On the 7th of May 2009 Senior Constables Len Snee, Grant Diver and Bruce Miller arrived at 41 Chaucer Rd in Napier to serve a search warrant on Jan Molenaar for the growing of cannabis. It was a day like any other and this was just a routine warrant, something they had done countless times. What was meant to be an ordinary procedure turned into three of New Zealand's darkest days and ended with one police officer dead, two officers critically injured and a member of the public fighting for his life.
This documentary tells the story of New Zealand sport’s ‘golden hour’, when on 2 September 1960 in Rome, two Arthur Lydiard-coached runners won Olympic gold: 21-year-old Peter Snell in the 800 metres, then Murray Halberg in the 5000 metres. The underdog tale mixes archive footage with recreations and candid interviews (Halberg talks about his battle with disability and doubt). The NZ Herald's Russell Baillie praised the result as “riveting” and “our Chariots of Fire”. It screened on TV prior to the 2012 London Olympics and was nominated for an International Emmy Award in 2013.
When the All Blacks beat France to win the 2011 Rugby World Cup final, it eased New Zealand's angst of more than 20 years without a title. It also created an unlikely hero in Stephen 'Beaver' Donald. A run of injuries led to a call-up for the fourth choice first five (he was whitebaiting when contacted). When Aaron Cruden was injured, Beaver came off the reserves bench and kicked a decisive penalty. Danny Mulheron's Moa award-nominated TV movie relives the reject-to-redemption fairytale. David de Lautour (Westside) plays Donald. This excerpt includes the kick itself.
In 1997, Osama bin Laden declared war on the USA and Pulitzer Prize winning Kiwi journalist and CNN correspondent Peter Arnett embarked on a mission to locate and interview him. Travelling to Afghanistan where he was blindfolded and driven to a secret location in the mountains by armed militia, Arnett engaged in a battle of words with bin Laden, lifting the lid on the Al-Qaeda founder’s chilling plans for the West. Following the dramatic events leading up to the interview, and the horrifying moment bin-Laden’s threats were realised in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, A War Story takes a fascinating and frightening journey into the heart of darkness.
When Petrol Station owner Leo Kao and his girlfriend Kara Hurring discovered millions of dollars deposited into their bank account in error in 2009, the pair did what most of us would only dream of doing: they ran. The captivating true story of an ordinary New Zealand couple who fled the country for a new new life in China with ten million dollars of stolen money, Runaway Millionaires reveals the truth behind the international manhunt that gripped the nation.
Taking place in the fraught political climate of the 1980s, By The Balls takes us straight into the heart of some of New Zealand rugby’s darkest days. Still reeling from the aftermath of the Springbok tour and a brutal face-off against the French rugby team, by 1987 it seemed as though all was lost for our country’s most beloved sport. Through the eyes of New Zealand’s legendary rugby players on the playing field of the 1987 World Cup, By The Balls is the compelling story of how the All Blacks would struggle to overcome the odds and return to glory.