LIHUE — Kauai residents and visitors will have an opportunity to see feature films that highlight Hawaii, Micronesia and other parts of Polynesia in the inaugural Garden Island Film Festival. The festival will be held at various venues from Nov.
LIHUE — Kauai residents and visitors will have an opportunity to see feature films that highlight Hawaii, Micronesia and other parts of Polynesia in the inaugural Garden Island Film Festival.
The festival will be held at various venues from Nov. 20 to Nov. 22 including the Westin Princeville Ocean Resort Villas, Kauai Community College and Waimea Theatre.
The doors open each evening at 5 p.m. A pre-screening of a film by a Kauai Community College student will be presented at 6 p.m., followed by a feature film with the respective director introducing his work in person. The evening will end with a discussion about the film.
The festival will open on Nov. 20 on the Great Lawn at the Westin Princeville Ocean Resort Villas with a free showing of “Papa Mau” directed by Na‘alehu Anthony. Attendees should bring a beach chair or mat. Refreshments and snacks will be available for sale.
This documentary examines the influence of Mau Piailug, a native of the tiny Micronesian atoll of Satawal, who was responsible for reviving the art of non-instrument navigation in Polynesia.
Relying solely on his knowledge of celestial bodies, ocean currents and natural markers, Mau guided the traditional sailing canoe Hokulea in 1976 on a voyage from Hawaii to Tahiti, a journey that had not been completed in over 600 years.
For Native Hawaiians, this expedition signaled an exodus from the cultural doldrums of the previous century. This remarkable journey shares Mau’s story of reinvigoration, reconciliation, and redemption of a people as the master Way finder and teacher who breathed life back into the sails of Polynesia’s voyaging tradition.
The following night, Nov. 21, “The Haumana” directed by Keo Woolford will be shown at the Kauai Community College Performing Arts Center. Admission for this film is $5.
In the award-winning film, Jonny Kealoha is the charismatic host of a struggling Polynesian luau show in Waikiki. To everyone’s surprise, including his own, he is appointed as the successor to teach a high school boys’ hula class when his former kumu hula (hula instructor) passes away. Kealoha becomes as much a student as a teacher due to the high demands of leading the hula dancers to a significant cultural event and, at the same time, rediscovering the sanctity of the culture he previously abandoned.
On Nov. 22, the Waimea Theatre will host the closing night feature, “Visions in the Dark: The Life of Pinky Thompson” directed by Ty Sanga. The cost of admission is $5.
Pinky Thompson fought hard against the stigma of being an inferior Native Hawaiian, and felt that the key to the Hawaiians’ ultimate survival was having a multi-faceted cultural identity. He championed a health care system, created invaluable educational programs and strengthened the pride of native Hawaiians.
Thompson also envisioned an ideal Hawaii that no one else saw and fought for it from the battle fields of Normandy, down the steps of the U.S. Congress to his humble home in Niu Valley. His legacy lives on through his work as a social worker and community leader.
Pre-sale tickets for “The Haumana” and “Visions in the Dark” are available until Nov. 20, 2 p.m., at the Kauai Visitors Bureau in Līhue and Waimea Plantation Cottages
Will-call service for tickets is also available through the Office of Economic Development. To request this service, send an email to rfrancisco@kauai.gov by Nov. 20, 2 p.m.