Abstract
The concept of landscape developed from an aesthetic perspective and has come to be
recognized as a cultural product of perception. Landscape is natural form that is subject
to our projections of cultural identification; therefore, nationally idealised landscapes are
a framed view referencing national identity. Cinematic landscapes are arguably one of the
most powerful mediums for constructing and reinforcing national landscape identity. In
New Zealand the cinematic projections of nationhood have often ignored the
environmental and Maori perceptions of landscape. Additionally the rural landscape is
underrepresented and misrepresented by New Zealand national cinema yet it is arguably
the most important landscape for the portrayal of culturally significant stories. A
paradoxical divide has opened between the projection of New Zealand landscape identity
as an environmental utopia and the reality of its ecological degradation. I argue that
national cinema can bridge this divide and correct New Zealand’s misrepresentation of
itself by projecting a more ecologically truthful and culturally inclusive landscape, thus
establishing a stable national identity where the landscape reflects projected identities.
This is a two-part thesis that addresses these themes in a written thesis and in a short
documentary, titled River Dog.