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IMDbPro

Whale Rider

  • 2002
  • PG-13
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
45K
YOUR RATING
Keisha Castle-Hughes in Whale Rider (2002)
Home Video Trailer from Columbia Tristar
Play trailer2:24
8 Videos
99+ Photos
DramaFamily

A contemporary story of love, rejection and triumph as a young Maori girl fights to fulfill a destiny her grandfather refuses to recognize.A contemporary story of love, rejection and triumph as a young Maori girl fights to fulfill a destiny her grandfather refuses to recognize.A contemporary story of love, rejection and triumph as a young Maori girl fights to fulfill a destiny her grandfather refuses to recognize.

  • Director
    • Niki Caro
  • Writers
    • Niki Caro
    • Witi Ihimaera
  • Stars
    • Keisha Castle-Hughes
    • Rawiri Paratene
    • Vicky Haughton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    45K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Niki Caro
    • Writers
      • Niki Caro
      • Witi Ihimaera
    • Stars
      • Keisha Castle-Hughes
      • Rawiri Paratene
      • Vicky Haughton
    • 381User reviews
    • 115Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 33 wins & 35 nominations total

    Videos8

    Whale Rider
    Trailer 2:24
    Whale Rider
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    Clip 1:27
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    Clip 1:27
    A Guide to the Films of Niki Caro
    Whale Rider: The Descendants Of Paikea
    Clip 1:26
    Whale Rider: The Descendants Of Paikea
    Whale Rider: Pai's Performance
    Clip 1:36
    Whale Rider: Pai's Performance
    Whale Rider: Pai Dives Into The Water
    Clip 2:09
    Whale Rider: Pai Dives Into The Water
    Whale Rider: My Name Is Paikea
    Clip 1:57
    Whale Rider: My Name Is Paikea

    Photos154

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    + 148
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    Top Cast26

    Edit
    Keisha Castle-Hughes
    Keisha Castle-Hughes
    • Paikea
    Rawiri Paratene
    Rawiri Paratene
    • Koro
    Vicky Haughton
    Vicky Haughton
    • Nanny Flowers
    Cliff Curtis
    Cliff Curtis
    • Porourangi
    Grant Roa
    Grant Roa
    • Uncle Rawiri
    Mana Taumaunu
    Mana Taumaunu
    • Hemi
    Rachel House
    Rachel House
    • Shilo
    Taungaroa Emile
    Taungaroa Emile
    • Willie
    Tammy Davis
    • Dog
    Mabel Wharekawa
    • Maka
    • (as Mabel Wharekawa-Burt)
    Rawinia Clarke
    • Miro
    Tahei Simpson
    • Miss Parata
    Roi Taimana
    • Hemi's Dad
    • (as Roimata Taimana)
    Elizabeth Skeen
    • Rehua
    Tyronne White
    • Jake
    • (as Tyrone White)
    Taupua Whakataka-Brightwell
    • Ropata
    Tenia McClutchie-Mita
    • Wiremu
    Peter Patuwai
    • Bubba
    • Director
      • Niki Caro
    • Writers
      • Niki Caro
      • Witi Ihimaera
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews381

    7.545.2K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    10guanche

    A real machismo meltdown.

    A beautifully filmed and convincingly acted treat for the entire family. Adults need NOT beware since the film respects its audience and contains levels of depth suitable for all ages. Although ultimately an upbeat movie, there are some grim plot elements that may not be appropriate for very young or overly sensitive children. However, there's no actual violence or anything truly frightening or morbid.

    This is the story of a 12 year old Maori girl who knows that she is born to the destiny her grandfather believes died with her stillborn twin brother. I won't spoil the ending (which is hinted at early on) with specifics, but suffice it to say that the story's ultimate lesson is that change is sometimes as necessary a component of living traditions as repetitive ceremony. And that the Maori must ride that "whale" as bravely as their mythological ancestor rode the whale from Havaiki (a satellite island of Tahiti, NOT Hawaii) to New Zealand. Not to destroy or denigrate their culture, but to ensure its vitality and continuity in the cultural matrix of the modern world.

    A great lesson in true cultural diversity without preachy slogans or "politically correct" censorship. It should be shown in all the world's classrooms. Keisha Castle-Hughes is unforgettable as the heroine, and richly deserves the Oscar for which she has been nominated.
    10lawprof

    An Exquisite Masterpiece!

    I don't use the word "masterpiece" often when reviewing a film but for "Whale Rider," it's an inadequate accolade. This is one of the most moving, beautiful and powerful films I have seen in years.

    Screenplay author and director Niki Caro faithfully translated Witi Ihimaera's novel of the same name, a poignant and sometimes sad but ultimately uplifting story of New Zealand Maoris seeking, with the leadership of a difficult, stubborn and often harsh elder to sustain their peoples' values and customs.

    Australia and New Zealand are both encountering, in politics and in culture (and often the two are inextricably linked), their shared heritage of white oppression of native peoples. Much of this history is unknown to Americans and Europeans who view Australia through a bird's eye picture of the Sydney Opera House and New Zealand with even fewer associational icons.

