Skip to content

TagcINeDIGENOUS

Tinā

“What’s a parent without their kids?”

Mareta (Anapela Polataivao) is grieving the loss of her daughter who tragically lost her life during the Christchurch, New Zealand quakes of 2011. Unsure what her future holds for her now, Mareta receives help from Sio (Beulah Koale) who helps her file for unemployment. When that runs out, his next step is to help her land an interview for a teaching position at an elite school attended mostly by Pākehās (non-Polynesian New Zealanders). Mareta is an imposing woman with a heart of gold. She dons her native Samoan garb, standing out from the rest of the teachers at the school, and is affectionately called Tinā (Samoan term for mother). Mareta soon bonds with Sophie (Antonia Robinson), a talented young singer who is dealing with an alcoholic mother and the physical and emotional scars from a terrible accident. Their mutual interest in music eventually sparks an idea. Mareta will lead the school’s very first choir. It’s a rough start but once the students learn to appreciate Mareta’s tough love approach the choir becomes something extraordinary. As the choir group prepare for a singing competition, looming villains and tragic news threaten the disrupt the beautiful harmony.

Directed by Miki Magasiva, Tinā film hits all the right notes and deserves to be up there with feel good stories about teachers like Dead Poets Society (1989) and Radical (2023). It will send you on an emotional rollercoaster and by the end you’ll find yourself sobbing into a fistful of tissues. While the story is rather sentimental and almost veers towards cloying, it ultimately finds a balance especially when punctuated with its musical sequences. I really enjoyed the performance by Polataivao who gives her character a sense of mystery and charm.

Tinā is sure to be a crowd pleaser.

Tinā is distributed by Rialto and hits theaters in select markets (Hawaii, American Samoa and Guam) August 29th and nationwide on September 5th.

Remaining Native

“I want to hurt for him and all my other ancestors. I want to remember where I come from and to not forget the community that raised me.” — Ku Stevens

Trauma carries on through generations with the ripple effects lasting long after the ancestor’s pain is forgotten. One young man is keeping the memory of his great-grandfather alive. It’s not something he has to do but rather something he feels compelled to do.

Directed by Paige Bethmann (Haudenosaunee), Remaining Native is a documentary that follows the story of Ku Stevens, an Indigenous teen and track star who dreams of becoming a college-level athlete. He runs on the open dirt roads of his native rural Nevada. It’s the same path that his great-grandfather ran when he escaped the Stewart School, a reformatory boarding school that forced Native American children to assimilate into white culture.

As Ku, whose full name Kutoven means “the eagle who brings light from the darkness”, trains towards a sub 9 minute 2-mile run, he contemplates the times his great-grandfather had to run and the suffering he must have endured to escape a cruel system that tried to strip him of his Native identity. Ku is wise beyond his years. To honor his ancestor and to help his community honor theirs, he helps lead a Remembrance Run; a 2-day, 50 mile race that follows the path that his great-grandfather would have taken to escape the Stewart School and return to his homeland.

Remaining Native beautifully balances the duality of the story in which Ku’s journey to become a college athlete mirrors his great-grandfather’s pursuit of freedom. It also works as a sports documentary with much time spent on Ku’s athletic journey. Ku is a fascinating subject and it’s clear he’ll go on to do great things. I do wish there was a bit more information about the history behind the Stewart School and how it affected Ku’s community. But overall this is Ku’s story and it’s an honor to witness it.

Remaining Native is part of 2025 SIFF’s cINeDIGENOUS festival program.

Dear Aloha

“Aloha sustains Hawai’ians by reminding us who we are.”

Hawai’i is one of the most beautiful places on earth and the Kanaka (Native Hawai’ians) feel a strong connection to their homeland. However, over the years life on the islands has become too expensive for the Kanaka to live and thrive. Many move to the mainland to raise their families including director Cris Romento’s family who moved to Vancouver, Washington over thirty years ago. In Romento’s short documentary Dear Aloha, she interviews members of the Hawai’ian diaspora, in particular her father Eric who still mourns losing his homeland. He still feels the pride of his homeland as many in the diaspora do.

The film explores this displacement of Hawai’ians and the ongoing fight for the Kanaka to stay. A tender and bittersweet film with a lot of heart and a bit of hope for the future. I would love to see this expanded into a full-length feature. There are many films about immigration but not enough about diasporas. And the plight of the Hawai’ian diaspora is one that definitely needs to be spotlighted.

Description: “Two Native Hawai’ians living in the Pacific Northwest reflect on how Aloha sustains them amidst distance, loss, and longing.” (source)

Dear Aloha is part of 2025 SIFF’s cINeDIGENOUS festival program.

JustWatch.com