Paula’s focus is all rural

Paula Jacobsen on set.

Paula Jacobsen’s newest short film aims to showcase the highs and lows of rural Te Awamutu.

Paula is a third year Communications and Digital Marketing student at Wintec with a passion for creating short films. Paula, 38, went to Te Awamutu College in the early 2000s before leaving to study hairdressing at Wintec.

Her film, Under the Pump is a coming-of-age short film which follows Jordan, a young worker at a farm supplier who is just starting his dream life in the country. However, no one sees him as a country bloke, rather they see him as an inexperienced city boy.

The story was inspired by lived experiences and is a nod to the people, land, and culture of rural New Zealand.

“It’s a celebration of the people who live in Ngaroma,” Paula says.

It was filmed in Ngaroma, just outside of Te Awamutu.

Many Te Awamutu residents helped with the film. Te Awamutu College student Cam Uden and his mother Wendy Lupton supported Paula’s vision by allowing filming to take place on their farm and giving access to their farm machinery for realistic props.

“I loved how enthusiastic Cam was,” Paula said.

Te Awamutu business Vet Pack also supported the filming by allowing filming to take place in their building. Paula says it was great to be able to include people who worked there as characters in the film.

Other actors included Wintec student Eckard Becker who played the main character, Mike Williams from Free FM, Chris Hanlon and Sam Elton from The Chris and Sam Podcast, Nick Coulter from Creative Waikato and Jesse and Ross Jacobsen.

Paula also had support from her family – her mum Alice Sherborne helped on set, and her husband Caleb Jacobsen and father Michael Sherborne acted as extras in the film.

The film will be premiered on December 1 in the Gallagher Events Room at Wintec at the Media Arts graduate exhibition.

 

More Recent News

Mōtai Tangata Rau rule

Waipā’s Mōtai Tangata Rau celebrated a major win at the Tainui Waka Cultural Festival 2024 in Hamilton last weekend. The competition, which attracted thousands of kapa haka fans and a final tally of 20 teams,…

The trees will be back

Te Awamutu’s first venture into a Christmas Tree initiative last year was so successful it will happen again. Thirty wooden trees were placed outside Alexandra St shops late last November, coinciding with the  Te Awamutu…

Getting their feet wet ….

Thirty-six young Rotary leaders spent a couple of hours at Lake Rotopiko near Te Awamutu last week, volunteering their time to help support restoration efforts being done by the National Wetland Trust. The trust collaborates…

They will remember

If you can have stars at an Anzac Day service, then a huge number came out at the 11am service in Te Awamutu. On a day when organisations queued up on Anzac Green to lay…