Our Own Image

Our Own Image

A Story of a Maori Filmmaker

Barry Barclay

An insightful look at the introduction of Fourth Cinema into the mainstream

128 Pages, 6 x 8 in

  • Paperback
  • 9780816697618
  • Published: November 15, 2015
BUY
  • eBook
  • 9781452950013
  • Published: November 22, 2015
BUY

Details

Our Own Image

A Story of a Maori Filmmaker

Barry Barclay

ISBN: 9780816697618

Publication date: November 15th, 2015

128 Pages

22

8 x 6

Acclaimed Maori filmmaker Barry Barclay’s Our Own Image relates the experiences of making his documentaries and his critically acclaimed feature-length film Ngati (1987), widely credited as the first fiction feature by a member of an indigenous community. Barclay details his views on the process of filmmaking within his own Maori community and discusses how his work differed from popular cinema, advocating for indigenous control, participation, and perspectives in media.

Our Own Image gives an in-depth depiction of the changes Barclay’s approach contributed to the field of documentaries, as well as displaying the respect for community Barclay brought to his filming technique. His insistence on letting people speak for themselves demonstrated authenticity to audiences, creating awareness of indigenous cinema in New Zealand and worldwide.


Barry Barclay (Ngati Apa) is an award-winning New Zealand filmmaker, writer, and philosopher. He coined the term Fourth Cinema and has been honored with a Laureate Award from the Arts Foundation of New Zealand and the New Zealand Order of Merit.