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1-42 of 42
- It was only after her death that the work of New Zealand writer, Katherine Mansfield, became well known, thanks to her editor and husband, John Middleton-Murry. She had left New Zealand to travel around France, and she died there from tuberculosis. Thirty three years later, Middleton-Murry is invited to France to approve a new edition of her collected letters and journals, and there he meets a young woman, Marie Taylor (also from NZ) who reminds him strongly of his dead wife. As the two become friends, Marie starts reading old correspondence between Mansfield and her husband, and discovers the true nature of their relationship and that Mansfield's dying wishes regarding her writings have been ignored by the manipulative, and less-than-honest, Middleton-Murry.
- The story centred on widowed journalist Dan Wells, who is sailing the Pacific with on his 25-metre schooner "Seaspray", with his three children Mike, Noah and Sue, assisted by their Fijian crewman.
- A group of Australian schoolchildren discover a way to create rainbow-coloured goats for wool, hoping to make money for their clubhouse in the process.
- A boy has a boomerang and when he throws it everything around him stopped,except him ,so he can do whatever we wants, including stopping crime.
- An Australian doctor comes to a small Maori village where a child is suffering from Leukemia, as he discovers the truth about his heritage the town rallies together to keep the freezing works open.
- A group of kids create their own little town with its own rules.
- A hundred years after the theft from New Zealand of three irreplaceable tribal carvings, two Maori, Rewi and Peter, decide it's time for ancient grievances to be put right. Both men are in Berlin where the carvings are stored in a museum. Plans go awry when a group that Peter has assembled breaks into the museum.
- Teen Nick is estranged from his family, and blaming himself for his Maori mate's climbing death. He runs away to his straight talking grandfather - who takes him bush - and loses his virginity to Sally.
- This is an ABC repackaged version of the GTV-9 series The Terrific Adventures of the Terrible Ten (1960).
- In 1942, Australian coastwatcher Don Marshall, a local district officer, operates on a small island off New Guinea. He is entrusted with relaying information to Allied headquarters.
- A relationship develops between a Samoan and a New Zealander, but each finds the other's culture a hard adjustment. Friends and family are not supportive, particularly when she becomes pregnant, although he proposes marriage.
- Tom, a journalist from the city, meets Rawi while writing a piece rural life. However, she is Maori and her family disapproves of the relationship.
- Percy the Policeman's dim-witted adventures in the line of duty on Sunshine Street, particularly attempting to apprehend the local burglar.
- The story of the brothers Alfred and Walter Burton, who founded an influential photography studio in late 19th-century New Zealand and captured an important period in the country's history.
- A group of poor university students plan schemes to rob a safe, failing to communicate their contradictory plans.
- Actor Martyn Sanderson returns in 1977 to the Hokianga of his youth and visits his elderly and romantic aunt, Olive Bracey. Her reminiscences of pioneer life mesh with nostalgic songs and readings from her fiction.
- Conversations with four people, exploring their inner worlds, their self-image and how they feel they fit into society. It explores spirituality, loneliness, art and home.
- Indigenous farmers in Peru, Nicaragua, Italy, France, Australia and New Zealand share their intimacy with the land and the seeds they have nurtured for generations; global corporations attempt to 'own' the intellectual property of seeds.
- "The Spirits and Times will Teach", is the first episode in the ground-breaking 1974 documentary series. Prior to the establishment of an urban marae in Porirua, Maori people recollect the past reality of life in the rural communities of Tokomaru Bay and Waima Valley. The concept of marae as traditionally understood is discussed by young Maori from groups like Nga Tama Toa in terms of the new and emergent urban present. As diverse Pakeha and Pacific Island community networks attempt to form links with the marae, real questions are raised about the nature of identity and the possibility of a "multicultural" future. The importance of having a sense of belonging and forming a sense of identity is explored as the documentary moves down to Porirua to follow the establishment of a new marae.
- The Tuhoe people of the Urewera country have maintained the Ringatu religion founded in the 19th century by Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki. Tribal leader John Rangihau takes a group to visit the deserted marae at Maungapohatu from where the prophet Rua Kenana was taken prisoner, and speaks of his Tuhoetanga.
- 1970–197230mTV Episode