By Alex Bourne
A New Zealand documentary about a Hawkes Bay boy who went to Yale University at the age of 15 has been accepted for the Berlin Film Festival.
Maori Boy Genius will screen in February at the International Gala and, maybe one day, the rising star of the film could be running the country.
When his friends were sitting their NCEA standards in high school, Ngaa Rauuira was studying politics and law at the American Ivy League Yale University.
And if that was not enough enough for the young man, his entire time there was captured on film - for the documentary Maori Boy Genius.
“People invested time and money, a lot of things, into me, into this, to flunk? There’s no choice. The only way was forward,” laughs Ngaa Rauuira.
Documentary-maker Pietra Brettkelly was impressed with how the Otaki teen dealt with being filmed 24-7.
“There’s always a stage during filming where you know your subject is getting sick of you. You turn up to film and they are thinking, ‘ahh, the’re here again’. But with Ngaa and his family that never happened, they were incredibly supportive,” says Brett-Kelly.
Maori Boy Genius portrays Rauuiri’s journey through a six-week summer programme at Yale. And the documentary has been accepted for the prestigious Berlin Film Festival, the same festival that introduced Taika Waititi's Boy to the international stage.
“It’s a wonderful compliment, it’s really humbling for me and all the team who worked on it, and for Ngaa and his whanau, that people beyond our shores care about this story,” says Ms Brettkelly.
The Berlinale awards for 2012 will be announced February 18th.
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