Feb 19, 20 – movies: HIGH TIDE DON’T HIDE, THE POWER OF THE DOG

For our mid February screenings, Movies at the Old School, 5 Stewart Street, Raglan has two award winning movies screening on 19th and 20th. On Saturday early evening (19/2/22) we have DocEdge award winner, HIGH TIDE DON’T HIDE at 5.00pm. Then the film with the most OSCAR nominations, THE POWER OF THE DOG (R13) at 8.00pm, and also on Sunday afternoon at 4.30pm. 

Get out of the summer heat and enjoy a movie in air conditioned comfort.

Book online: http://raglanmovies.nz. Door sales available from 30 mins before session times.

Licensed bar & homemade snacks on sale at these screenings.

Raglan and all cinemas in NZ require Vaccine Passes. Face masks required on arrival and may be removed for eating and drinking. Capacity is reduced to 20 so you can spread out.

Adults $15, Concession $12, RCAC Members $12, Children $8.The reduced concession rate is for $12 concession (student, seniors or CS cards).


Feb 19: Movie – HIGH TIDE DON’T HIDE

Doc Edge 2021 Film Festival: Winner, Best New Zealand Editing – Thomas Gleeson

In the race for existence, striking teenagers discover that activism, authority and awareness make for a steep learning curve.

Determined to provoke real action, New Zealand teenagers join the global School Strike for Climate. But planning a movement and building momentum are the easy parts as they face political indifference, their own white privilege, and the ongoing struggle to be heard. Meanwhile, the tides continue to rise.

HIGH TIDE DON’T HIDE Documentary 83 mins | New Zealand | 2020

  • Saturday 19th February 5.00pm

Raglan Movies at the Old School, 5 Stewart St, Raglan 3225.

Book online: raglanmovies.nz, call into the Old School office Mon-Fri 10am to 2pm. (Office closed public holidays)

Door sales from 30 mins before session times.

Licensed bar & homemade snacks on sale.

Adults $15, Concession $12, RCAC Members $12, Children $8.
The reduced concession rate is for $12 concession (student, seniors or CS cards).

Raglan Movies at the Old School, 5 Stewart St, Raglan.

Movie screenings are running under the Red Covid setting with Vaccine Passes and face coverings. On arrival please check in by scanning the QR poster or with the manual register. Have your Vaccine Pass ready for sighting or scanning. Vaccine Passes and face coverings are not required for children aged 11 and under. When you are seated face coverings are recommended.

HIGH TIDE DON’T HIDE covers a group of New Zealand students who in 2019 along with students worldwide took to the streets demanding immediate climate change action. The Rebel Film Collective documented a group of Kiwi teenagers preparing for the protest in New Zealand. As the young organisers bring the Aotearoa School Strike 4 Climate movement together, a painful truth emerges; climate change has a disproportionate effect on indigenous people. Kiwi-Pasifika poet Aigagaleifili Fepulea’i Tapua’i forms a breakaway group to ensure climate change impacts on Pacific nations is acknowledged.

In Aotearoa New Zealand, filmmakers The Rebel Film Collective started shooting seven months before what became the world’s biggest ever climate change strike. We were given intimate access to New Zealand students’ meetings, homes and personal video diaries to record how the local movement began. weaving the stories of five teenagers as they lead their communities to strike for climate.
We were there when an unexpected turn of events changed the face of the protests. High Tide Don’t Hide reveals the inner processes of teenagers mobilising record-setting numbers of children and adults…while dealing with the looming threat of climate change, interpersonal politics, and the need to just be teenagers.

Director: Phil Stebbing, Niva Kay, Emily McDowell
Documentary 83 mins | New Zealand | 2020.


Feb 19, 20 Mar 5: Movie – THE POWER OF THE DOG

THE POWER OF THE DOG by Director Jane Campion has the most OSCAR nominations and is a Golden Globes Winner: Best Drama Motion Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor. Plus Silver Lion for Best Direction at Venice Film Festival. Top 10 Film – American Film Institute.

THE POWER OF THE DOG | 2021 R13, Animal cruelty & content that may disturb | 127 mins | UK, New Zealand |

  • Saturday 19th February 8.00pm
  • Sunday 20th February 4.30pm
  • Saturday 5th March 5.00pm

Raglan Movies at the Old School, 5 Stewart St, Raglan 3225.

Book online: raglanmovies.nz, call into the Old School office Mon-Fri 10am to 2pm. (Office closed public holidays)

Door sales from 30 mins before session times.

Licensed bar & homemade snacks on sale.

Adults $15, Concession $12, RCAC Members $12, Children $8.
The reduced concession rate is for $12 concession (student, seniors or CS cards).

Raglan Movies at the Old School, 5 Stewart St, Raglan.

Movie screenings are running under the Red Covid setting with Vaccine Passes and face masks. On arrival please check in by scanning the QR poster or with the manual register. Have your Vaccine Pass ready for sighting or scanning. Vaccine Passes and face coverings are not required for children aged 11 and under. Masks can be taken off to eat and drink. Audience numbers will be limited to 20 so people can spread out and sit in their bubbles.

THE POWER OF THE DOG is filmed in the South Island and set in 1925 Montana. The Burbank brothers (Cumberbatch & Plemons) are wealthy ranchers in Montana. At the Red Mill restaurant on their way to market, the brothers meet Rose (Dunst), the widowed proprietress, and her impressionable son Peter (Smit-McPhee). Phil (Cumberbatch) behaves so cruelly he drives them both to tears, reveling in their hurt and rousing his fellow cowhands to laughter – all except his brother George (Plemons), who comforts Rose then returns to marry her.

As Phil swings between fury and cunning, his taunting of Rose takes an eerie form – he hovers at the edges of her vision, whistling a tune she can no longer play. His mockery of her son is more overt, amplified by the cheering of Phil’s cowhand disciples. Then Phil appears to take the boy under his wing. Is this latest gesture a softening that leaves Phil exposed, or a plot twisting further into menace?

Director: Jane Campion (TV’s ‘Top of the Lake’, ‘Bright Star’, ‘The Piano’)
Writer: Jane Campion
Cast: Benedict Cumberbatch, Jesse Plemons, Kirsten Dunst, Thomasin McKenzie, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Frances Conroy, Keith Carradine, Peter Carroll, Adam Beach
2021 | R13, Animal cruelty & content that may disturb | 127 mins | UK, NZ

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