    Recently, "Rabbitproof Fence" painfully depicted the policy of Australia to force lighter skin aborigines into "schools" where they would be nurtured to become "semi-whites" and then married to those of similar skin tone. The object was to bleach the blackness out of Australia and the horrors of this incarnation of cultural and anthropological genocide are on full display in that film.

    "Whale Rider" takes a different and, in the end, perhaps a more powerful approach. There are virtually no whites in the film and only children's t-shirts and some music blasting from a boombox suggests the encroaching force of the controlling majority.

    The cast is unknown to Americans and their names can be found on the IMDb homepage for the film. The lead actress, however, must be named. In the role of "Pai," a young girl whose mother dies at her birth along with her twin brother, is the extraordinary Keisha Castle-Hughes. She imbues every scene with a commanding and inviting vitality. Hers is an Academy Award (and any other major award) performance.

    Pai's father left New Zealand for Europe, there to create and sell Maori crafts. She lives with her grandmother and grandfather, the latter some sort of unelected chieftain of the oceanside community. Bitter that no male heir will succeed him and alternately cruel and loving to his reluctantly acknowledged granddaughter, Koro starts a school to supplement the young boys' secular education with inculcation of the ways of the Maori. Pai wishes to join as an equal and is firmly, indeed harshly rebuffed at every turn.

    If the Maori language has the phrase "You go, girl!," then it be directed towards the indefatigable but not arrogant Pai. It would have been easy to make her the kind of thoughtless rebel that nature often programs teenagers to be. The depth of her character resides in her simultaneous quest for equality and her understanding of her grandfather's unyielding attachment to patriarchal values. Pai's close relationship with her grandmother, a woman living a life universally recognizable to Americans, provides warmth and support and do some of her other relationships.

    The story unfolds seamlessly with Maori music and rituals bridging the spoken dialogue (mostly in English, some in Maori with subtitles).

    Partly a straight tale, partly a gripping mystical fable, "Whale Rider" never becomes saccharine.

    The music and Maori songs complement but do not compete with the dialogue, a welcome change from many movies today. The land and the ocean are rawly gorgeous.

    As in Australia, relations today between New Zealand's indigenous people and the descendants of their vanquishers are sometimes tense. There are open wounds from continuing political collisions over land and culture. The Maoris are not a monolith and internal dissension is active. Serious attempts to sustain Maori values and culture in the face of assimilative pressures meet with varied degrees of success (in Koro's Maori school the kids wear t-shirts with rock themes and one has a shirt advertising an upstate New York resort area if I saw correctly). New Zealand's most internationally renowned Maori is the opera diva Kiri te Kanawa who is now dedicated to Maori cultural restoration projects. "Whale Rider" can only give a boost to such efforts which, as this film shows, makes not only New Zealand but the world richer.

    This is a film I will acquire on DVD as soon as it is available.

    10/10.
    9bbhlthph

    A Classic of the future!

    After many months of watching films of which the best deserved IMDb ratings of six. seven or eight, I viewed this really exceptional film that I felt deserved at least double anything else I had seen recently, so a comparative rating of 15 would not have seemed out of place. This, and the many 'best film' awards it has received from film festival audiences, leave me with little doubt that here we have a classic of the future. Surprisingly it comes into that most difficult of categories - the family film - not a film that Dad can sleep through whilst the kids enjoy it, or one which gives Dad and Mum some pleasure whilst the kids wish they had not been dragged away from the telly, but a film that can really be enjoyed by all the family - except perhaps teenage boys at the age where their horizons have just widened to the extent that they are interested only in films featuring unrelenting action and adventure, preferably accompanied by unremitting violence.

    The DVD of 'Whale Rider' was released in 2004 but it never attracted me greatly. and getting round to watching it has taken me some time. There are so many films of a similar type where the story sounds very admirable and wholesome, but experience warns that the combination of a cast of enthusiastic and largely non-professional actors, a limited budget, and over-enthusiastic direction by somebody not fully understanding the limitations of the medium, often culminates in a rather mawkish product. The fear that this might have happened here has kept me away for a long time. To anyone else in this position let me recommend getting a disk and giving it a spin as soon as possible.

    Admittedly promoters of such films take a considerable risk - often their final budget stands or falls largely on the performance of the star. The rest of the cast are essentially ordinary people playing themselves and even though they may not have much acting experience, their parts are not too demanding so minor imperfections are often not too disruptive. But one minor glitch in the performance of the star can break the spell which is created when the audience begins to feel involved in the story and concerned about what happens to the individuals portrayed. This is essentially a film by a woman director about feminine empowerment, but not the sterile antagonistic type which looks for a world run exclusively by women (preferably with only a few men left around to keep the sperm banks well stocked). Here we are looking at the true equality that first began to be recognised during the World Wars of the twentieth century when everyone understood there was an enormous task to accomplish and we could never finish it unless we harnessed the full abilities of everyone in our society. This is a film from New Zealand where the leaders of a traditionally male dominated Maori culture, badly disrupted by the impact of the more sophisticated civilization of western settlers, are attempting to go back to their roots to avoid being totally absorbed into the new colonial culture but remain unable to fully recognise that women must play a vital part in any process of cultural regeneration. This film, based on a book by the first Maori author to have a work published in North America, is a fictional fable that shows one way in which such an essential change to the fundamental structure of their traditional culture might take place.

