New Zealand’s first television-movie star was just fifteen years old. Jamie Higgins, plucked from a Wellington schoolyard, devastated the nation with his harrowing depiction of Jimmy Sullivan in Murray Reece’s The God Boy (1976). A lonely pawn caught in the crossfire of his parents’ violent, tragic relationship, Jimmy comes of age through a process of emotional hardening – by, as he says, learning to ‘care about nothink’.1
Ever since, it seems, New Zealand film has been preoccupied with the fraught transition from childhood to adulthood. As Vincent Ward, director of Vigil (1984) and The Navigator: A Medieval Odyssey (1988), has suggested: ‘Maybe we are attracted to the childhood theme because New Zealand is so remote that, when we venture into the world, we do so as innocents.’2 As innocent as…
