Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 26, Number 1, 1 January 2009 — Incarcerated youth get new focus on life through film [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Incarcerated youth get new focus on life through film

By Liza Simūn Public Affairs Specialist

Flashback to Day One of an intensive film workshop at the Hawai'i Youth Correctional Facility, where 12 wards are being told that they will learn to write and produce two movies all of their own making - from concept to costume, in just two weeks time. B. slumps in her chair and curses. Others simply stare into space. When workshop director Alex Munoz introduces himself in both his native Chamorro language and in Sāmoan, some are openly hostile. They tell him to speak Hawaiian. Munoz asks them to teach him the language, but a somber silence follows. Munoz is aware of the over-representation of indigenous ethnicity in HYCF - at least 60 percent of the population is Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander. Their view of him as an intruder speaks volumes about the depths of their alienahon. But Munoz, the founder of FYI - Fihns from Youth Inside - was undeterred by the unpromising start. Even in facilities for the most violent juvenile offenders, he has gotten good results from plaeing potent tools of movie-making in the hands of the disempowered. "I always say just because you may be locked up in here, there is no reason why you can't free your mind," said Munoz. Over the next few days, Munoz led the HYCF youths through exercises for team-building, encouraging them to cut loose and improvise. Hawai'i movie professionals showed up at HYCF to volunteer theh help. Resistance to the project started to melt away - slowly. Munoz credits the Hawai'i pros for returning day after day. The USC fihn grad's modus operandi has been to train loeal industry people to eonhnue his curriculum for incarcerated juveniles, thus

giving the message to the kids that "people really care about them." It's a message that HYCF hasn't been noted for. The facility is currently operating under an agreement with the federal government to improve services, including educational programs. New HYCF administrator A1 Carpenter did his homework on Munoz before seeking the state attorney general's approval for the frhn workshop, whieh was financed in Hawai'i by a private donor. "We need to teach these kids that opportunities do eome theh way when they are young, or otherwise they will just sink back into the apathy that is part of theh disadvantaged background," said Carpenter. A real-hfe subplot of transformation clearly emerged by the workshop's thhd day as Munoz engaged the HYCF youth in screenwriting. Munoz began by asking the youngsters to create characters and discuss what they "want, fear, love and dream about ..." The youths drew their answers from their own ehaohe hves. One of their scripts is about a star footbah player tempted into selhng dmgs to help out a grandmother too poor to afford her medication. The other is about a would-be rap star from Sāmoa who arrives in Hawai'i seeking a record deal that wih help buy a home for his parents, but ends up homeless. The boys who eame forward to play the leads surprised everyone, because they are noimally withdrawn or shy. Most surprisingly, the scripts have upbeat endings. The young wards insisted on this, even though Munoz gave them plenty of examples of story plots that did not follow the typical western convention of conflict resolution. "Flimmaking for these kids is like oeeupahonal therapy. They gain a distance from their personal histories and get insight about better choices. This says to me that they know they have a future to look forward to," said Munoz.

On the final production day, M. the once-shy leading man, said his first reaction to the project was that it would be "junk." His friend R, seated next to him on a eoueh inside a facility building, describes a hula class that didn't work out. "We like the ancestry kine stuff, but we didn't like it that they made us just follow something that was all forced on us," he said. Both agree that fihn project has given them a ehanee to talk about their "struggles." They both dropped out of school in ninth grade, faced homelessness, domestic abuse and drug use. "The big struggle is now . . . iight here," P. says. "I gotta leam to get along with 40 or 50 inmates here - eaeh with their own personality . . . or I'll end up in some bigger, worse plaee." He adds that the film workshop has given him an idea for life after incarceration: "Now I think I could make a documentary someday about growing up in Hawai'i. People think it's all sunshine and grass shacks, but I'll show them what it's really like." B. is one of two girls participating in the workshop. She hasn't completely shed the tough posturing she exhibited on the first day. But on this last day, she is easily humored by a youth correction officer who calls her a star. "B. isn't the type of kid who would seek out a drama class in her

conununity, but she has so mueh talent," says the officer. A smile softens B.'s face as she cradles an expensive hand-held camera she is using to document "behind the scenes" action - perhaps for a movie about "the making of the HYCF mo vie." B. gives the fihn project two thumbs up because it's added new job titles to their names. As part of the workshop, she has rotated through several positions on the set - grip, camera, sound, assistant director. "When people see my movie, they will see I'm not just a ... nothing person," she says. Munoz said many of the HYCF youth spoke with hini in the final days of the workshop about job opportunities in the film industry. "They were happy to discover they could do something that was fun and fulfilling and get paid for it too," he said. He has seen a few of his incarcerated charges go on to careers in the industry. Making movies is good all-around job training, Munoz observes, noting that it promotes attention to deadlines and work ethic. But the real point of the workshops, he insists, is not so mueh vocational as it is visionary. "Fihn is a medium that belongs to young people," he said. "Give it to them. Let them use it, and they will shoot in this way that is very free and show us what it is like to be human." S

lncarcerated youths, whose faces are blurred to protest their identies, shoot a scene from "Second Chances" — their original movie, with loeal director James Serreno and project director Alex Munoz (right). - Photo: Uia Simon