“When did paradise become merchandise?” is the question at the heart of HaMafilms’ fifth production Deep Blue, dubbed an environmental love-story.
Created by Antiguan-Canadian husband and wife team Howard and Mitzi Allen, the film, is about the clash between a marine biologist, helping the residents of a small fishing village preserve their way of life, and a resort developer wanting to build on their land.
The film, which has debuted in Antigua and Barbuda, and New York, will have its Caribbean premiere at Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival on September 24, at 1 pm, and will screen again on September 26, at 8 pm at MovieTowne, Invader's Bay, Port of Spain.
[caption id="attachment_1036120" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Canadian actors Kim Huffman and Peter Williams star in Deep Blue. -[/caption]
Canadian actors Peter Williams and Kim Huffman star in Deep Blue and are accompanied by international talent including, Canadian-Guyanese actor Ryan Singh, British actor Tom Durant Pritchard (of Netflix’s The Crown and biopic Judy), Antiguan-British actress Julie Hewlett (The Sweetest Mango), and Canadian-Trinidadian actress Rhoma Spencer who will attend the screening, a media release said
The soundtrack features original music by Causion, Antigua and Barbuda’s reggae ambassador, Antiguan musician Vincent McCoy along with singer/song writer Promise No Promises. The movie’s theme song, Beautiful, is written and performed by Grammy winner singer/songwriter Maurice Gregory, formerly of Third World.
Howard, who is the film’s writer and director, says its inspiration came while he and Mitzi were shooting commissioned environmental documentaries and became exposed to the importance of the natural environment and the dangers it faces.
“We learned a lot about coral reefs and mangroves, and I am thinking ‘there are lots of people who don’t really understand how these things work,’” Howard said in the release. “When a developer comes and wants to build a hotel, and wants to cut down mangroves, most people would think, ‘Yeah what’s the big deal,’ but if you understand how important mangroves are then you realise that no you can’t just remove them, they actually serve a purpose.”
As the film’s writer, Howard noted that he tried to bring nuance to all of the interests – environmental and economic – in these situations. “I had to try to figure out how to tell this story in a way that it doesn’t feel like a documentary and it doesn’t feel like we are preaching to people, but still get some of that information out,” he added.
[caption id="attachment_1036118" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Rhoma Spencer Rhoma Spencer who one of the stars in Deep Blue, will attend the screening on September 24. -[/caption]
Mitzi, the film’s executive producer, noted that people from all over the globe are seeing their lives and histories in the film, and that it especially resonates with people from coastal communities and small island developing states. She adds that she wants the film to spur people to think about their consumption