

Documentary, Adventure, Science, Environment

LANGUAGE

English, Te Reo Māori

VIEW SESSIONS
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BOOK SEATS FOR

RANGINUI: Call of the Ice

Mon 20 Jul 7:30pm ncp

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BOOK SEATS

All tickets for this event must be prepaid online using the link above.
No phone bookings

ncp - no complimentary passes

cap - captioned for hard of hearing

RANGINUI: Call of the Ice

WATCH TRAILER

FILM NOTES

A rare, immersive journey to Antarctica’s winter darkness, guided by stars, stories and shifting ice.

Filmed in some of the harshest conditions on Earth, RANGINUI: Call of the Ice follows Professor Rangi Matamua and Mataia Keepa deep into Antarctica in mid‑winter, when temperatures plunge, sunlight disappears and the ice never fully rests. Answering a wero handed down from Rangi’s grandfather, the pair carry Māori starlore to the far south, placing ancestral knowledge alongside cutting‑edge research on climate, space and the polar environment. The result is a portrait of Antarctica that feels newly alive: auroras flicker, constellations wheel overhead and pressure ridges grind past their tiny outpost.

Man in Nature

For audiences, this is an absorbing, quietly awe‑inspiring cinematic experience. Rather than treating Antarctica as a distant backdrop, the film invites viewers to feel it as a living entity that reveals itself slowly to those who know how to watch. Moments of wry humour, close whanaungatanga and everyday problem‑solving balance the epic landscapes, while the conversations between science and mātauranga Māori offer a hopeful, future‑focused take on how we might navigate a warming world. It’s an ideal choice for viewers drawn to kaupapa Māori storytelling, climate and space science, and big‑screen journeys into places few will ever visit in person.

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