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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, October 23, 2005

Independents' days

By Michael Tsai
Advertiser Staff Writer

The film festival's Hawaii Panorama series showcases 48 diverse indies by Island filmmakers.

'The Orb' Sandust Productions

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PANORAMA SERIES AND HIFF NOTES

When and where: Hawaii Panorama films screen at 7:45 tonight, 9 p.m. tomorrow, 8 p.m. Thursday and 3:15 p.m. Oct. 30 (all shows sold out; rush line only) at Dole Cannery; and 6 and 8:15 p.m. Wednesday at the Doris Duke Theatre, Ho-nolulu Academy of Arts

Cost: $9 general, $8 children 13 and younger, military, students, those 62 and older, per screening

Contact: 528-4433, www.hiff.org

Note: HIFF continues through Thursday on Maui, Oct. 30 on O'ahu, Kaua'i and the Big Island. A Best of Hawaii Films program screens outdoors on Moloka'i at 6:30 tonight.

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“Sand Island Drive-In Anthem” utilized Hawai'i talent on all levels.

Kinetic Films

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“Hawaii Slam: Poetry in Paradise”

Zang Pictures

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“Wake,” by Academy for Creative Media students

Kevin Inouye

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“Wake,” an Academy for Creative Media student film, was directed by Kevin Inouye.

Kevin Inouye

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Scott Lee Mason is director of “The Orb,” and Misty Lawrence handled special effects and make-up for the hi-def film.

Sandust Productions

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With local filmmakers once again delivering the fruits of their modestly funded, feverishly attended labors to the Louis Vuitton Hawaii International Film Festival this week, Hawai'i is re-staking its claim as a State of Independents.

There are 48 locally produced narrative and documentary films at this year's festival, most of them packaged in the Hawaii Panorama showcase.

As HIFF executive director Chuck Boller notes, this year's crop of Hawai'i films is particularly diverse, from polished historical documentary to low-budget experimental comedy, edgy art film to conventional drama, sweet romantic comedy to glorious splatterfest.

"The quality of the local indies is extraordinary this year," Boller said. "Hawai'i has become a hotbed of filmmaking because everyone is so supportive of each other. They all work on each other's projects, sort of like a big film school, and the bar keeps getting raised higher and higher."

The Hawaii Panorama series opened last night — oddly enough, with installment No. 6, — featuring a pair of socially conscious projects: Michael Wurth's provocative full-length feature "Pele O Ka Foodmart," which invokes the legend of volcano goddess Pele in a complex story involving domestic abuse, and Brianne Castillo-Huang's "Bracelet," a moving short film about care-giving.

"My So-Called Life (In Hawaii): Selected Works from ACM Students," a showcase tonight and Oct. 30, features short films from University of Hawai'i Academy for Creative Media students. Both showings sold out, but as with all HIFF sellouts, interested moviegoers are encouraged to stake out the rush line for last-minute openings.

Over the years, the Hawaii Panorama has served as a launching point for filmmakers like Nathan Kurosawa ("The Ride") and James Sereno ("Silent Years") as well as a venue for more-established professionals like Stephanie Castillo, who returns this year with "Remember the Boys," to share their latest works with a home audience.

With the festival's longstanding tradition of showcasing projects that speak to the Hawai'i experience, local filmmakers of all stripes have found a reliable venue to tell stories that might otherwise go untold — from ACM student Ty Sanga's "Plastic Leis," which draws on his observations as a hotel worker to comment on the prostitution of local culture, to Castillo's latest documentary, a tribute to Domingo Los Banos and the 50 Hawai'i teenagers of Filipino ancestry who were sent to fight in the Philippines during World War II.

Boller said selecting films for the Hawaii Panorama showcase is getting harder as advances in digital technology make it easier for local artists to make short films. He and festival programmer Anderson Le happily anticipate even harder decisions as Hawai'i filmmakers start to produce more feature-length projects.

"I'd love to see that," Boller said.

In the meantime, this year's offerings offer compelling glimpses at the breadth of experience in Hawai'i.

Here's a sampling:

  • Local Anthem: When author Cedric Yamanaka agreed to let Kinetic Films' Sereno and Ryan Kawamoto adapt his short story "Sand Island Drive-In Anthem" into a short film, he likened it to letting his child go off to the prom with her date, Kawamoto recalls.

    "He was very mellow, very trusting," said Kawamoto, who directed the piece. "In the end, I think we kept the essence of what his story was all about."

    The story takes place in a local drive-in restaurant over the course of one pivotal day in the lives of a group of friends.

    "It's the most local thing I've made," said Sereno, who founded Kinetic Films as a way to produce homegrown films that utilize Hawai'i talent on all levels. "It's a story that's a slice of life, funny at some points but very dark at the end. It's about a series of events that pushes these guys to a different point in their lives."

