An inspiring story of family, community and sisterhood set against the backdrop of a season of grassroots club rugby in Taranaki. Filmed over two years, it follows two local teams and several individual players - including Sevens Superstar Michaela Brake, as they navigate ambition, community and personal challenges.
No Tears on the Field arrives as a visually rich and emotionally grounded portrait of women’s rugby in Taranaki, a region whose rugged beauty becomes an unspoken character throughout the film. Director Lisa Burd crafts a documentary that is warm, intimate and full of genuine affection for its subjects. At its heart is a group of young women whose passion for the sport is matched only by their commitment to their families, their work and their communities. The film positions them not as athletes chasing glory but as people carving out space for themselves in a world that often overlooks them.
The documentary follows four players across a full club season, weaving their stories through the rhythms of rural life. These women rise before dawn to tend to farms, care for siblings, manage injuries and navigate personal grief, yet they still find the energy to train, compete and support one another. Burd’s camera lingers on these quieter moments, capturing the exhaustion, the laughter and the small acts of solidarity that define their days. It is here that the film shines brightest. The rugby scenes are beautifully shot, but it is the off‑field intimacy that gives the documentary its emotional weight.
Each player brings a different perspective on what rugby means to her. One finds solace in the sport after the sudden loss of a parent. Another uses it as a way to stay connected to her father, who also happens to be her coach. A third balances childcare with training, embodying the resilience that underpins so many women’s sporting journeys. Their stories are not framed as inspirational slogans but as lived experiences shaped by hardship, humour and determination. They are likeable, grounded and refreshingly candid, and the film treats them with the respect they deserve.
Burd also explores the influence of family, particularly the relationships between daughters and their parents. One of the most compelling dynamics is between a player and her father, whose coaching style reflects a traditional, tough‑it‑out mentality. He is brusque, demanding and occasionally abrasive, yet the affection between them is unmistakable. Burd captures the tension between his old‑school approach and his deep pride in his daughter, revealing a relationship that is both complicated and tender. Another player’s bond with her mother, shaped by shared loss, offers a quieter but equally powerful counterpoint. These intergenerational connections give the film a richness that extends beyond sport.
Yet for all its warmth, No Tears on the Field does not shy away from the contradictions within the rugby world. The film frequently highlights the sport’s emphasis on mental wellbeing, with players speaking openly about grief, anxiety and the pressures of rural isolation. Their honesty is striking, and their willingness to be vulnerable is one of the documentary’s greatest strengths. However, this openness sits uneasily alongside the behaviour of some male coaches, whose motivational tactics rely on criticism, negativity and the familiar “toughen up” rhetoric. The contrast is jarring. While the women talk about healing and support, the men often default to the same hardened attitudes that have long defined rugby culture.
This tension becomes one of the film’s most interesting undercurrents. The players are carving out a space where emotional honesty is valued, yet they remain surrounded by a system that still leans heavily on outdated ideas of toughness. The title itself, drawn from advice passed down from a mother to her daughter, reflects this inherited hardness. It is meant as protection, but it also reveals how deeply ingrained these expectations are, even among women who have spent their lives in male‑dominated environments.
The documentary also touches on the history of women’s rugby, acknowledging the decades of struggle that paved the way for today’s players. While these moments are important, they tread familiar ground. Anyone with even a passing knowledge of the sport will recognise the stories of early pioneers fighting for recognition. Though the film gestures toward progress, the first Black Ferns female coach was followed on by 30 years of male-only coaches, and it is clear how far the sport still has to go. The continued dominance of men in leadership positions feels at odds with the film’s celebration of women’s strength and community.
Despite these frustrations, No Tears on the Field remains a compelling and heartfelt documentary. Its greatest achievement is its portrayal of the women themselves: funny, determined, vulnerable and fiercely committed to one another. They are the beating heart of the film, and Burd gives them the space to speak honestly about why they play. For some, rugby is a refuge from isolation. For others, it is a way to honour lost loved ones. For many, it is simply the place where they feel most themselves.
The film’s visual beauty enhances this emotional depth. Taranaki’s landscapes are captured with a painterly eye, from misty paddocks to dramatic coastlines. These images ground the story in a specific place, reminding viewers that these women are shaped not only by their families and their sport but also by the land they live and work on. The region becomes a quiet but constant presence, reinforcing the sense of community that runs through the film.
No Tears on the Field is a celebration of women who refuse to be defined by limitation. It is also a reminder that progress is uneven, and that the structures surrounding women’s sport still carry the weight of old habits. The documentary’s warmth and sincerity make it easy to root for its subjects, even as the film exposes the contradictions they must navigate. Beautifully shot and full of heart, it offers a moving glimpse into the lives of women who play not for fame or recognition but for connection, belonging and the simple joy of the game.
No Tears on the Field is coming to Aotearoa NZ cinemas March 19.
Find your nearest screening here





















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