1:57 pm today

Shrek is going to get a te reo Māori makeover

1:57 pm today
Shrek coming in te reo Maori.

It is the first time a DreamWorks animation is being adapted into the language. The re-imagined version will be released in 2025. Photo: Supplied

Shrek, one of Dreamworks' most famous franchise films, is set to return to the big screen in te reo Māori next year.

Māoriland Charitable Trust has announced a collaboration with DreamWorks Animation to dub the film. It is the first time a DreamWorks animation film is being adapted into the language.

Special screenings will be held across New Zealand after a world premiere at the Māoriland Film Festival in March, 2025.

"We are hugely excited to re-imagine this phenomenal and captivating story, which has captured the hearts of families worldwide in te reo Māori," said Māoriland producer Libby Hakaraia.

Lead translator of Shrek Te Kiwa Goddard said he understood the popularity of mainstream films for everyone.

"I'm a father of six, and I see this film as not only being gratefully received by my tamariki, their friends and whānau but by non-Māori speaking people as well as it's that sort of film where you are carried away by the story and the music.

"There's a hunger for stories in te reo that bring the world to our tamariki. The biggest challenge is to find the 'sweet spot' when it comes to matching the humour - which is funny when expressed in English - and then find its equivalent in Māori."

DreamWorks Animation localisation vice president Scott McCarthy said the project celebrated cultural diversity.

"Just as Shrek brings unlikely friends together, this project highlights that same unifying power."

The project has funding support from Te Māngai Pāho and Te Tumu Whakaata Tāonga.

Shrek, the first in the franchise which was originally released in 2001, has been dubbed into more than 40 languages.

Meanwhile, a te reo Māori version of Disney's animation Encanto was released last week, just in time with te wiki o te teo Māori.

Tāmaki Makaurau-based Mātewā Media developed the new version of the film adding to the list of Disney animations translated into te reo Māori including Moana, Lion King, Frozen and Coco.

  • Lion King Reo Māori premiere: 'A dream come true'
  • Mātewā producer Chelsea Winstanley told Midday Report there was "absolute delight" at the premiere.

    "We went out into the theatres on Thursday, that was our opening, and we were number two at the box office," she says, adding it raked in about $20,000 on the night.

    "Since then, we've made lots more but we're hoping this week will really show the commitment that people have to te reo Māori, because we've got so many schools going through this week, it's kind of become almost like part of school curriculum in a way, people are like waiting for us for the next one to be put out."

    For her, this proved the demand for te reo Māori in the cinema.

    "This is also not just for Māori, this is for nationwide, we have Pākehā kids going and enjoying it and loving it. and Disney now can actually see they have an audience here, and that's not just for Disney that's for every studio, if you like, every company that wants to make a film here, or release a film here, they should know now that we are a bilingual nation and that we deserve to have both languages."

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  • Disney had seen the talent with stars coming back for the second Moana film, Winstanley said.

    "They are blown away by the talent we have. And, you know, now you can see the progression in talent. Moana 2, we've got one of our incredible singers and talent Awhimai Fraser [who] has gone all the way through, now she's in Moana 2, the English version.

    "Of course, you've got our OGs from that, Rachel House, Temuera Morrison, they're all coming back for Moana 2. So it's a no-brainer for them."

    She could not hint at what the next dubbed film could be, but said she wanted to keep the momentum going to normalise te reo.

    "I can't say but let me just tell you, the train isn't stopping."

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