Still from Two Cars, One Night
 

Two Cars, One Night

by Taika Waititi
Product Availability
Home-Use, Community Screenings, VOD
About the Film

Set in the carpark of a rural pub in Tek Kaha, New Zealand, this award-winning short comedy from Taika Waititi tells the story of two brothers, Romeo and Ed, who wait in the car while their parents are inside drinking. Romeo spots Polly, an eleven-year-old girl who is also waiting for her parents in their car. Bored and restless he decides to make contact with the girl, and what at first seems to be a relationship based on rivalry soon develops, and the cross-car rivalry warms into a budding friendship. Waititi shows his genius for subtle humour and sweet innocence in this early film from the director of the equally funny and much bigger budgeted THOR: RAGNAROK!

Distribution Availability: Canada and United States (Non-Theatrical, Community Screening); Worldwide excluding New Zealand and Australia (Internet Rights)
2004  ·  11m  ·  New Zealand
English
Festivals and Awards
2003
Otago Film Festival, Winner, Best Film
2004
Berlin Film Festival , Winner, Best Short Film, Panorama Section
2004
Aspen Film Festival , Winner, Best Drama
2004
Oberhausen, Winner, Prize of the Cinema Jury
2004
Newport Film Festival, Winner, Claiborne Pell Award Jury Prize
2004
Hamburg Short Film Festival , Winner, Best short film
2004
Seattle Film Festival , Winner, Best short film
2004
Melbourne International Film Festival, Winner, Best live action short film
2004
Seagate Foyle Film Festival, Winner, Best International Short Film
2004
National Geographic’s All Roads Festival , Winner, Audience Award
2004
American Film Institute, Winner, AFI Grand Jury Prize
2005
Wairoa Maori Film Festival, Winner, Best Dramatic Short
Credits
Editor
Owen Ferrier-Kerr
Producer
Ashley Gardiner and Catherine Fitzgerald
Cinematographer
Adam Clark
Writer
Taika Waititi
About the Director

Taika Waititi

Born in 1975, Taika Waititi also goes under the surname Cohen. He comes from the Raukokore region of the East Coast and has been involved in the arts for several years, as a visual artist, actor, writer and director.

As a performer and comedian, Taika has been a driving force in some of New Zealand’s most innovative and successful productions. With a strong background in comedy writing and performing (with fellow comedian Jemaine Clement), Taika has won New Zealand’s top comedy awards, the Billy T Award and the Spirit of the Fringe Award in Edinburgh. Taika regularly undertook stand up gigs around the New Zealand and in 2004 launched his solo production, Taika’s Incredible Show which he says “wasn’t that incredible but had a cool poster which I drew myself”. Taika has been critically acclaimed for his dramatic abilities being nominated for Best Actor at the 2000 Nokia Film Awards for his role in the Sarkies Brothers’ film Scarfies.

Taika’s short film, Two Cars, One Night, was nominated for an Academy Award in 2005. His next short, Tama Tu, about a group of Māori soldiers in Italy during World War II, won a string of international awards, and became eligible for Oscar nomination. Taika’s first feature, Eagle vs. Shark, was released in 2007 with a video release early in 2008. He won best screenwriter for the film at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival. On the eve of the film’s debut screening at the Sundance Film Festival Taika was named as one of 10 directors “to watch” by Variety magazine. He was also took the Award for Best Director for the film at the 2008 Qantas Film and Television Awards.

Taika directed two episodes of Flight of the Conchords a twelve-part comedy series, created by and starring his friends Jermaine Clement and Brett McKenzie, for the American cable channel HBO.

Taika’s 2010 feature length film, Boy, is an exploration of some of the characters and ideas introduced in his Oscar-nominated debut short Two Cars, One Night. The film was shot in the Bay of Plenty. Following its release, Boy became the highest grossing local film in New Zealand history. He attended the 2012 Berlinale and CineMart in Rotterdam with Jojo Rabbit (2012).

In 2013, Waititi co-directed the New Zealand-based vampire comedy mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows with friend and fellow comedian Jemaine Clement; Waititi starred as Viago. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2014.

Waititi’s fourth feature, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival to great reception, leading him to be chosen to direct the Marvel Studios film Thor: Ragnarok.

(Biography via The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi.)

 
Other films by Taika Waititi

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