Showing posts with label storme wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label storme wood. Show all posts

INTERVIEW: STORME WOOD

Paradise Recovered director-producer Storme Wood.
Living in-sink

By Don Simpson

Producer-director Storme Wood’s Paradise Recovered intelligently discusses faith and religious tolerance (and intolerance), critically analyzes abusive and prohibitive religious sects -- all without a tinge of condescension or judgment. Perhaps as a result, Paradise Recovered proves that religious and spiritual people can peacefully co-exist with atheists, agnostics and everyone else as long as there is an open and intelligent discourse. In other words, listening and understanding is significantly more important than attempting to convert others to your beliefs.

Opening in Los Angeles this Friday at the Downtown Independent, we sat down with Wood during the 2010 Austin Film Festival for a discussion about Christianity, religious cults and personal freedom.

JEsther Entertainment: What attracted you to Andie Redwine’s script?
Storme Wood: I tell Andie that when I read her script it seemed like it was tailor-made as the movie I always wanted to try to make. The story seemed small and intimate and could be done in a realistic way; and the fact that it is trying to be honest about the subject matter. Religion is a big deal in the United States; Christianity is a big deal in the United States; so are the people who think that Christians are crazy. It is a well-told story and raises questions; but in the end it is about dialogue and that we are not all that far apart if we are willing to listen to and talk to -- not yell at -- each other.

JE: Did Redwine remain involved throughout the production?
SW: She was heavily involved in the production. We had a very small crew so everyone had to pitch in. As much as possible she was on set with me. I liked to have her at the monitor because she was a great sounding board for whether or not we were getting it right. She has a lot of experience with that subculture of religious groups and the people that have been through that. I don’t have that experience. I have experience with Christianity, but not with those small churches. Andie helped a lot. We would talk about the characters and what they would or wouldn’t do.

JE: Have you been receiving any feedback from audiences about Paradise Recovered?
SW: Resoundingly both [Christians and non-Christians] have responded positively to the film. There have been very few people who have been negative so far. People say critical things -- we certainly did not make the perfect film. I was told that somebody walked out at [one screening] who was offended. I have talked with some very conservative Christians who think it is a good film -- people who do some of the things that Esther’s group does in the film, like homeschooling. Andie and I are not against homeschooling, but some people that are homeschooling...

JE: Some people use homeschooling as a means of repression, to control what information their kids are exposed to.
SW: Yes. So their kids don’t have the opportunity to interact with other kids. Essentially, that is what a cult does -- it is called milieu control. They are trying to control the world in which these people live and what information is getting in or out. You can’t keep the kids from reality forever, so you might as well just be honest. I mean there are things that are not appropriate to tell my kids, but when they ask questions I do try to be as honest as possible about how the world is and what some people think.

JE: Should religious cults be permitted to exist? Is there a way to protect people from these cults?
SW: I am finding out that there is a lot more of this going on that I thought there was. Since we made this film, people have been coming up to us and telling their stories. For example, a director here at [the 2010 Austin Film Festival] told us how he had to burn all of his Star Wars action figures and get rid of his stuffed animals because they were false idols. Another guy was telling us about his friend’s wife who had been forced to marry a guy when she was 13-years old and had three kids with him. People in the faith community give a lot of these churches a pass, thinking “that’s just how they do it.” We have freedom of religion so people can choose to do or believe whatever they want. We don’t understand how people get drawn into some of these groups and it becomes abusive and dangerous and hard for them to escape. Some of it is really horrific stuff, but some of it is not really as obvious. If we were to become more aware of the issues, maybe we could reach out and help the people who want to get out of these groups. We are not going to fight and liberate these people physically, but maybe we can be more aware of what is going on and try to help when and how we can. When people get out of these groups they are scared, they feel isolated and alone, but there are a lot of people who have been through very similar experiences. It would be nice to be able to connect some of those dots for them so they know that they are not alone.

JE: What identifies a religious group as a cult?
SW: Dr. Lifton identifies eight criteria: Milieu Control, Mystical Manipulation, Loading the Language, Doctrine Over Person, The Sacred Science, The Cult of Confession, The Demand for Purity, and The Dispensing of Existence. (Steve Hassan’s www.freedomofmind.com is a good resource for more information.) Experts apply these eight criteria to determine if a religious group is a cult. We conducted some interviews (which will be included on the DVD release of Paradise Recovered) at the Wellspring Retreat and Resource Center which talk about this in greater detail. One thing they noticed is how Andie worked Lifton’s eight criteria into the script. I was all about the story being compelling and entertaining and Andie had woven the eight criteria into the story so that if you know what you are looking for, you can find them.

JE: What is one message that you want to convey with Paradise Recovered?
SW: In many ways, it's about personal freedom. It’s about the freedom to make up one’s own mind. People should have the freedom to learn and be given the tools to make their own choices. Nobody should have their freedom taken away by someone else who wants to tell them what to think. It is about empowering people to be free. There are all kinds of things that can take away our freedom -- addictions, cults, and even some mainstream churches. I mean this in terms of personal freedoms -- not in a “Go Team America!” kind of way -- to think, to love, to experience life and experience each other. One of my ultimate hopes for the film is that it will get people thinking and talking about the issues it raises; that we might move toward a dialogue that would bring people together instead of a fight that tears people down.
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AUSTIN FILM FESTIVAL 2010: PARADISE RECOVERED

Gabe (Dane Seth Hurlburt) and Esther (Heather del Rio) in Paradise Recovered.
The good and god
 

By Don Simpson

Esther (Heather del Rio), a young Jesus-loving God-fearing Christian woman donning an over-sized frumpy and shapeless dress, takes a job at a health food store owned by Gabriel (Dane Seth Hurlburt), who is for all intents and purposes a left-wing Godless bohemian. As they say, desperation makes strange bed-fellows. (“The point on the ideological spectrum where far-left bohemians and right-wing fundamentalists meet is a health food store.”) 


Esther also works as an assistant for David Sawyer (Andrew Sensenig) -- the local preacher for Warren F. Vanderbilt's Prophetic Watchman Ministries, a very prohibitive Christian sect -- and his family.

Esther soon finds herself homeless, churchless and friendless. Faced with no other option, she moves in with Gabriel and Mark (Oliver Luke) and the grand discourse and debate regarding philosophy versus theology commences. Gabriel, a son of a preacher man and devout skeptic, is writing a thesis on belief -- people who believe something that all evidence points to the contrary (read: Creationism). Esther, however, believes that the Bible represents the absolute truth and cannot comprehend how someone can be a good person if they do not abide by the rules of the Bible. (Vanderbilt's interpretation of the Bible says no to birthdays, holidays, doctors, movies, music, “unclean” foods, questions, personal rights and freedom. According to Gabriel: “They tell you where to go, what to think, who to marry and they threaten your soul if you don’t do what they say.”)

Producer-director Storme Wood and producer-writer Andie Redwine’s Paradise Recovered is essentially a modern-day retelling of the parable of the Good Samaritan. Wood and Redwine intelligently discuss faith and religious tolerance (and intolerance) -- as well as critically analyzing abusive and prohibitive religious sects -- all without a tinge of condescension or judgment. Gabriel and Esther’s characterizations are handled brilliantly -- in terms of acting, writing and directing. Above all, Paradise Recovered turns out to prove that religious and spiritual people can peacefully co-exist with atheists, agnostics and everyone else as long as there is an open and intelligent discourse.
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