    This may not sound like the basis for an enjoyable film for a Western family audience, but the host of best film awards it has received does convey some sense of the extent to which it is a very exceptional movie. Although almost everyone involved played their full part in its success; it was ultimately the outstanding Oscar nominated performance given by its star which made the film memorable. Keisha Castle-Hughes was 12 years old when this was filmed and it won her the youngest ever Best Actress nomination. If there were only more young actors of this calibre, we might have more films fostering positive values in society, rather than often competing to outdo each other in violence, horror or degradation. Incidentally, but more importantly, we might also begin to find that the former films are capable of providing us all, including the younger generation, with a generally more enjoyable viewing experience.
    9Fong_Chun_Kin

    Small girl with the heart of a whale

    Slow pace but never boring. Small girl 'Paikea' touches your heart with her quiet strength and determination. Time and again, she faces prejudice from her grandfather whom she never gives up loving. Her grandpa loves her too, but tradition and the single-mindedness that Paikea will never be the leader of their tribe forces him to refrain from showing his true emotions towards his only granddaughter. But young Paikea never gives up; she respects grandpa's decision and masks her desire to become the whale rider of her tribe.

    The remarkably beautiful and serene scenery of New Zealand complements the eventual inner peace that Paikea achieves. To save the whales their tribe loves so much, she shows remarkable calmness in guiding the whales back into sea despite death staring her straight in the face.

    An inspiring and well-executed film.
    AltuKayar

    a very emotional, perfect movie

    I think that the movie `Whale Rider' is a really great movie because it does not only introduces a whole new culture and a different way of living but also tells about the hopes, believes and loves of people in a very different way. Besides that the actors of the movie are really very successful, we know that the main character was the youngest Oscar nominee with her performance although it was the first time she was acting in a movie.

    I do not consider the Maori people as the people of New Zealand, and I do not think that the movie gives us information about the New Zealand people and their life styles. The whole thing is rather develops in a different world, a world that is ancient and unchanged. While watching the movie, we see lots of different things such as the traditional greetings of people by using their noses and heads or the chants(traditional songs) that they use to express their feelings. These are very interesting for me to learn and watch, I felt like as I am 8 or 9 years old and watching a documentory about a country that I have never seen before.

    It was also very interesting for me to see and experience the feelings of love, hope or commitment in a very interesting way. I mean Pai loves her grandfather very much but it is a different kind of love that I have never seen.

    I want to say why is the movie is really really great. The whole thing is about people from a different culture and a different world as I said before, and they do such weird things and you think that `ok, it is a part of their culture' and you somehow accept everything. But at the end it almost makes you believe that, Pai is really a prophet and she really can communicate with the whales and she did really rode that whale and all. The movie really makes you to believe that all the things are real.

    In addition, the main actor Pai, really acts great, very good for her age and experience. Maybe it is because of their culture and all the kids of Maori are like that, but when she is sad and looks at you you get sore and when she is happy it makes you feel good. I think that is called good acting.

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    Related interests

    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Drew Barrymore and Pat Welsh in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
    Family

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The whales in the movie are a combination of footage of real whales, life size models (some with humans creating movement) and CGI. Keisha Castle-Hughes said the key whale riding scene took place 15-20 miles offshore, and was terrifying.
    • Goofs
      The father and grandfather argue after the slide show, and the father goes to pull down the white sheet that was hung over some drapes to act as a screen. He pulls it down, along with the rod and orange drapes that the sheet was hanging from. Moments later, the drapes are back up in place and hanging perfectly straight, without enough time for him to re-hang the drapes.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Paikea: In the old days, the land felt a great emptiness. It was waiting. Waiting to be filled up. Waiting for someone to love it. Waiting for a leader.

      [child birth scene]

      Paikea: And he came on the back of a whale. A man to lead a new people. Our ancestor, Paikea. But now we were waiting for the firstborn of the new generation, for the descendant of the whale rider. For the boy who would be chief.

      Paikea: There was no gladness when I was born. My twin brother died, and took our mother with him.

    • Crazy credits
      Dedicated to those who have gone before
    • Connections
      Featured in The Making of 'Whale Rider' (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Bar One
      (International Observer)

      Loaded Sounds

      Performed by International Observer

      Courtesy of IO Audio

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 29, 2003 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • New Zealand
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Maori
    • Also known as
      • Người Cưỡi Cá Voi
    • Filming locations
      • Whangara, Gisborne, New Zealand
    • Production companies
      • South Pacific Pictures
      • ApolloMedia Distribution
      • Pandora Filmproduktion
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $20,779,666
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $137,418
      • Jun 8, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $41,062,976
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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