Un joven californiano se traslada a Hawai, donde entabla amistad con tres hawaianos que le muestran Hawai más allá de la imagen de postal.Un joven californiano se traslada a Hawai, donde entabla amistad con tres hawaianos que le muestran Hawai más allá de la imagen de postal.Un joven californiano se traslada a Hawai, donde entabla amistad con tres hawaianos que le muestran Hawai más allá de la imagen de postal.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 premio en total
Priscilla K. Basque
- Lehua
- (as Priscilla Basque)
David 'Dutch' Schultz
- Richard Thompson
- (as David Schultz)
Erik MacArthur
- Jason
- (as Erik Douglas)
Robert Ogata
- Mr. Taketa
- (as Robert M. Ogata)
Reseñas destacadas
I have been tracking this film since its rough cut debut at the Hawaii Film Fest. I heard that it broke the attendance record at that Fest and had tremendous reviews. Evidently, the film makers were able to raise additional funds from that success and shot additional scenes. The final version was premiered at AFI Fest 98. The screening I attended was packed, people stood in the back and chairs were brought in. It was a lot of fun. I heard the second screening was just as full. The film is about a young Californian who moves to the big island of Hawaii. There he is befriended by three Hawaiians who show him a very different Hawaii that is not seen by the average tourist. Incredible cinematography ( especially the underwater scenes ) and a great soundtrack, along with a strong script with dramatic performances make up for a great ride. The lead Hawaiian performance by Lorenzo Callender is particularly impressive.
A relocated California teen (Roy Newton) faces rampant anti-white sentiment in this interesting `coming of age' drama set in the island paradise of Hawaii. The acting is fair and the drama often forced, as the well-meaning lad struggles to fit into a culture where local islanders view mainlanders as a threat and respond with aggression. This isn't the Hawaii my travel agent pitched.
This uneven effort, written and directed by first-timer David L. Cunningham, is laudable in attempt and tone but suffers from the constrictions of budget and experience. By the final reel, all the characters have either failed or suffered and there are no clear resolutions, except those espoused all too briefly -- by a native schoolteacher.
This uneven effort, written and directed by first-timer David L. Cunningham, is laudable in attempt and tone but suffers from the constrictions of budget and experience. By the final reel, all the characters have either failed or suffered and there are no clear resolutions, except those espoused all too briefly -- by a native schoolteacher.
I just wanted to say that this movie was fantastic. It was honest without being insulting(as most films about Hawaii are)and the camera work was superb. The thing that stood out the most was the exceptional performances by Lorenzo Callender(Ronnie Boy), Daryl Bonilla(Keao) and Kalani(Zulu), with Bonilla stealing the show with natural depth and comedic timing. Hopefully Hollywood's "big wigs" will look into these fine young actors. Great movie!!!
I may be a bit biased, since I've worked with some of the actors in this film.
Nah, they no care what I say. And David Cunningham charged us for the lunch we 'treated' my colleagues to, but that's another story.
Suffice to say, I hated the first third of the film. Tired stereotypes of local boys bullying the poor haole guy.
And then something happened.
As soon as the jellyfish stung Roy, (not a great actor, but I stuck with it), the plot took another turn.
These local boys became real. This is where the movie should have started. Even the local girls become more interesting. The characters lived the world of this film. If only Kalani and Roy were the central characters focusing on their church life.
Kalani made up for Roy's shorcomings as an actor and was far more believable.
Props also to Daryll Bonilla, Lorenzo Callendar and Garret Sato, all friends and colleagues who cut their teeth in this production. They are the real stars of this film, and I'm sure everyone in Hawaii agrees.
Nah, they no care what I say. And David Cunningham charged us for the lunch we 'treated' my colleagues to, but that's another story.
Suffice to say, I hated the first third of the film. Tired stereotypes of local boys bullying the poor haole guy.
And then something happened.
As soon as the jellyfish stung Roy, (not a great actor, but I stuck with it), the plot took another turn.
These local boys became real. This is where the movie should have started. Even the local girls become more interesting. The characters lived the world of this film. If only Kalani and Roy were the central characters focusing on their church life.
Kalani made up for Roy's shorcomings as an actor and was far more believable.
Props also to Daryll Bonilla, Lorenzo Callendar and Garret Sato, all friends and colleagues who cut their teeth in this production. They are the real stars of this film, and I'm sure everyone in Hawaii agrees.
Beyond Paradise is a movie that not only shows the side of Hawaii not much people see... but it also shows how prejudiced people can get. The movie had a good meaning. Topped off with good acting and nice story line.. TWO THUMBS UP!
¿Sabías que...?
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- How long is Beyond Paradise?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Messze a paradicsomtól
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración
- 1h 45min(105 min)
- Color
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