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Something to watch tonight: Friday 14 November

By November 14, 2025February 13th, 2026No Comments

Helen Kelly - Together (Sutorius, 2020)

If you are one of those view­ers who have been moved by the Pike River fea­ture film — and there are many of you, it’s still num­ber one at the New Zealand box office — you really ought to seek out Tony Sutorius’ doc­u­ment­ary about the trade uni­on­ist and cam­paign­er, Helen Kelly (played in the film by Lucy Lawless).

This is the doc­u­ment­ary that the Tony char­ac­ter in the film (Jordan Mooney) is mak­ing when he fol­lows Kelly, Anna Osborne and Sonya Rockhouse to the Wellington High Court and bey­ond. The ori­gin­al release of the film was sty­mied by Covid and oth­er chal­lenges, and I wasn’t aware until yes­ter­day that it was avail­able on DocPlay.

If, like me, you wished that Pike River had been more polit­ic­al, Helen Kelly – Together is an excel­lent com­pan­ion piece. Indeed, if we were still in the days of put­ting teth­er decent pack­ages for DVD and Blu-ray release, this would be one of the spe­cial fea­tures on Pike River. It fills in plenty of gaps about the acci­dent itself, the lives of the men and, espe­cially, the shock­ing state of work­place safety in New Zealand at the time of the dis­aster. It was an acci­dent but, at the same time, it was not an acci­dent, if you know what I mean.

Kelly came from a uni­on fam­ily. Her fath­er Pat was a staunch trade uni­on­ist and com­mun­ist and her moth­er, Cath, was anti-Vietnam War act­iv­ist and helped run a kind of house­wives uni­on, the Campaign Against Rising Prices (or CARP) which I’d nev­er heard of before.

The film doesn’t dwell on the past, although it makes clear that the 1984 Trades Hall bomb­ing in Wellington, that killed care­taker Ernie Abott, was a rad­ic­al­ising moment for some, just at the time the rest of New Zealand was hurt­ling towards neoliberalism.

By 2015, Kelly has real­ised that the best way to achieve any growth for the uni­on move­ment was to focus on health and safety and try and — not only — get justice for work­ers and fam­il­ies whose lives were being des­troyed by Aotearoa’s scan­dal­ous atti­tude to work­place safety, but achieve the kind of sys­tem­ic change that is at this very moment being — equally sys­tem­at­ic­ally — being rolled back.

Twenty forestry work­ers a year were dying on the job and the indus­tries with the worst records were, not un-coincidentally, the least uni­on­ised. She knew that the fight for bet­ter pay and con­di­tions was less likely to be sup­por­ted by middle New Zealand — the demon­ising of uni­ons had been an ongo­ing pro­ject since the 1970s — but work­ers com­ing home alive would be.

If I have a quibble about the film, it’s that the his­tor­ic­al con­text around that fight is skated over too quickly. The attacks on work­ing people and the growth of the eco­nom­ic right wing are dealt with in a short mont­age and I fear that if you weren’t already aware of the ‘Dancing Cossacks’ pro­pa­ganda and Rob Muldoon’s author­it­ari­an­ist inclin­a­tions, you won’t learn it here. Incidentally, Cath (Helen Kelly’s mum) gets a cap­tion but Pat does not. Oversight? Or an assump­tion that New Zealand view­ers would already know who he was because of his notori­ety at the time?

Kelly was only 52 when she died (lung can­cer des­pite nev­er being a smoker) and New Zealand was robbed of a gen­er­a­tion­al polit­ic­al tal­ent. I was reminded of anoth­er Mt. Victoria res­id­ent who was taken from us too soon, also memori­al­ised posthum­ously in a doc­u­ment­ary. Celia Lashlie was only 61 when she passed in 2015 and Amanda Millar’s film about her is also avail­able on DocPlay and is also essen­tial viewing.


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Where to watch Helen Kelly – Together

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Streaming on DocPlay or digit­al rent­al on AroVision or NZ Film On Demand 

Australia: Streaming on DocPlay

Rest of the world: Not cur­rently available