    The film features comedian Augie Tulba in his first dramatic role.

    "Comics always have a dark side," Sereno said. "Comedy requires fine timing, and comics can take that and turn it the other way. You see Augie's power and intensity. It's Augie like you've never seen him before."

    Kawamoto said he tried to go for maximum authenticity in the film. That meant taking over Meg's Drive-In on Waiakamilo Road for five days and enduring sporadic bursts of karaoke from the bar next door.

    Sereno said he hopes local audiences will feel a connection with the film.

    "It's about a group of guys with no control over their lives, who feel a little oppressed, and they're trying to break out," he said. "I hope anyone locally will see it and see something of their own life in it."

  • Grand Slam! If the sight of a possessed poet bursting through the cinematic fourth wall and throttling the camera isn't enough to give you the willies, surely the sight (and sound) of a won-over Mainland poetry audience chanting "hana hou" will.

    And those aren't even the best moment's in Kathryn Xian's "Hawaii Slam: Poetry in Paradise," which tracks a team of local poets on their quest to bring a little bit of Hawai'i to the championship of slam poetry in St. Louis.

    Xian, the co-founder of Zang Pictures and "nonexecutive director" of Girl Fest Hawaii, delivers much more than just a road flick with slam-poetry soundtrack.

    Without straying from her subjects, Xian examines the roots of slam poetry, its inherent contradictions and the impact of competition on the form and on the individuals who practice it. Ultimately, she also shines a light on the way the Hawai'i team's cultural values altered the dynamic of the event.

  • Blood, sex and violence! Or, as the early tagline for Scott Lee Mason's "The Orb" read, "What else are friends for?"

    Mason and his collaborators at Sandust Productions worked on this full-length feature right up until a week before the festival to make sure audiences could enjoy the tale of a malevolent glowing orb wreaking havoc in Hawai'i in true hi-def fashion.

    Mason said the original idea of the orb was something of a joke because spheres are one of the easiest things to animate in 3-D. It was producer Dustin Cross who suggested that Mason build a horror story around it, in part because of the broad global market for horror-genre films.

    Mason's girlfriend, Misty Lawrence, handled the special effects and makeup — no small task given the film's wince-worthy action scenes and copious bloodletting.

    "It's pretty disgusting," Mason said, admiringly. "But it's pretty cool."

    The film, including the infamous opening fight scene, was shot at Sherwood Forest in Waimanalo and at the Sandust back lot in Kahalu'u.

  • Elmore the Boy Genius: In terms of sheer productivity, 25-year-old Gerard Elmore, with roughly 30 short films under his belt, is the Louis L'Amour of local indie directors. But it's his sharp wit and fearless filmmaking that have earned him the "boy genius" tag from HIFF staffers.

    Elmore's contribution this year is "Valtor the Great Versus the Universe," a 10-minute comedic short that Elmore is hoping to expand into a full-length feature with the help of a few generous investors.

    "I don't make masterpieces," Elmore said. "I make entertainment. I do this for fun because I love it. I love the craft."

    Elmore worked closely with Sandust and the crew of "The Orb," sharing equipment, shooting sites and production anxieties. The two films are paired tomorrow night, in the only all hi-def evening of the festival.

  • ACM, The Sequel: Last year's collection of ACM student films yielded several gems, among them Kaliko Palmeira's "Steve Ma'i'i" (winner of the Blockbuster Video Audience Award), Kevin Inouye's "The Tale of Haiku Jones," and Andrew Ma's "Game Over." This year's bunch might be even better, top to bottom.

    Renato Fontaine's "Promise of Paradise" revisits a TV miniseries pilot Fontaine's father and his friends produced more than 20 years ago about the growth of the drug culture within dying plantation communities.

    "They were three social scientists and a filmmaker who wanted to show the reality of what was happening at that time versus what was being shown on TV," Fontaine said.

    The networks passed on the pilot (which featured a young Jade Moon and voice-overs from Michael W. Perry), but Fontaine's film offers a stacked narrative that provides fresh insight into the ambitious project and into a turbulent time in Hawai'i's history.

    Hyun Shin's beautifully filmed "Piko" tells the story of a young woman who returns to Hawai'i from New York to reconnect with her estranged family. Thomas Smith, a theater student who collaborated with Shin, said the project is built around the cultural significance of storytelling — "and part of that is the realization that film is a new way of transmitting traditional values."

    In his emotionally impressionistic short "Waiting to Surface," Jason Ordenstein taps into his personal experience of going to school on the Mainland only to return home feeling estranged and disconnected.

    "This is definitely intended to be a spiritual journey," Ordenstein said. "There is a yearning for the salvation of the soul."

    Ordenstein said he worried that the story was too personal in scope to be relevant to a larger audience.

    Reach Michael Tsai at mtsai@honoluluadvertiser.com.