|
By tiffany royal
POULSBO -What started as a simple 3-5 minute script class
project has turned into a full-Length, $1.5 million film.
The independent movie hails from one of the most impoverished
areas of Washington and was created by an inexperienced group
of filmmakers who were led by a veteran Hollywood professional,
C. Tad Devlin.
The Immigiant Garden will be shown at a screening
sponsored by the Pou1sbo-North Kitsap Rotary Club on Friday,
July 19, at President's Hall at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds.
But it was actually created and produced in Lewis County,
about 20 miles south of Olympia. Director and producer Tad
Devlin (Sleeping with the Enemy, George of the Jungle, When
A Man Loves A Woman) was teaching a film class at Centralia
Community College in Lewis County in 1989 when he assigned
the class to develop a simple 3-5 minute script. Everyone
came back with unacceptable R-Rated work Devlin explained,
he then asked the class to try again. That is when CarolineWood
presented her play The Immigrant Garden.
Woods 1910 period piece was about a young girl who
corresponds with an elderly gardener living in England.After
receiving positive classroom response, Wood and Devlin worked
on the script with Caoline to develop it for the proposed
3-5 minute film. But every week Wood came back with more and
more script pages; eventually topping out at 125 pages.
Devlin cut the script down to 106, then told Wood he couldnt
cut back any more. They just looked at each other and finally
Devlin said, Let's go for it. That got the ball
rolling for the first Northwest Film Projects movie, and put
the wheels in motion for getting the cast, the equipment and
most of all, the money to fund the project. There were several
criteria for the fllm: the biggest of which was that everything
had to be made with consumer gear - nothing professional could
be used in the production of the flim. About 350 people from
Lewis and the surrounding counties ended up working on the
movie.
Devlin saw the venture as an opportunity to get the areas
younger residentse involved as the Lewis Countys once
a prosperous logging and natrural resources economy had been
going downhill for several years. He believes the "Running
Start" and artistic kids don't get recognized in the
schools, like the athletic students, and there is no disciplineof
interaction imposed upon them. Some of the kids had a history
of getting into trouble. Tad mixed them with kids who came
from good homes and the result was they helped each other
get recognized (for their work on the film). The mission of
the company is to develop rural Pacific Northwest stories
for theater and television, with an emphasis on e-films, using
themes of moral excellence, responsibility; unselfish
behavior and respect for others (tolerance).
Poulsbo-North Kitsap Rotary member and Kitsap County Commissioner
Chris Endresen said the group saw this project as worthy cause
to support "We wanted to support someone that has given
the youth the opportunity to make a difference, she
explained. Its giving them skills, self-esteem
and some direction. Thirty percent of the proceeds from
Fridays screening will go the Nalional Multiple Sclerosis
Society while the rest will help pay the expense of producing
the film. "The Immigrant Garden will be shown three
times on Friday, July 19 at Presidents Hall at the Kitsap
County Fairgrounds. $5 for the 4:30 p.m., and $8 for the 7
and 9 p.m. showings. Tickets are available at Central Market
in Poulsbo, Kitsap Farm Garden Tractor in Silverdale, Apple
Tree CoveI Animal Hospital in Kingston and at the Bremerton
YMCA. For ticket information, call (360)779-8007.
|