Hawaiian filmmakers tour another Pacific coast
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Young Chang
One group of filmmakers and local hosts took it easy Friday afternoon.
They could’ve hit the shopping scene, the amusement parks, maybe even
Hollywood, but stars of the Hawaiian film “Ka’ililauokekoa” instead
walked the Newport Pier on their first afternoon at the Newport Beach
Film Festival.
Down below, it was spring break incarnate. Kids invaded a beach that
had earlier beheld only birds and morning walkers as the day imitated a
June afternoon.
Far away, where ocean became indiscernible from sky, the sun shone.
And right under their feet, on a platform that was closer to the water
than these tourists were used to, the planks on the pier seemed to never
end.
“The piers in Hawaii, they’re not this long,” said Noelani Iokepa, who
starred in “Ka’ililauokekoa.” “And there’s no place in Hawaii where you
can drive on the ferry.”
Iokepa, her co-star and boyfriend Kapono Guerrero, director of the
film Kala’i Ontai, and his wife Kau’i Ontai -- who also appeared in the
film -- had just come from being driven across the Balboa Island ferry by
locals Cammie Leslie and Debbie Davis.
The two members of the Newport Beach Premiere Cinema Guild had freed
up their afternoon -- Leslie is a real estate broker, Davis designs
wetsuits for women -- to make sure the visiting filmmakers got to know
the city outside of Fashion Island’s Marriott Hotel.
It was part of the festival’s “host a filmmaker” project, which teams
local volunteers up with directors, actors, writers, producers, etc., to
show them around town. The project is in its first year.
“Ka’ililauokekoa” was shown at the festival on Sunday, but other than
the screening and a harbor cruise scheduled for today, the guests were
free to do as they pleased.
The piece, about a girl whose father gives her away to a powerful
chief, is one of the festival’s almost 60 featured full-length films. It
was originally made for children as part of the Hawaiian school system’s
video curriculum, the actors said. But now that the title has grabbed the
attention of American filmmakers, the cast and crew want to send out a
message.
“That Hawaiians are real people,” Guerrero said. “There’s a lot more
than Waikiki.”
Iokepa added that their goal is to network with other Hawaiians while
in the U.S. And Leslie and Davis’ guidance when it comes to matters of
leisure and entertainment has been helpful, she said.
“It’s a little bit overwhelming when you’re flying out, so it’s nice
to have a friendly face to greet you at the airport,” said Rita Goldberg,
chairman of the guild, “and to kind of show you around to make heads or
tails of things.”
What tops the visitors’ list of things to do?
“The Crab Cooker,” Guerrero said promptly. “We want to eat at The Crab
Cooker. We heard a lot about it.”
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