Six New Zealand screenwriters have had their scripts selected as part of the Black List New Zealand Project (BLNZP), a partnership between internationally acclaimed the Black List and the New Zealand Film Commission.
The six writers will take part in a professional development workshop and mentorship series hosted by the Black List with leading global screen industry executives heading up the panels and mentoring the filmmakers. They will also receive up to NZ$25,000 in NZFC development financing to complete the next draft of their script.
179 scripts were submitted for the BLNZP and New Zealand Film Commission CEO Annabelle Sheehan says the quality was exceptional. “We have an extraordinary pool of filmmaking talent in New Zealand and that has shone through in the calibre and diversity of the submissions.”
Franklin Leonard, founder and CEO of the Black List agrees, saying, “The talent the New Zealand Film Commission managed to gather as part of this submission process was remarkable both in aggregate and at its highest levels. We're incredibly excited by our first Lab cohort and what the next steps will be with their scripts."
The successful screenplays cover genres from romance and comedy to crime and horror, offering unique perspectives from a richly diverse group of writers; Anna Nuria Francino (BARA), Taratoa Stappard (MĀRAMA), Shuchi Kothari (NAVRATRI AKA NINE NIGHTS), Finnius Teppett (I.O.U), Claire Barclay (LONG GONE), and Yamin Tun (HONG KONG STORY).
The aim of the BLNZP is to provide a platform to amplify the voices of filmmakers who have typically been underrepresented. “It’s great to see Māori and diverse filmmakers feature so strongly in the selection. Having the Black List founder Franklin Leonard and his team working with us to place our writers in front of some of the most significant screen executives in Hollywood is an extraordinary opportunity,” says Ms Sheehan.
Among the Hollywood mentors available to the New Zealand writers are David Rabinowitz and Charlie Wachtel (Blackklansman), Kirsten “Kiwi” Smith (Legally Blonde, 10 Things I Hate About You).
The BLNZP is a one-off fund, designed to help promote relationships between writers and producers and create international opportunities for New Zealand feature films
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The Black List
The Black List, an annual survey of Hollywood executives' favourite unproduced screenplays, was founded in 2005. Since then, at least 440 Black List scripts have been produced, grossing over $30 billion in box office worldwide. Black List movies have won 54 Academy Awards from 267 nominations, including four of the last twelve Best Picture Oscars and eleven of the last 28 Best Screenplay Oscars.
In 2012, the Black List launched a unique online community where screenwriters make their work available to readers, buyers and employers. Since its inception, it has hosted nearly 80,000 screenplays and teleplays and provided more than 130,000 script evaluations. As a direct result of introductions made on the Black List, dozens of writers have found representation at major talent agencies and management companies, as well as sold or optioned their screenplays. Currently, the Black List hosts over 5,000 scripts by approximately 3,700 writer members.
About the Projects:
BARA
When her mother and sole witness to her existence ends up comatose, a mute recluse must brave the outside world to unlock her voice and save them both from a life unlived.
WRITER: ANNA NURIA FRANCINO
A graduate from Unitec with a Bachelor of Performing & Screen Arts, Acting major, Anna also worked in arts administration before going on to stage manage plays including Shane Bosher’s Angels in America, and Toa Fraser’s Pure and Deep. She remains ever grateful for untold weeks spent investigating story and character. In 2012, Anna entered Auckland’s Short + Sweet Festival. The play she directed won Best Newcomer, Best Actress, and Best Overall Production.
Anna has penned dialogue for New Zealand’s longest-running serial drama, Shortland Street, since 2015. She also works as a storyliner for the show. Her first (originally co-written) screenplay, BARA, won NZWG’s 2015 Best Unproduced Feature Film Script and was later awarded a NZWG Seed Grant. Thanks to consequent support from NZFC’s Early Development Fund, Anna took the reins as BARA’s sole writer, resulting in a massive reinvention that benefited from sessions with script consultants Emily Anderton and Stephen Cleary.
HONG KONG STORY
A Burmese family flung from their homeland to a new life in Hong Kong face statelessness in the run- up to 1997 - the British handover of the colony back to China. The family needs to find a new country to escape to, but they are torn apart by infidelity and mistrust.
WRITER: YAMIN TUN
Yamin Tun is the New Zealand film industry’s SPADA New Filmmaker of the Year 2016. She won Best Short at NZIFF 2016 for her first film Wait, which also won the Jury Prize at Show Me Shorts.
