• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • LCA Portal
  • LAMP2
  • LCA Online Donations
  • LCANZ Service Centre
  • Contact

Lutheran Church of Australia

where love comes to life

  • HOME
  • ABOUT US
  • The Latest
    • News
      • The Latest News
      • LCA eNews
      • Calls – Employment – Volunteering
      • Daily Devotions
      • The Lutheran
    • Resources
      • Worship Planning Page
      • Online Worship
      • Congregation Leaders
      • Bulletins and Announcements
    • Events & Projects
      • Implementation of Ordination Resolution
      • Convention of General Synod 2024
      • Convention of General Synod 2025
  • Congregational Life Hub
      • Congregational Life Hub
        Resources and support for all areas of your congregation’s life
        Visit the hub
      • Worship & Faith – Inspiring worship and growing in faith
      • Mission – Equipping congregations for local mission
      • Ministry – Encouraging congregations in ministry
      • Pastoral Care – Supporting those involved in caring for others
      • Governance & Admin – Equipping those involved on church boards and committees
      • Vacant Congregations – Supporting congregations in vacancy
      • Safe Church – Helping you to protect the people in your care
      • Church Workers – Assisting employing and calling bodies
      • Training – Equipping you for serving others
  • FIND A CHURCH
  • CONTACT US

Misfits forge family ties

5 June 2016

by Mark Hadley
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Hunt for the Wilderpeople

DISTRIBUTOR: Madman

RELEASE DATE: 26 May 2016

RATING: PG for mild themes & coarse language


The Hunt for the Wilderpeople is a wry New Zealand adventure that well reflects the laconic sense of humour thriving on both sides of the Tasman ‘ditch’. This story about a troubled boy and a misfit old man discovering a bond that withstands society’s worst criticisms provides a perfect illustration of the unity that oddball Christians also enjoy.

The Hunt for the Wilderpeople is based on the novel Wild Pork and Watercress by best-selling New Zealand author Barry Crump. His story concerns overweight Maori boy Ricky Baker (Julian Dennison), who has been shunted between foster homes before arriving on the farm of Bella Faulkner (Rema Ti Wiata). Ricky is destined for juvenile detention if he can’t make this last placement work. However, Bella and her husband Hector (Sam Neill) are also ‘people without people’ and they set about creating a family where Ricky can really belong. When social services threaten to move Ricky on, he and the curmudgeon Hector are forced to discover how strong their new ties will be. The pair heads bush and the chase that follows is laugh-out-loud funny. Yet it’s also endearing as Ricky and Uncle Hector forge a new definition of family – the Wilderpeople.

We don’t build on what others think of us, but on what someone has done FOR US.

Writer/director Taika Waititi has done a brilliant job crafting a story that will draw guffaws from kids and parents alike. Waititi also does a wince-worthy cameo as a minister of religion, whose funeral service well encapsulates the sort of nonsense non-Christians have heard from preachers who’ve left the Bible behind: ‘So let’s pray that Jesus will make it a bit easier to get through those doors and get to [his] bounty of delicious confectionery.’

It’s a pity the only presentation of Christianity is a negative one, because the very essence of family the film offers up is one that’s been at the heart of God’s community for 2000 years.

Uncle Hector has spent time in jail for manslaughter, and authorities wonder whether his crimes now extend to child abuse. Ricky’s also characterised unfairly by his past.

Yet the basis for their family rests on an acceptance of each other that transcends society’s standards of success. Like the apostle Paul’s description of the early church, their weaknesses make room for something much, much stronger:

‘Brothers and sisters, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong.’ (1 Corinthians 1:26-27)

The Hunt for the Wilderpeople has a few words that might be unsuitable for young ears, but it presents a picture of family that Christian parents will have no trouble getting behind. We don’t build on what others think of us, but on what someone has done for us. In this case our weaknesses become all the more valuable, because they serve to display the love and strength we find in God and each other.

In the case of the Wilderpeople, this is a desire to put family before everything else. In the case of the church, it’s the Holy Spirit who takes that same motivation and transforms it into an eternal security. Jesus persists in offering himself as a foundation for a family that will exceed even Barry Crump’s ‘majestical’ glories of the New Zealand bush.


This review comes from The Lutheran June 2016. Visit the website to find out more about The Lutheran or to subscribe.

« Ministry of the New Testament
Our God ends the search »

Primary Sidebar

Join more than 5,000 people receiving LCA eNews in their inbox every fortnight. It brings you the latest of everything, including updates from this page. It's free, and you can unsubscribe at any time. Click on the picture to sign up.

Archives

  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • Footer

    Quicklinks

    • HOME
    • NEWS & FEATURES
    • CALLS – EMPLOYMENT

     

    • FIND A CHURCH
    • WORSHIP PLANNING PAGE

    Contact us

    139 Frome Street
    Adelaide SA 5000

    08 8267 7300

    © 2026 Lutheran Church of Australia

    Privacy Policy • Disclaimer

    Designed by LCA Communications