Among the many good things about moving to Hawke's Bay last month was the unexpected bonus of seeing the 2010 New Zealand International Film Festival twice.
Thanks to a happy quirk of timing, the festival followed me to Napier, so I've had a rare second chance to catch the movies I missed the first time round.
Unfortunately, even with a second bite of the cherry, I messed it up: I missed Homegrown, the collection of New Zealand short films, I missed cowboy classic Once Upon a Time in the West, and I let the live cinema experience of The Marvellous Corricks pass me by.
Luckily, there's still some good stuff to come.
Screening tonight is the film by Irish-New Zealander Lydia Monin, From Poverty Bay to Broadway, about boxer Tom Heeney.
Heeney could be the biggest Kiwi sports star you've never heard of - he was a World Heavyweight contender in 1928, putting New Zealand boxing on the world map some 70 years before David Tua put the O in awesome.
He fought Gene Tunney in New York for the heavyweight title, losing the bout but picking up a challengers check of US$100,000.
Even today that's a lot of money for a boy from Kaiti, Gisborne - in 1928, it must have been unimaginable riches.
And while I haven't seen the movie, from what I've read about him, Heeney sounds like a true, honest-to-goodness Kiwi bloke, straight-up and doggedly determined - it speaks volumes that his nickname was Honest Tom.
Oh, and he represented this region in rugby too, playing for Hawke's Bay-Poverty Bay against the Springboks in 1921.
The film screens just once in Napier, at the Century Cinema tonight. I'm pleased I got a second chance to see it.
Editorial - Knockout film showing in Bay today
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