• Home
  • About
  • Services
  • Video
  • Work
  • Words
    • Articles
    • Editing
    • Case Studies
    • Public Relations
    • Reviews
    • Essays, Poems
    • Books
  • Blog
  • Contact Me

Pamela Biery

~ public relations & writing

Pamela Biery

Tag Archives: onyxtheatre

Exploring the Legacy of Manzanar: From Film to Play to Book

13 Monday May 2024

Posted by Pamela Biery in Book Reviews, Film Reviews, Nevada City, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Exploring the Legacy of Manzanar: From Film to Play to Book

Tags

annkaneko, CATS, manzanar, onyxtheatre

Review by Pamela Biery

When Jeannie Wood, CATS (Community Asian Theatre of the Sierra)  Executive Director, saw the documentary film “Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust”, she knew it was a perfect partner for CATS production of “Snow Falling on Cedars” at the Nevada Theatre.

Seeing both the” Snow Falling on Cedars” production, which is being performed through May 18, and “Manzanar, Diverted”, screening on May 26, offers a complementary and multidimensional perspective on several critical aspects of American history. Like bookends, we see the beginning exodus of tribes, incarceration, and where we are now with Manzanar in the Owens Valley.

The Play: Snow Falling on Cedars

The CATS production of Snow Falling on Cedars at the Nevada Theatre is playing through May 18, 2024.  This play is based on David Gutuerson’s best-selling novel, adapted and dirested by Kevin McKeon. McKeon previously directed here in 2010, at which time it won many accolades. He returned to Nevada City from Seattle to mount this performance. Clever and simple staging makes this story work. Local actors provide strong character representation as the story moves along a Post WWII reckoning of race, war wounds and a divided society in need of healing.

The Film: Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust

Documentary filmmaker Ann Kaneko’s connection to Manzanar is multi-generational. It is a place that family members just described as she was growing up in Los Angeles. Returning to Manzanar, she comes to understand the tribes that were removed from this land before the Japanese were turned here during World War II. Behind the story, moving the puppets across the high Sierra desert, is the Los Angeles power and water district. This thoughtful film shows a history as well as protections being put in place for future conservation.

The Book: Buddha in the Attic

Lastly, for those wanting to dig a little deeper and do some further learning through reading, take a look at Julie Otsuka’s book, “Buddha in the Attic.” This national bestseller and winner of the Pen/Faulkner Book Award provides a consciousness flow of Japanese women immigrants to San Francisco in the 1800’s through their Americanization and then, with the onset of the war, on to Manzanar. Rather than the usual storyline, the author gives us a raft of individual examples that taken together present a picture that is more complete than what we may have gotten from a traditional storyline.

Know & Go

Get tickets to “Snow Falling on Cedars” through May 18 at NevadaTheatre.com.

Tickets online and available at the door to “Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust” screening on May 26 at 7 PM The Onyx Downtown at the Nevada Theatre 401 Broad Street, Nevada City. Tickets at theonyxtheatre.com. The filmmaker will provide a virtual Q&A immediately filling this film. This screening is a community fundraiser for CATS, as is the play.

“Buddha in the Attic” by Julie Otsuka is available at local booksellers and on Amazon.

Note: This is an independent review.

California Dreamin’ On the Big Screen

28 Friday May 2021

Posted by Pamela Biery in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on California Dreamin’ On the Big Screen

Tags

cinema, dream state, film critic, Heyday Books, mick lasalle, onyxtheatre

Note: Watch for an upcoming exclusive series of special video talks by Dream State author San Francisco Chronicle film critic Mick LaSalle hosted by TheOnyxTheatre.com. Book review follows.

Mick LaSalle’s new book, Dream State, California in the Movies, is a revealing journey into the psyche of California as it is reflected in cinema. Longtime San Francisco film critic Mick LaSalle has a knack for getting to the story behind the story and this book is full of great perceptions of just what California cinema expresses both intentionally and unintentionally through its film industry.

Dream State is a methodical examination of how California appears in film, from San Francisco to Los Angeles with a wonderfully witty narrative on just how many ways we can see the Golden Gate Bridge being destroyed. With chapters that take on the myth-making behind the Wizard of Oz and the dark underbelly of Film Noir, the reader begins to sense that Hollywood is both vacuous and deliciously full at the same moment, and this moment is a uniquely California moment, made possible at least in part, by a beautiful, mild and changeable climate where life just looks a bit more glamorous before the cameras start rolling.

For those who like to go below the surface of film, Dream State is a must read. LaSalle’s career as a film critic for the San Francisco Chronicle provides him with a steady flow of apt observations and most importantly, the connective tissue that is implied or perhaps hinted at as both cultural and cinematic references. One aspect that emerges as a theme is the dissonance between perception and reality as perpetuated through cinema–not the obvious, but rather the moments that tend to go largely unrecognized but have great influence, which LaSalle is near genius at identifying.

There are dozens of films mentioned, each presented with unconventional rarely discussed viewpoints. The eleven chapters include distinctly different time generations and genres, examining how Pearl Harbor is portrayed then and now, as well as Romance and Utopian visions. This is not a book of reviews or even in a certain sense, the in-depth discussion of individual films, but rather a closer look at what we rarely examine in terms of the culture itself as seen through the mirror of California cinema. LaSalle gives us a bit of American history as well as anthropological insights and a totally unique set of mind-opening perceptions.

In a broader sense, Dream State is about America and the values America chooses to portray through cinema and this too, is cast with an eye to historical context, examining how events like World War II, Woodstock, and 911 have shaped what we see on the screen and how this informs and reinforces that which is permissible and that which either by production code or implication, falls beyond the pale and shifts over time.

Dream State provides unique insights on what it means to be in California and why and who has been drawn to this seemingly superficial oasis of tempting promises fulfilled, along with the implied illusions Hollywood offers that vanish when the theatre lights come back on and the credits roll.

Locals in Nevada County, watch for upcoming videos, and know that The Onyx Theatre is looking forward to seeing you very soon!

Advance purchase available through Heyday Books.

Categories

  • best practices
  • Book Reviews
  • Co-working
  • communication
  • digital media
  • environment
  • Film Reviews
  • Green
  • history
  • Indie film reviews
  • literature
  • Nevada City
  • ocean & fisheries
  • poetry & poets
  • public relations
  • pugs
  • Social Change
  • social media
  • sustainability
  • technology
  • Thought Leadership
  • travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Unified Communication
  • urban planning
  • video
  • web design
  • writers and writing

Recent Posts

  • Exploring the Legacy of Manzanar: From Film to Play to Book
  • And it’s a Wrap!
  • Constellations 
  • A Few Notes on the Magic of Indie Documentaries
  • Who Is Sarah Kidder?

Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: Chateau by Ignacio Ricci.