http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-filmmaker18jul18,1,1002722.story?coll=la-headlines-california
Oxnard Lands a Starring Role
Novice filmmaker Trae Briers seeks a
national audience for movie set in the city he loves.
By Fred Alvarez
Times Staff Writer
July 18, 2004
The tale is part love letter,
part wake-up call.
Against a backdrop of racism and youth violence, Oxnard
filmmaker Trae Briers has crafted an urban love story about his hometown, a Shakespearean-style
tragedy designed to showcase the seaside city and the talents of the first-time
director.
He started with no money, no studio backing. All he had was
a desire to tell a story, from personal experience, about the struggles of interracial
relationships and the search among the races for common ground.
Ten years
in the making, "In Your Eyes" debuted earlier this year to a sold-out crowd at
the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Now Briers is trying to gather
the cash to re-shoot some scenes and polish the production, with an eye toward
national distribution.
"At some point, people of interest are going to
see this film," said the 30-year-old writer, director and producer. "But I'm not
worried about that. Now I know this is what I was meant to do."
This is
no simple love story. It is a portrait of the community where Briers was born
and raised, a city with more blacks and Latinos than any other in Ventura County,
two groups that in Briers' view share a deep, little-mentioned history of discord.
It is also a city awash in street violence, with young people in recent years
killing each other in near-record numbers.
From Briers' original 120-page
script, "In Your Eyes" tells the tale of star-crossed lovers on the verge of adulthood.
It is a Romeo-and-Juliet-style tragedy in which a Mexican father forbids his daughter
to date a black man. The movie explores community attitudes about race and underlying
tensions that often erupt in violent outbursts.
Briers wanted to show
his reality in raw, unflinching fashion, pushing the message that if minority
groups could get beyond their differences, together they could be a powerful force.
But he also wanted to pay homage to Oxnard, rounding up local actors to play key
roles and featuring local parks, malls and other shots of the cityscape. He even
got the Oxnard Police Department to provide a holding cell for a scene.
"We don't do it very often, but it sounded like he had an interesting project
that would portray the city in a positive light," Police Chief Art Lopez said.
"He struck me as the kind of individual who was willing to go out there and hustle
to make things happen."
Briers has banked on such generosity. Along with
partner Jorge Ramirez, he formed a production company, Determined Pictures, and
persuaded investors to put up $100,000 to shoot the movie. People offered their
stores, nightclubs and houses for shoots free of charge.
Now Briers is
trying to build a local following for the film, intent on releasing it first in
Ventura County to generate momentum and help draw attention to the area's budding
entertainment industry.
"It's a hometown movie, and I think we can create
enough noise in Ventura County to be able to get a wider response," Briers said.
"Obviously I want to go national, but you've got to crawl before you can walk,
and I want to crawl in my hometown."
Rutherford Briers III learned to
crawl, walk and run in the city he calls "The Nard."
The second-oldest
of six children, he was student body president at Hueneme High School and attended
UC Santa Barbara for three years before withdrawing in 1994 after his father died.
He embarked on what he calls a "spiritual journey," landing a job as a Paramount
Studios page and honing his interest in the industry.
By 1996, he was
enrolled in a film program at Oxnard College, learning the basics. Then it was
back to UC Santa Barbara and its film program, where one of his assignments was
to learn to make a movie for under $100,000.
Briers said he took the
assignment with the making of his first feature in mind. UC Santa Barbara film
professor Anna Everett said she was not surprised he pulled it off.
"One
of the things that struck me was the passion he had for telling the story," said
Everett, who served as a mentor for the budding director. "I think he really had
a good grasp of what he felt his contributions could be, and it was clear he wasn't
going to be deterred from realizing his dream."
It hasn't been easy. It
took him two weeks to write the script and two years to clean it up. And he has
held nearly 30 jobs in 10 years in order to nurture his movie.
He lined
up investors to transfer his vision to the big screen, including Oxnard-based
music production company Platinum Entertainment, which sank $4,000 into the project.
"It sounded like something we really wanted to be part of," said co-owner Steve
Cruz. "We've always been backers of local talent. Not only is this being done
in our backyard, it's being done with backyard money."
Plenty of others
pitched in. Oxnard residents Tomas Hernandez and Jessica Arciniega lent the use
of their backyard in the city's La Colonia neighborhood to shoot some scenes.
Local rappers and musicians donated songs for the soundtrack.
And although
the movie features a handful of notable actors, including former "New York Undercover"
detective Michael DeLorenzo, it is peppered with rookies trying to break into
the business.
Thousand Oaks resident Caleeb Pinkett, the younger brother
of actress Jada Pinkett, plays a starring role. And after a dozen years of trying,
Oxnard resident Nancy Rodriguez earned her SAG card by playing the mother of the
young Latina forbidden from seeing her black boyfriend. She was paid $285 a day,
the SAG minimum for a low-budget film. She said she would have done it for free.
"I just loved the story," said Rodriguez, who also played a part in a two-minute
short designed to sell the full-length feature to investors. "I always believed
that as long as I was patient, one day somebody would see I can do something.
It's just so weird how it happened in my hometown."
Briers had figured
no one would have seen his film by now. He shot it in November and December, and
had hoped to have a final version in the can this spring so he could start shopping
for distributors.
Then one of his investors wheedled a special invitation
to the Santa Barbara Film Festival early this year, and Briers had three weeks
to ready the movie for public viewing. The movie premiered Feb. 1, and a second
showing was added to satisfy demand. He has since held two more screenings in
Oxnard and Camarillo to gauge audience reaction as the story moves toward final
edits.
Now, it's time to see where Briers' personal story leads.
With hopes of landing a distribution deal, he has applied for entry to film festivals
in Ojai and Malibu, and plans to take a shot at Sundance. He is already thinking
ahead to his next movie, a thriller set in rural Mississippi.
And when
he dares to dream big, he looks to a day when the county comes into its own as
an entertainment mecca, perhaps sporting a home-grown school for the performing
arts to help young artists like him launch their careers.
"My main goal
and dream is to have enough money to be a part of something like that," he said.
"We are too close to Los Angeles to not have our own entertainment establishment.
Dreaming is all I've ever done, but I'm a dream chaser."
Copyright 2004
Los Angeles Times