Press Kit - Beautiful Son
Transcription
Press Kit - Beautiful Son
PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT Julianne King 808-262-2552 For additional information: www.beautifulson.com julianneking@hawaii.rr.com BEAUTIFUL SON RECEIVE BEST DOCUMENTARY & AUDIENCE AWARD AT THE HAWAII INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL A documentary about one family’s struggle to heal their son from autism Honolulu, Hawaii-- The team that brought the 2002 Hawaii International Film Festival “Special Jury Prize Aloha Spirit Award” - HEART OF THE SEA, the portrait of Hawaiian legend Rell Sunn- was back with the world premiere of BEAUTIFUL SON, a moving documentary about one family’s attempt to heal their autistic son. The film received the Best Documentary Award and the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the Hawaii International Film Festival. In 2003, Hawaii filmmakers Don and Julianne King realized something was wrong with their three-year-old son, Beau. Around age two-and-a-half, Beau started loosing his ability to speak, his coordination, and was becoming disconnected from the outside world. Determined to help Beau, his parents brought him to the best doctors in the U.S. and took along a video camera to document the results. Two months later, Beau was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). In BEAUTIFUL SON, Don and Julianne take us on their journey through the landscape of this debilitating neurological disorder as they attempt to recover Beau from autism. Along the way, through their research and personal interaction with various medical professionals, Don and Julianne come to believe the establishment has little to offer apart from advice of “good parenting” and behavioral therapy. Desperate to find help, they stumble upon a community of doctors and parents who are experimenting with alternative treatments and who are, they believe, successfully recovering some kids from autism. BEAUTIFUL SON is the story of an illness reaching epidemic proportion, now affecting one in 150 children. And, it’s the story of a grass roots movement of parents and doctors who believe that vaccines, mercury and other toxins may be triggering some forms of autism and demanding research be done to help their children. ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS Don King: Director, Cinematographer Don King has been making waves in Hollywood for years. He is best known for his underwater cinematography and second unit D.P. work in such films as Cast Away, Die Another Day, Riding Giants, Blue Crush and Charlie's Angels II. Don is currently shooting (on land & sea) for the Emmy award winning TV series LOST. His directorial credits include the 2005 Laird Hamilton's American Express commercial, 2006 Cool Water commercial and All Aboard the Crazy Train, which won best documentary short at the 2005 Maui Film Festival, & best cinematography at the X-Dance festival. A Hawaii state swimming champion and NCAA Stanford championship water polo player he's been trained to shoot in the most intense situations. His adventures include sailing across the Indian Ocean from Bali to Madagascar in a traditional wood & bamboo canoe for which he was knighted. Julianne Yamamoto King: Director, Producer Julianne Yamamoto King's production background includes shooting for KHON, producing independent sports shows like H3O, and associate producer for award winning PBS documentary Heart of the Sea. She credits herself on becoming an advocate for her son Beau. She hopes this film will help the thousands of children suffering from neurological disorders. Her vision is of a world, which protects the environment and the health of all people, especially children. Charlotte Lagarde: Executive-Producer, Producer Charlotte Lagarde is the award-winning Producer/Director of Heart of the Sea: Kapolioka’ehukai (2002), a documentary about the Hawaiian surfing legend, Rell Sunn, which won numerous awards including the Audience Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival, Best Documentary Award at the Ashland Independent Film Festival and the2003 PBS Independent Lens Audience Award. Lagarde was the executive producer of Reporter Zero, a portrait of AIDS journalist Randy Shilts nominated for Best Documentary at the 2006 Berlin International Film Festival. She is currently co-producing Deann Borshay Liem’s Precious Objects of Desire, a follow-up to the Emmy nominated First Person Plural. Lagarde's productions Voting in America (2004), Every Child Should Have a Chance (2001), Tribal Sovereignty: Unplugged (1998) and Juvenile Justice: Unplugged (1997), are distributed in public schools throughout the United States. Her films Swell (1996), about four generations of female surfers (Gold Apple from the National Educational Media Network) and Zeuf (1994), a documentary about a woman surfer's struggle with breast cancer (Directors' Choice award at the Black Maria Film and Video Festival) were broadcast on PBS stations and the Sundance Channel. Lagarde holds an MA in documentary filmmaking from Stanford University. Vivien Hillgrove: Editor Vivien Hillgrove is a highly acclaimed editor whose extensive picture editing credits include Henry and June and The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Phil Kaufman. Her sound editing credits include Blue Velvet by David Lynch, Amadeus by Milos Foreman, which won 11 Academy Awards in 1984, and One From the Heart by Francis Coppola. Her documentary work includes Broken Rainbow by Victoria Mudd, which won an Academy Award in 1985, six award-winning documentary films by Lourdes Portillo including The Devil Never Sleeps and Senorita Extraviada, which won a special jury prize at Sundance and the 2002 International Documentary Award. Her other documentary credits include First Person Plural (P.O.V.), Heart of the Sea (PBS-Independent Lens Audience award) and The Future of Food by Deborah Garcia. Todd Boekelheide: Music Composer Todd Boekelheide started working in film in 1974 as a member of the staff at American Zoetrope, Francis Ford Coppola’s production company in San Francisco. In 1976 he left to work as an assistant editor on Star Wars, and went on to edit picture and sound on The Black Stallion 2 years later. This film kindled an interest in film music, so he began music studies at Mills College in Oakland. As he began to develop his film scoring career, he also specialized as a rerecording mixer, and won an Oscar for mixing the music on Amadeus in 1984. He has scored several feature films, including Dim Sum and Nina Takes a Lover, and numerous documentaries, notably Emmy Award Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse. In 1999 he won an Emmy for his score for the documentary Kids of Survival: The Life and Art of Tim Rollins and the KOS. Up-to-date credits information can be found at www.tobomusic.com. ABOUT ITVS The Independent Television Service (ITVS) funds and presents award-winning documentaries and dramas on public television, innovative new media projects on the Web and the Emmy Award-winning weekly series Independent Lens on Tuesday nights at 10 PM on PBS. ITVS is a miracle of public policy created by media activists, citizens and politicians seeking to foster plurality and diversity in public television. ITVS was established by a historic mandate of Congress to champion independently produced programs that take creative risks, spark public dialogue and serve underserved audiences. Since its inception in 1991, ITVS programs have revitalized the relationship between the public and public television, bringing TV audiences faceto-face with the lives and concerns of their fellow Americans. More information about ITVS can be obtained by visiting itvs.org. ITVS is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American people.