News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Column: Ice Documentary A Must-See For All |
Title: | US HI: Column: Ice Documentary A Must-See For All |
Published On: | 2003-09-23 |
Source: | Honolulu Advertiser (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-24 05:01:51 |
ICE DOCUMENTARY A MUST-SEE FOR ALL
Invite the relatives over tomorrow night. Invite your friends from work or
church or Little League. Bring the TV out to the garage and tell the neighbors
to bring potluck.
At 7 p.m., Hawai'i is going to get a hard look into a very clear mirror, and
you're going to want to talk to your people afterward.
Edgy Lee's documentary, "Ice: Hawai'i's Crystal Meth Epidemic" is jarring in
its frankness. Not overly sensational or graphic, but honest. The point is made
quite strongly that ice affects everyone in Hawai'i, not just the strung-out
addicts crouched in downtown doorways.
"You'd better stop just playing your golf game. You'd better stop just watching
television. You'd better stop going to your restaurants and thinking everything
is hunky dory," Hawai'i County Mayor Harry Kim says in an on-camera interview.
"The message is, wake up. The message is, wake up before it hits you in the
face like a 2-by-4."
There are local television news clips of some of the most violent incidents in
recent memory -- car crashes, shootings, horrendous cases of child abuse --
each tied to ice use.
In some ways, even more devastating, are interviews with ice addicts who look
like people you know, people you'd never suspect. One is a young woman who
describes herself as coming from a "white, middle-class, Republican family in
Honolulu." She was able to pull herself out of six years of addiction and turn
her life around. Even so, her father sitting next to her in the well-appointed
living room bursts into tears as he tries to talk about what he went through.
It is a moment so painful because it confirms every parents' worst fear: yes,
it could happen in any family.
There are quotes so laden with pain that they resonate long after the credits
roll:
A kupuna from Waimea saying, "They selling drugs on the side of the road like
they selling poi in a bag."
A veteran critical care nurse choking back tears as she searches for a way to
describe what she has seen, coming up only with, "Don't even try it because you
won't be able to beat it. That's all."
A teacher from Maui saying, "As long I don't hurt nobody but myself, it's all
good. ... What the (expletive deleted) you talking about ABUSE? I just party."
Part of the gravity of the piece is because of the on-camera narrator, Honolulu
private detective Matt Levi. The former investigative reporter and television
journalist has stayed away from broadcast projects for 15 years. His powerful
return to television speaks to his belief in the project. Levi isn't a
face-for-hire. That he would lend the legacy and weight of his name and
presence to the project is a huge endorsement, though all he would say about it
is, "This is good."
It is good, but it hasn't been easy. Director Lee and co-producer Jeff Mueller
say it has been harder to raise money for the project than any other
documentary they've produced. Lee says the project has cost $400,000 so far.
She and Mueller are looking to raise an additional $200,000 to make a second
cut of the documentary aimed at students that will be taken into schools across
the state. Mueller said there is a lack of educational materials on the subject
available for youths, and the goal is to take this first piece and build on the
momentum.
There are things the documentary doesn't do: It doesn't take sides in the
treatment vs. incarceration debate; it doesn't mention faith-based prevention
and intervention programs; it doesn't hold up a solution to the ice problem.
None of this was because of oversight.
Lee's purpose was to present the ice problem in a way that was "apolitical,
nonpartisan and nonsecular," she says. And as far as solutions, Mueller says
the only thing that makes sense is a multifaceted approach. "It's going to take
a collaborative effort. As it is, we're scattered. We're divided. And we're
failing."
"Our job is to lay it out there in the most honest, straightforward way we can
and hope people pick up on it," Lee says. "This certainly is just scratching
the surface."
For those who still think that ice isn't something they need to worry about,
this documentary is going to be a painful scratch on that veneer of denial. For
those still searching for a quick fix to the problem, the piece gives the sad
answer that there is none; but that hope lies in community involvement,
education, and action.
Tomorrow's documentary will be combined with interactive town hall meetings
across O'ahu.
Invite the relatives over tomorrow night. Invite your friends from work or
church or Little League. Bring the TV out to the garage and tell the neighbors
to bring potluck.
At 7 p.m., Hawai'i is going to get a hard look into a very clear mirror, and
you're going to want to talk to your people afterward.
Edgy Lee's documentary, "Ice: Hawai'i's Crystal Meth Epidemic" is jarring in
its frankness. Not overly sensational or graphic, but honest. The point is made
quite strongly that ice affects everyone in Hawai'i, not just the strung-out
addicts crouched in downtown doorways.
"You'd better stop just playing your golf game. You'd better stop just watching
television. You'd better stop going to your restaurants and thinking everything
is hunky dory," Hawai'i County Mayor Harry Kim says in an on-camera interview.
"The message is, wake up. The message is, wake up before it hits you in the
face like a 2-by-4."
There are local television news clips of some of the most violent incidents in
recent memory -- car crashes, shootings, horrendous cases of child abuse --
each tied to ice use.
In some ways, even more devastating, are interviews with ice addicts who look
like people you know, people you'd never suspect. One is a young woman who
describes herself as coming from a "white, middle-class, Republican family in
Honolulu." She was able to pull herself out of six years of addiction and turn
her life around. Even so, her father sitting next to her in the well-appointed
living room bursts into tears as he tries to talk about what he went through.
It is a moment so painful because it confirms every parents' worst fear: yes,
it could happen in any family.
There are quotes so laden with pain that they resonate long after the credits
roll:
A kupuna from Waimea saying, "They selling drugs on the side of the road like
they selling poi in a bag."
A veteran critical care nurse choking back tears as she searches for a way to
describe what she has seen, coming up only with, "Don't even try it because you
won't be able to beat it. That's all."
A teacher from Maui saying, "As long I don't hurt nobody but myself, it's all
good. ... What the (expletive deleted) you talking about ABUSE? I just party."
Part of the gravity of the piece is because of the on-camera narrator, Honolulu
private detective Matt Levi. The former investigative reporter and television
journalist has stayed away from broadcast projects for 15 years. His powerful
return to television speaks to his belief in the project. Levi isn't a
face-for-hire. That he would lend the legacy and weight of his name and
presence to the project is a huge endorsement, though all he would say about it
is, "This is good."
It is good, but it hasn't been easy. Director Lee and co-producer Jeff Mueller
say it has been harder to raise money for the project than any other
documentary they've produced. Lee says the project has cost $400,000 so far.
She and Mueller are looking to raise an additional $200,000 to make a second
cut of the documentary aimed at students that will be taken into schools across
the state. Mueller said there is a lack of educational materials on the subject
available for youths, and the goal is to take this first piece and build on the
momentum.
There are things the documentary doesn't do: It doesn't take sides in the
treatment vs. incarceration debate; it doesn't mention faith-based prevention
and intervention programs; it doesn't hold up a solution to the ice problem.
None of this was because of oversight.
Lee's purpose was to present the ice problem in a way that was "apolitical,
nonpartisan and nonsecular," she says. And as far as solutions, Mueller says
the only thing that makes sense is a multifaceted approach. "It's going to take
a collaborative effort. As it is, we're scattered. We're divided. And we're
failing."
"Our job is to lay it out there in the most honest, straightforward way we can
and hope people pick up on it," Lee says. "This certainly is just scratching
the surface."
For those who still think that ice isn't something they need to worry about,
this documentary is going to be a painful scratch on that veneer of denial. For
those still searching for a quick fix to the problem, the piece gives the sad
answer that there is none; but that hope lies in community involvement,
education, and action.
Tomorrow's documentary will be combined with interactive town hall meetings
across O'ahu.
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