The Oshima Gang
Theo Macdonald
RM Gallery
Samoa House Lane
Karangahape Rd, Auckland
3 September – 11 October 2025
Opening 3 September at 5:00pm
The Oshima Gang is an experimental documentary that revisits five colonial-era institutions featured in the 1983 World War II film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence: Auckland Railway Station, King’s College, Auckland Council Chambers, Mount Eden Prison, and the Auckland Domain Wintergardens.
Layering contemporary Super 8 footage of these sites with archival text and raw production sound from the original 1982 shoot, The Oshima Gang invites viewers to consider postcolonial identity in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland; to reflect on how outsiders perceive this landscape, and how locals, too, might be made to feel like outsiders within it. The film treats Auckland’s preserved, decaying, and repurposed colonial architecture as a malleable text, open to interpretation and critique.
The film’s methods are informed by Fūkeiron (“Landscape Theory”), a short-lived radical film movement that emerged in Japan following the collapse of the 1960s student protests. Rejecting human subjects entirely, Fūkeiron proposed that the oppressive structures of the urban environment best reveal the political and psychological conditions of contemporary life.
By placing these historical ideas and documents in dialogue with the present, this exhibition looks to the lessons of the late 1960s to examine how we might represent and record this current moment in New Zealand history, a time defined by rising militarism, Western bloc violence, urban neglect, and widespread institutional failure.