The Town That Lost a Miracle
The Town That Lost a Miracle

Screened as part of NZIFF 2009

The Town That Lost a Miracle/Autumn Fires 

Classic 70s TV documentaries made in the Hokianga by Barry Barclay explore the legend of ‘Opo the friendly dolphin’ and an old woman’s memories of pioneering life and the niceties of civilised life.

83 minutes

The Town That Lost a Miracle 1972

Director

Producer

John O'Shea

Screenplay

Photography

Graeme Wisken

Editor

Ian John
30 minutes

Opononi became the focus of national attention in 1955 thanks to a famously friendly dolphin. Seventeen years later, working with writer James McNeish, Barry Barclay visits Opononi and gently but tellingly probes the legend of that magical summer and the mystery of its violent end.

Autumn Fires 1977

Director

Producer

John O'Shea

Photography

Rory O'Shea

Editor

Dell King
53 minutes

Actor Martyn Sanderson returns at 39 to the Hokianga of his youth and visits his elderly and romantic aunt, Olive Bracey. Their reminsicences mesh with nostalgic songs – ‘Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life!’ – and readings from Bracey’s unpublished fiction. Rory O’Shea’s lyrical cinematography lends its own poetry. This beautiful, layered film is all that came of a series to be called In Search of Pakehatanga proposed by Pacific Films after the success of Tangata Whenua. ‘It was metaphor created at a time when it was still possible to make metaphors in documentary in this country’, Barclay recalled. But an era of more aggressive television was close at hand and he left the country soon after for nearly five years. — BG