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NZ Box Office smash, River of Freedom making waves

The NZ documentary River of Freedom began streaming on December 13 and within 24 hours was the 4th most watched movie in NZ on iTunes, after Barbie, Denzel Washington’s The Equalizer 3 and Taylor Swift’s Eras and ahead of Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon.

The documentary is “a unique and visceral account of the under-reported and divisive furore that erupted in NZ over its Covid policy,” says Journeyman’s CEO, Mark Stucke who secured worldwide rights. It is now available to rent or buy on YouTube, Apple TV, JMAN and Vimeo.

 

River of Freedom was entirely crowd-funded, with no government or lottery funding. It

was distributed independently and reached #10 at the NZ Box Office in its third week, nudging Oppenheimer out. Ignored by mainstream media and major theatres, the documentary was the most watched film in the country on 21st September. Audiences travelled from far and wide to watch, with ticket sales compared to Barbie, Oppenheimer, even their own Lord of the Rings.

Watch the mini-documentary on the film’s NZ’s Box Office success here.

New Zealand’s primary media platform, Stuff, finally sent a reviewer to see the film: Graeme Tuckett reported “It took me a week to get a ticket. The film sold out its Wellington screenings for five straight days. The Thursday afternoon session I got into was also a sell-out.”

River of Freedom is an intimate journey into New Zealand’s 2022 Freedom Convoy and resultant Parliament protest – an uprising against Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s severe No Jab, No Job mandatory Covid-19 vaccination regime, one of the harshest worldwide.

A professional filmmaking team were on the road and embedded within the protesters throughout the month-long convoy and occupation. River of Freedom lays out the reasons behind the uprising – who the people were, why they were there and what happened.

The film is written, produced and directed by Gaylene Barnes (Seven Rivers Walking) and produced by Jared Connon (Pearl) and Julian Arahanga (Songs from the Inside). Robin Monotti Graziadei (The Book of Vision) is executive producer, with cinematography from Co-producer Mark Lapwood.

“Of the ten cinemas that screened River of Freedom during week one, we had four screens,” says Matt Bell of Focal Point Cinemas. “After 11 days, we’ve taken $30,700 gross box office. It was our top movie at all four sites for two weeks running, which is pretty good for a documentary.”

But many cinemas still hadn’t come on board. “It’s actually performing, but there are so many parts of the country where people can’t get out and see this movie, because it’s not in their neighbourhood”.

On 21st September, in its third week, River of Freedom reached #1 at the Box Office on only a small number of screens. Larger theatres took notice and started booking the film. Where it wasn’t screening, many locals contacted the cinema or posted requests on social media. In one town locals created a change.org petition for their theatre to show it.

“The people are so nice and they’re thanking me for showing it,” says Paul McPhail from the St James Theatre in Gore, where some audience members have travelled from as far as Queenstown, 167 km away. “They’re staying around after the film and talking about it. If I’d have known this info back then I would have behaved differently.”

In Methven, about an hour out of Christchurch, Cinema Paradiso has been in a bad way financially since Covid. “We were looking at maybe closing the cinema at the end of the ski season,” says owner Richard Sheppard. “We just didn’t have people coming to the movies despite having lots of mainstream and New Zealand movies playing.”

Ticket sales have been amazing,” he says. “It’s probably one of the biggest movies I’ve had here, on par with Barbie and Oppenheimer.”

“River of Freedom opened up the doors and got people walking through again,” agrees wife Kristina. “They’ve clapped at the end of every session and come out and said how wonderful it is. We’ve had several members of the public hugging us and thank us for screening it. People from all walks of life have come along and been deeply moved.”

“I’ve heard comments that ‘everyone should see this movie’,” agrees Matt Bell. “At the end, people are not in a rush to get out of the cinema. They let it breathe a bit and the lights come on and they slowly leave as opposed to the mad rush out the door. I’d ask them how they found it, get into conversations. Most people have a story as well.”

And the audience were bringing back friends and family to show the side of the protest that mainstream media did not – the heart. One person has seen it 9 times. In total the film played for 10 weeks, Rialto Cinema in the main city of Auckland screening it for 8 of those.

“I’m really proud of the success of our film in New Zealand and how it touched audiences,” says director and editor Gaylene Barnes. “What an opportunity for people the world over to experience New Zealand at its worst… and at its best.”

For further information visit www.riveroffreedom.nz.

Who the People Are’ an excerpt featuring Eric Clapton’s This Has Gotta Stop.

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4 COMMENTS

  1. Still waiting for the day they hang Ardern for her anti human rhetoric.
    Any crime at this level should see the death penalty for all involved including msm collaborators.

  2. I tend not to stream anything but if it gets a Physical Media release I will indeed invest in a copy or two maybe more as gifts to leftist friends that cannot be taken away, edited out of context or literally memory holed because it goes against “THE MESSAGE.”

    If you don’t own a film, TV series or Documentary or even music on Physical Media you don’t own it……we have see this time again with streaming platforms and so on even deleting content people have already paid for.

    • NZ is a Corporation
      Not a Democracy
      Doesn’t matter whose in power
      NZ signed away its sovereignty in 1962 with the signing of the International Finance Agreement

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