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A screengrab of the haka scene that features in the trailer for season four of The Crown
A screengrab of the haka scene that features in the trailer for season four of The Crown

Pop CultureOctober 30, 2020

The breakout star of the new season of The Crown is… New Zealand

A screengrab of the haka scene that features in the trailer for season four of The Crown
A screengrab of the haka scene that features in the trailer for season four of The Crown

A new trailer for season four of The Crown dropped overnight, and big news, Aotearoa: we’re in it. London-based Māori group Ngāti Rānana has confirmed they were involved in filming a haka scene.

The fourth season of Netflix’s award-winning drama about the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II premieres next month, and a new trailer gives us a delicious taster of where the drama will lie. Predictably, some of it takes place in Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey, but hold onto your tiaras, because all the important drama goes down in New Zealand.

This bold statement is based on approximately 0.8 seconds of trailer footage that includes a haka and a sad princess, but what is life without risk? I’m the Queen seeing a cow, I’m Paddy Gower halfway through election night. I’m going out on a royal limb and I’m going to call it, and say this season of The Crown is all about New Zealand.

Season four follows the royal family from 1976 to 1990, and features Charles (Josh O’Connor) and Diana (Emma Corrin) on their six-week tour of Australia and New Zealand in 1983. This was the famous visit when baby William tried to eat a Buzzy Bee on the grounds of Government House, and when the belief in the royal fairytale was at its peak. Charles and Diana visited places like Wainuiomata and Masterton, Waitangi and Te Poho-O-Rawiri Marae in Gisborne, and it will be a sad day if The Crown does not give Wainuiomata the international acclaim it so rightly deserves. 

The trailer shows Charles and Diana riding a royal wave of Antipodean public popularity, while enduring plenty of private misery. In fact, none of the Windsors appear happy, not even Princess Anne, who seems to spend the entire season riding a horse. Still, the main thing is that New Zealand is included in The Crown, right?

PHOTO: NETFLIX

Charlie Panapa from Ngāti Rānana London Māori Club confirmed to The Spinoff that they were involved in filming the haka scene that features in the trailer. While he was unable to share any specifics about the scene itself, Panapa confirmed it was set during the Prince and Princess of Wales’ 1983 Australasian tour.

“Though the real tour happened in the early mild autumn, the scene we filmed was in the dead of winter,” Panapa said. “What really blew us away was that as soon as we stepped on set it was as if we were magically transported home, with ponga trees and a waharoa to complete the illusion.

“Many of us had hairstyles far too modern to read as early 80s, so there were quite a few wigs and rollers required for both tāne and wāhine.”

We won’t see this scene in full, or any others set in New Zealand, until the series drops next month.  Until then, we can distract ourselves with the first proper look at Gillian Anderson’s portrayal of Margaret Thatcher, and the tense royal face-off between Britain’s first female prime minister and the Queen (Olivia Colman, in her second and final season as the sovereign).

PHOTO: NETFLIX

To be fair, Liz has a lot on her plate this season. There’s a wedding and a funeral, and she’s still fighting with sister Margaret (Helena Bonham Carter). Her new daughter-in-law insists on roller skating through the palace, and honestly, can’t a monarch get one moment’s peace without someone else demanding to be loved?

That’s where we come in, Aotearoa. Yes, we’re in The Crown, but it’s no big deal. Sure, we’re playing a key part of one of Netflix’s biggest original dramas, but we’re cool with it. Like Charles and Diana on the lawn of Government House, everything’s fine. Either way, November 15 can’t come soon enough.

Seasons 1-3 of The Crown are available on Netflix. Season 4 premieres on November 15, 2020.

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Pop CultureOctober 30, 2020

Emily Writes: The best spooky TV to binge this Halloween weekend

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Are you excited about spending Halloween on the couch this year? So is Emily Writes, who has some suggestions for a weekend of spooky streaming.

If 2020 hasn’t been scary enough for you and you’re looking to be terrified this Halloween, there’s plenty to watch on all of the streaming services. Binge away and add to the existential dread you carry around daily. Here’s the top 10 best shows to stream this weekend.

10. The Haunting of Hill House / The Haunting of Bly Manor (Netflix)

The Haunting of Bly Manor has just dropped on Netflix and if you’re a millennial or Zoomer incapable of watching TV without checking your phone or scrolling Instagram at the same time you will absolutely not be able to follow this show. Points for queer representation but honestly, The Haunting of Hill House is far superior. It’s scarier and less convoluted.

