Lindsay Shelton: film seller supreme…
2013 10m
Lindsay Shelton's career testifies to his love of communicating, and his love of film. He began a decade programming the Wellington Film Festival, while working in television news. In 1979 he joined the New Zealand Film Commission: over the next 22 years he was an enthusiastic promoter and salesman for New Zealand film around the globe.
In this ScreenTalk interview, Shelton talks about:
- Getting pulled into the new medium of television, from a globetrotting newspaper career
- Campaigning to sell films for the New Zealand Film Commission
- The golden days of Kiwi movies first breaking into overseas markets: Goodbye Pork Pie, then selling Sleeping Dogs and Smash Palace to the United States
- How the world was discovering New Zealand as a hothouse of new and exciting talent
- Shelton's long held belief that the best way to promote New Zealand films is by country rather than genre
- His belief that without the NZ Film Commission there would be no local film industry
- The "wonderful" but stressful story of how he persuaded Jane Campion to turn An Angel at My Table into a movie
- Stunned reactions to the first international screening of Once Were Warriors, at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival
Interview Credit
Interview and Editing - Ian Pryor. Camera - Alex Backhouse
“The campagin which I ran throughout my 21 years at the Film Commission was always based on promoting New Zealand films, a genre as New Zealand films.”
Lindsay Shelton on how he marketed New Zealand films to a international audience






