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Stray

M NZ

Adult Themes.

M AU

Sex scenes, nudity and coarse language.

DIRECTOR/SCREENPLAY: Dustin Feneley

PRODUCER: Desray Armstrong, Dustin Feneley
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ari Wegner
EDITOR: Dione Chard
PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Sophie Durham
SOUND DESIGNER: Dick Reade

WITH: Arta Dobroshi (Grace), Kieran Charnock (Jack), Joel Fili (probation officer), Ross Harper (timber yard boss), Mia Blake (Michelle), Sean Crawford (Sean).

FESTIVALS: Moscow IFF 2018, NZIFF 2018, Miskolc IFF 2018, Nara IFF 2018, Brisbane IFF 2018, Cape Town IFF 2018, Festival des Antipodes 2018, Oaxaca FF 2018

AWARDS: Best Actor, Moscow International Film Festival 2018

DURATION: 104 min
ORIGINAL LANGUAGE: English 
COUNTRY: New Zealand

ASPECT RATIO: 1:1.85
FORMAT: 2K
SOUND: 5.1

Two damaged strangers fall into a complex intimate relationship in Dustin Feneley’s beautiful and rigorous debut feature film, shot in Otago against the backdrop of the breathtaking Southern Alps.

One of the most strikingly photographed New Zealand films in recent memory, Stray is the statement-making feature debut of writer/director Dustin Feneley. Set in the wintry south, this bracingly spare character drama frames Aotearoa’s oft-filmed landscapes in a clear and startling new light.

Jack (Kieran Charnock, The Rehearsal), a taciturn young man on parole for grievous bodily harm, holes up in a cabin somewhere in Central Otago. It’s not clear whether he’s trying to forget the past or reconcile with it, although his hesitancy with locals suggests he’s much closer to the scene of the crime than he’d care to admit. Locked away in a prison of his own making, Jack one evening encounters Grace, very far from home and seeking refuge. Played by the captivating Arta Dobroshi, star of the Dardenne brothers’ Lorna’s Silence, Grace’s own private struggles linger beneath her attraction to Jack. These lonely, enigmatic strangers drift into a relationship that promises to either hurt or heal.

Capturing New Zealand’s moody and majestic southern landscape with terrific clarity, Stray demands to be seen on the big screen.

“Fortifies hope in the breadth and ambition of NZ film”
★★★★★ - Flicks

“One of the very best films ever made in New Zealand"
"Indelibly beautiful, human and near-perfect film"
★★★★½ - Stuff

"The best film to come out of New Zealand this year"
"Remarkably shot, quietly powerful and totally uncompromising in its vision"
★★★★★ - NZ Herald

"A revelation... a wonderful film... a fine addition to our national cinema"
- Radio NZ

"Intimate and human"
- Hollywood Reporter