A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Jeremy Dyer, proprietor of the Governors Bay Hotel, which needed extensive renovations as a result of earthquake damage".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Governors Bay Hotel, which needed extensive renovations as a result of earthquake damage".
A photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Governors Bay Hotel, which needed extensive renovations as a result of earthquake damage".
A photograph of repaired cracks on Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of repaired cracks on Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of repaired cracks on Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of cracks in the ground near Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of cracks in the ground near Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of cracks in the ground near Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of cracks in the ground near Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of cracks in the ground near Governors Bay Road.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "A huge rock bounced in the garden, smashed through the house, and the fence".
A photograph of a picnic table near Governors Bay Road. The concrete pad underneath has cracked.
A photograph of a picnic table near Governors Bay Road. The concrete pad underneath has cracked.
A photograph of a crack in the concrete pad underneath a picnic table near Governors Bay Road.
A photograph of a concrete pad under a picnic table near Governors Bay Road. The concrete has shifted in the ground.
Early Days Yet, directed by Shirley Horrocks, is a full-length documentary about New Zealand poet Allen Curnow, made in the last months of his life. The poet talks about his life and work, and visits the places of some of his most important poems. It includes interviews with other New Zealand poets about Curnow's significance as an advocate for New Zealand poetry. As Curnow famously mused in front of a moa skeleton displayed in Canterbury Museum: "Not I, some child, born in a marvellous year / Will learn the trick of standing upright here."