The Orator

par Tusi Tamasese
Disponibilité du produit
Institutional, Home-Use, Community Screenings, Educational, VOD
À propos du film

17 years after Vaaiga was banished from her ancestral village, three large and intimidating men, including her older brother Poto, arrive at Saili‟s house and forever change their quiet lives. Saili hides in his taro patch while Vaaiga, his wife, is left to confront these unexpected visitors. Poto, who is sick, demands Vaaiga, return with him and restore him and their family to health. Vaaiga refuses, determined to stay with her 17 year old daughter, Litia, and her beloved husband Saili. Saili fears he has neither the strength nor the status to defend himself and his family, for he is a little person. Without his deceased father‟s chiefly status, he is simply a taro farmer. Already his neighbours are encroaching on his land, disrespecting the graves of his parents and now his wife is being threatened, because Poto will return. Tagaloa, the paramount village chief, who protects Saili within the village, is aging fast.

Encouraged by Vaaiga to make a stand, Saili summons his courage and decides to seek his father‟s chiefly title but Tagaloa refuses, ridiculing his request. He does not believe Saili has either the required physique or the skill in oratory expected of the role. When the threats to his family escalate, Saili takes on the attackers, but his bravery results in a vicious beating and public humiliation. Without hope of defending his family and land Saili is tempted to give up. Suddenly, Vaaiga dies and Poto, her brother, returns and steals her body.

Saili, tormented by his failure to protect their love, faces his fears and seeks once more a chiefly title, determined to use it to reclaim Vaaiga. At Poto‟s village, Vaaiga‟s funeral is underway. While Saili summons the courage he will need to stand up and face this crowd, a delegation arrives from the village council led by a senior chief, Fousaga. Poto‟s artful oratory successfully defends the family‟s right to bury their banished sister with them. And then, amid laughter and mockery, Saili stands and faces Poto. His words speak of a love which defeats all possible gifts or argument. He wins Vaaiga back, death will not part them and the family will remain together.

Distribution Availability: Canada and United States (Educational/Institutional & Community); Worldwide excluding New Zealand, Australia, Germany, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland, Luxembourg, and Liechtenstein (Internet rights)

2011  ·  1h50m  ·  Nouvelle-Zélande, Samoa
Samoan
(sous-titres)
Festivals et prix
2012
Sundance Film Festival, Palm Springs
2012
Pacific Rim Film Festival
2012
Brisbane International Film Festival, Audience Award
2011
Venice International Film Festival, Special Mention: Orizzonti Section
2011
Venice International Film Festival, Art Cinema Award from CICAE Jury
2011
Venice International Film Festival, Cinema Avvenire Best Film
Générique
Director
Tusi Tamasese
Editor
Simon Price
Cinematographer
Leon Narbey
Producer
Catherine Fitzgerald
Sound Editor
Tim Prebble
Writer
Tusi Tamasese
À propos du cinéaste

Tusi Tamasese

Tusi Tamasese spent 18 years in his native Samoa, before moving to New Zealand and completing a double major in film and political science. After shooting 2009 short film Va Tapuia in Samoa with private funding, he directed his debut feature The Orator / O Le Tulafale, which was made entirely in the Samoan language. This tale of an outsider in conflict with his community scored multiple honours at the 2011 Venice Film Festival. Tamasese followed it with New Zealand-set father and daughter drama One Thousand Ropes; the tale of family and redemption was invited to premiere at the 2017 Berlin Film Festival.

(Biography courtesy of New Zealand On Screen.)

 

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