Yamin is developing feature films as writer-director, including The Teak and the Cloth, set in military conflict Myanmar, and HONG KONG STORY. She was invited by Sundance and Cannes mentor Gyula Gazdag to apply for the invitation-only Three Rivers Residency, the only New Zealand projects ever invited to apply for this residency. In 2016 Yamin was selected to a mentorship with Australian filmmaker Rolf de Heer and in 2013 completion bond specialists Film Finances Inc selected Yamin to attend Telluride Film Festival – one of only four filmmakers from the world.
In 2021-2022 Yamin is premiering another short film, Blood and Gold, delayed in 2020 due to COVID.
Born in Myanmar of mixed indigeneity, Yamin and her family escaped the military regime and have lived an itinerant life around Europe, Hong Kong and New Zealand.
I.O.U
On the run from debt collectors, an expectant mum seeks refuge at her family home in Bulls. But when she turns to fraud to escape her debts, she has more to worry about than bankruptcy.
WRITER: FINNIUS TEPPETT
Finnius Teppett is a writer/director based in Auckland. He has an MA in Creative Writing (Scriptwriting) from Victoria University's IIML, and is an award-winning playwright. His play My Dad's Boy was workshopped in New York, and opened Fortune Theatre’s 2017 season. He co-writes political satire show White Man Behind a Desk.
His NZ Film Commission-funded short film, Democracy premiered at the NZ International Film Festival/Whānau Mārama 2020, and was nominated for ‘Best Screenplay’ at Show Me Shorts 2020. He is the co-creator of The Citizen's Handbook a ten-part comedy-civics series funded by the RNZ/NZ On Air Innovation Fund, and he directed and co-wrote The Citizen's Handbook Election Specials for RNZ. He was part of Script to Screen’s ‘FilmUp’ mentorship programme in 2020.
MĀRAMA
1869. When a young, Māori woman is summoned from New Zealand to North Yorkshire, she uncovers the horrific truth of her colonial heritage and she must destroy the titled Englishman who has devastated her family.
WRITER: TARATOA STAPPARD
Taratoa Stappard is a writer/director. He was born in Hawera, Aotearoa. His father was English and his mother is Māori (Ngāti Toa, Ngāti Raukawa me Ngāti Tūwharetoa).
This year he will direct his script, Taumanu (Reclaim) for TVNZ in New Zealand.
Taratoa’s first feature script, MĀRAMA, received BFI Early Development Funding and was selected for the imagineNATIVE 2020 Indigenous Screenwriting Intensive. He was chosen to participate with MĀRAMA on the TIFF 2021 Writers’ Studio.
Taratoa has directed six short films, screening in festivals including BFI London, Edinburgh, Encounters, Māoriland, Angers and Busan, as well as being broadcast on BBC2, BBC3, Film4 and Canal+.
LONG GONE
A pugnacious Māori runaway employs unorthodox methods to solve a cold case when she returns to a New Zealand town and discovers a man’s mysterious disappearance was pinned on her.
WRITER: CLAIRE BARCLAY
Claire Barclay (Ngāti Apa) started work in script development aged thirteen, when her father – director Barry Barclay – asked her to give notes on his script. She swore that when she grew up and wrote her own screenplay, she wouldn’t watch whomever was reading until they got to The End and immediately ask “so . . . whaddaya think?” She’s managed this so far . . . but acknowledges she must remain vigilant.
In Claire’s varied career in film and television, she’s worked as an assistant editor, commercials producer and agent, representing writers and directors. She was a ‘spare time, stolen hours’ writer until 2020, when selected for an NFTS (UK) screenwriting course. LONG GONE was Claire’s primary film school project and she’s been mentored during development by Emmy nominated New Zealand director Jessica Hobbs, supported by the NZFC Tuakana Teina scheme.
NAVRATRI AKA NINE NIGHTS
9 lovers, 9 secrets, 9 nights: it's the song and dance of desire.
WRITER: SHUCHI KOTHARI
Shuchi Kothari is a New Zealand-Indian filmmaker and academic. Her writer and producer credits include features (Firaaq, Apron Strings) and shorts (Shit One Carries, Coffee & Allah, Fleeting Beauty) that have screened at over 100 international film festivals including Venice, Cannes, Toronto, BFI, Busan, and Telluride. She is also one of the creators, producers, and writers of the series A Thousand Apologies, New Zealand's first ever Asian prime time show on broadcast television.
She recently completed an hour-long documentary Threads: Sustaining India's Textile Traditions. Shuchi has mentored several acclaimed filmmakers/projects and served on juries of Film and Television awards, and national funding bodies.
In 2018 Shuchi co-founded the not-for-profit Pan-Asian Screen Collective to advocate for equitable representation of Asian screen practitioners on and behind the screens in Aotearoa New Zealand.