I've always meant to catch the 1994 New Zealand film
Once Were Warriors, and finally did last night.
First: did Auckland really have bits as ugly as that in 1994? Did Maori gangs really look exactly like escapees from the Mad Max movies? Do they still look like that? What about that trashy bar, and the amount of beer typically being drunk? (Actually, I read in an article afterwards that it was not a Maori pub at all in real life. Huh.)
Anyway, apart from it looking much uglier than I expected, and the acting sometimes in my opinion feeling a bit more theatrical than cinematic, I could see why the film had impact. Unexpectedly, almost, I found myself quite upset by the pivotal death and the funeral scenes.
I was surprised that it did not get more criticism, or at least questioning, from other countries about its race politics at the time, though. I see that the author of the book was a right wing figure, and although the movie changed the book's perspective a lot (focusing on the mother - and its hard to see how you could do it otherwise), the deeply bleak picture it painted of urban Maori behaviour was still controversial in New Zealand. But not, it seems, in other nations' reactions.
I suspect it would face a strong attack on PC lines everywhere if being released today.
Update:
Vice asked recently why a prominent NZ bike gang, the Mongrel Mob, uses Nazi symbols. Seems it wasn't started by Maori, but is now dominated by them. But on the upside, membership is ageing and not being replaced by younger.
This article shows artsy photos of the gang members, whose heavy face tattooing is, shall we say, a tad on the extreme side.