Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of films produced in Oceania by country of origin ... Snake Island (2009) Niue: Sons ... A Peace Corps Story (2020 documentary film) Vanuatu. Tanna
Seven Sinners (1940 film) She Gods of Shark Reef; Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake; South of Pago Pago; South Pacific (1958 film) South Sea Sinner; South Sea Woman; South Seas genre; Space Amoeba; Strange Holiday (1970 film) Swiss Family Robinson (1940 film) Swiss Family Robinson (1960 film)
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. ... Pages in category "Documentary films about Oceania" ... Earth (2007 film) M. Moana (1926 film) T.
The Ellice Islands were administered as British protectorate by a Resident Commissioner from 1892 to 1916 as part of the British Western Pacific Territories (BWPT), and later as part of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands colony from 1916 to 1974. [84] [85] Among the last islands in Oceania to be colonised was Niue (1900).
The film was subsequently screened at a charity event in Hollywood. [10] A different kind of documentary movie was directed by Walter Manglona in 2018. The Forgotten Island was about the senior citizens of Saipan, who starred as themselves. Although Manglona had some training in directing and screenwriting, all actors were amateurs.
South Pacific (Wild Pacific in the US) is a British nature documentary series from the BBC Natural History Unit, which began airing on BBC Two on 10 May 2009. The six-part series surveys the natural history of the islands of the South Pacific region, including many of the coral atolls and New Zealand. It was filmed entirely in high-definition.
In 2015, the Hawaiian film Kumu Hina won the Second Jury Prize and the Public Prize (Audience Award). [5] In 2016, Australian film Another Country took out the Grand Jury Prize. [6] [7] In 2019, Island of the Hungry Ghosts, Gurrumul and Au Nom du Père, du Fils et des Esprits won the three Grand Jury Special Prizes (Prix spécial du jury). [8]
The film depicts the real-life story of American independent filmmaker John Pierson, who, in 2002, took his wife and two children to the island of Taveuni in Fiji to live for a year, and used a vacant cinema to show films free of charge. [4] [5] Boot Camp (2007), starring Mila Kunis and Peter Stormare, is partly set in Fiji, but is not a Fiji ...