9. Last Looks (Quibi)

OK, I know I’m the only person who watches and loves Quibi but I’m still including this one. Catch it before Quibi goes. It’s a documentary series on “the dark side of glamour”. It’s beautifully shot and includes “real life crimes that shook the fashion industry”. It’s bite-sized true crime basically, narrated by Dakota Fanning of all people. But what I like the most about it is the clothing and make-up. It has also introduced me to some fascinating stories like the murder of Maurizio Gucci, the story behind fake heiress Anna Delvey, and fashion journalist Christa Worthington’s horrific murder and slut shaming in Cape Cod. I don’t usually like true crime but I really like this series.

8. Little Fires Everywhere (Amazon Prime)

You may argue that Little Fires Everywhere isn’t scary enough to watch on Halloween but I think Reese Witherspoon’s white lady characters are very scary. Based on Celeste Ng’s 2017 bestseller this adaptation depicts motherhood as a terrifying and secretive journey where you sink or swim. Kerry Washington is very good in it and there’s rising dread with every episode until you reach the gripping finale.

David Tennant in Deadwater Fell (supplied)

7. Deadwater Fell (TVNZ OnDemand)

I never really understood the attraction people have to David Tennant until I watched this. Then I watched two episodes of Des (that’s all I could stomach – it’s about serial killer Des Nilsen and is on TVNZ as well if you’re so inclined) and my attraction disappeared in seconds. Anyway, Deadwater Fell is a British drama slash thriller based in a small Scottish town where everyone knows everyone’s business. A terrible house fire leaves a family dead. Was it an accident? Or was it murder? What a great beard though.

6. Unsolved Mysteries (Netflix)

Season two just dropped but I still think season one is the best. I was really into season one and I still look up the cases for updates. But season two was just really sad and grim. It no longer felt like a guilty pleasure – instead I just felt like a terrible person for watching it. Still, it will lead you on a journey into murder Reddit which is definitely a frightening place. Those people are the worst. You can also catch the OG Unsolved Mysteries on Amazon Prime. It still holds up.

The extremely horny True Blood

5. True Blood (Neon)

It’s horny and there’s vampires. What more could you ask for? And there’s seven seasons on Neon. Seven! Only four of them are any good but hey, every one of them has Alexander Skarsgård in it.

4. Servant (Apple TV)

Servant is terrifying and I’m obsessed with it. From the messed-up mind of M. Night Shyamalan, King of the Plot Twist, Servant is the story of an insufferable rich white couple who are in mourning following the death of their baby. I know, it’s not for everyone. I don’t want to give anything away but they hire a nanny after this death and everything becomes really, really fucked up. It has been a while since I’ve waited week-to-week in anticipation of a TV show like I did with this one – Servant totally captured me. You can watch the whole season because it has been out for a while.

What We Do in the Shadows (supplied)

3. Wellington Paranormal (TVNZ OnDemand), What We Do In the Shadows (Neo)

Because I live in Wellington, I’m contractually obligated to include these two shows. Plus, Karen O’Leary is a delight.

2. The Handmaid’s Tale (Neon)

Predictable, but I couldn’t not include it. It’s terrifying in and of itself but it’s also just terrifying because you can see it happening. Like now. You all know the plot but it’s basically what happens if or when Trump wins the US election next week.

1. Lovecraft Country (Neon)

The best show I’ve seen this year. Lovecraft Country is incredible. The first episode is a confusing what-the-fuck-is-this introduction, but stick with it. It gets better every episode. Set in segregated 1950s Jim Crow America, the show presents the horror of overt, systemic and brutal racism as the true monsters of the era (along with actual monsters). Sundown laws, the Tulsa race massacre, the murder of Emmett Till, Trumball Park housing, the “green book” are all featured among the magic and monsters of horror writer H.P. Lovecraft. It’s truly frightening to see history repeat in 2020.

Honourable mentions that didn’t make the cut: Zombody Save Me! (TVNZ), The Victim (TVNZ), Gloriavale (TVNZ), The 1pm briefing with Dr Ashley Bloomfield, Evil (NEON), iZombie (NEON), The Terror (Amazon Prime), Fire in Paradise (Netflix).