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This isn’t Hollywood, it’s Homeport
By Danna Webster, KP News
“Lights, camera, action!” rang out at
LuLu’s Homeport Restaurant on a drizzly April morning last
spring. It was 5 a.m. when The Film Co. at Northwest Film
Forum moved in, set up a ton of equipment, and stayed for
the entire day.
Filmmaking had arrived on the Key
Peninsula. It started with a search by the independent
film company based in Seattle. They were looking for the
perfect setting to represent a rural Northwest scene in
the feature-length film “We Go Way Back.”
The story of the film is about
23-year-old Kate, a nice girl who can’t say no. She tries
to make everyone around her happy—except herself. She
senses vaguely that she’s lost her way, but has she
actually lost her mind when her 13-year-old self appears
in the backseat of her car? Her 13-year-old self is
dissatisfied with the adult she has become. In an effort
to get rid of the 13-year-old in the back seat, the main
character walks into a bar; the bar is Homeport. Her child
character, played by actor Maggie Brown, peers through the
window and watches as her adult self, played by actor
Amber Hubert, has a drink among the locals, played by
Lakebay residents Phyllis and Art Olson.
“We were scenery,” says Art Olson.
“All we did was sit and the action took place in front of
me.” Olson guesses they shot the same scene about 32
times. He and Phyllis had to sit with imaginary drinks and
Art had to smoke a cigarette. He told the film crew, after
all the retakes to get the scene right, “I’m gonna die of
lung cancer.”
When asked if this might be his
Academy Award nomination, Art says he doesn’t think so.
That prompted Homeport owner, LuLu Smith, to say, “He’s a
big star around here anyway.”
Smith had nothing but praise and
appreciation for the film producers and crew.
“All very nice,” she says. “You
expect those people to be stuck up or something but
everyone was very nice. I can’t believe they can do all
they did in such a little space.”
The real-life Homeport bartender,
Bobbie Trudgon, is the prettiest girl in town, according
to Art Olson. Trudgon describes that day in April as a
“big mess out here, though plenty exciting.”
Smith, Trudgon, the Olsons and a few
local residents looked on as the film crew worked their
magic. They produced an episode in the story where
23-year-old Kate picks up with a fellow in the bar, leaves
with him, and walks up the street. Meanwhile, the child
character, who watched through the window, is filmed
outside walking in the rain and despondent.
“We Go Way Back” was written and
directed by Lynn Shelton, a filmmaker, editor, actor and a
product of the Art Institute of Seattle. She attended
graduate school at the School of Visual Arts in New York
City and worked with prominent New York experimental
filmmakers. She has produced an award-winning documentary
and her films have been screened at dozens of festivals
and venues.
The Film Company is an initiative of
The Northwest Film forum of Seattle. According to Joy
Fairfield, production manager, the company is dedicated to
energize and support the independent film community. It
collaborates with innovative artists in the production of
a yearly season of new work. The Film Company is the
nation’s first nonprofit film studio.
In late August, “We Go Way Back” was
submitted to the Sundance Film Festival. The results will
be known around the first of next year, before the
festival.
“Independent films are all about
festivals,” says Fairfield. “You high profile them as much
as you can. The distribution company comes to see the
films (at festivals like Sundance). (Its) future is
determined by festival play.”
In addition to the Sundance Film
Festival, the film will be submitted to festivals in
Germany and the Netherlands. Fairfield says she will
report the festival results to the KP News.
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News, all rights reserved.
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