Michael
Gough's
Hawaiian Production Diary
PREPARATION
What is a holiday movie?
This is the basic question that haunts every movie maker and club. Should
it be in the holiday competition or the documentary? Should the primary audience
be family, friends or the general public? I want to make a record that will
be enjoyed by the family as a holiday souvenir and also, hopefully, entertain
a general audience. Sometimes the balance is hard to keep. Family holiday
films about children eating icecream and making sandcastles can sometimes
be too personal and may have limited general appeal.
One great advantage of video is that you can make two different versions
from the same material. I have a holiday version of St.Petersburg which I
produced for my travelling companions which is full of lighthearted memories
including friends making fools of themselves doing Russian dancing. I then
re-edited it as Peter's Monument the more serious historical
documentary that got a gold seal in the IAC Competition 1999. The pictures
are the same only the script and the structure of editing has changed. I
don't know now how the Hawaii video will be structured but hopefully most
people will be entertained.
What do I already know about Hawaii?
We all pick up images of a place, usually from the media. Hawaii
Five-0h, From Here to Eternity etc. Names of places
stick in our mind, "Waikiki", "Pearl Harbour" with views that we must seek
out.
What else can I pick up?
I like to understand the background of a place before I arrive and often
read locally based novels such as "The Kapilan of Malta". This time my son
bought me a wonderful collection of travellers tales about Hawaii. I also
bought a guide book and explored the world wide web. I usually hire a car
but I'll leave it till we get there. Our apartment is right in the centre
of Waikiki. We may limit ourselves to guided tours elsewhere. I have been
listening to Hawaiin music on the internet and am already feeling in the
mood.
Themes and schemes?
In the process of thinking about the holiday I have already formed some ideas
about possible themes. It will not pre-determine what I will see and think
when I get there. It is just a recognition that we only have a few days and
any prior thought will mean that we don't waste any unrepeatable opportunities.
These ideas are never pre-fixed, I always remain open to the spontaneous
idea.
I remember going to Venice for two days. I had done the research but there
was nothing that I had read that could prepare me for what I felt. I was
gobsmacked and I realised that editing around such mundane commentary as
"This is a gondola" was superfluous. Venice had to be simply absorbed as
a visual feast. The finished film (Super 8mm!) was simply cut to Vivaldi
without any commentary and titled Reflections of Venice.
Back to Hawaii. I would like to produce a video that is different from my
others, and I certainly don't want to call it just "Hawaii 2000". If I want
the date I will put it in the credits. It would be nice to come up with a
really imaginative treatment but it is almost arrogant to believe that I
will find a totally original theme which has never been recognised by the
millions of other movie makers that have used Hawaii as their location.
I have a few initial ideas on themes and titles. Did you know that the word
"Aloha" has three meanings, "Hello, Farewell and Love"? or that Hawaii is
further from any mainland than any other group of islands in the world? It
is also called "the Paradise Island"
how about the title "Another
Day in Paradise"?
The travellers cheques were collected this morning. We will start packing
this afternoon. Hawaii here we come.
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