Pubdate: Wed, 15 Oct 2003 Source: North Island Gazette (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 North Island Gazette Contact: http://www.northislandgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2783 Author: Christine vanReeuwyk MINIHAN FILM FACES FRIGHTENING FACTS PORT McNEILL - Disturbing. Violent. Real. CHOICE, the new Colin Minihan film, created for Port McNeill RCMP Community Justice, is all this and more. CHOICE depicts the destructive options available for youth today from drugs to violence. The film opens with a brutal beating in the boys' locker room at school. The frighteningly realistic attack leads into a maze of twisted, violent events that come close to explaining what society has thought unfathomable until recently. Namely why a student would walk into a school with a gun and kill or why a victim of bullying would resort to suicide. "It's not supposed to be an enjoyable movie," says producer Kelly Carson. The story follows the lead character, played by Zach Pashley, as he enacts revenge on suspected narc Seth, played by Frankie Harris. It can be difficult to watch, but the idea, Carson says, is to invoke discussion and thought. "Colin says when a bully watches this they'll never bully again," she says. Some may question the authenticity of high school students doing lines of cocaine in the bathroom at a house party, or the severity of the locker room beating. However, CHOICE, written, directed and edited by Minihan, is made by Port McNeill teens, for teens everywhere. The ideas are their own and come from the world of possibilities, decisions and choices that they know. "This is fictional and we've turned it into a story," Carson says. "But this really happens." While the mother in the film, played by Carson, picks at Seth about the little things like a pack of felt pens, Seth deals with reality. The lesson for parents? "Talk to your kids," Carson emphasizes. "Really think about what's important, what's going on in their lives." CHOICE is the second film Minihan and Carson have worked on together to benefit the Community Justice program. Both received funding from National Crime Prevention and ICBC. Similar to the first film JEt, the fast alternation of scenes, innovative angles, and special effects keep the film active and maintains audience involvement from beginning to end. CHOICE, at over 60 minutes, is much longer than JEt and yet maintains the edge that will hold teens attention. CHOICE, has been in the works for two years, taking one year to write and one year to film and edit. The film is ready for distribution to school liaison officers, often RCMP members assigned to specific schools. "You need the youth to look at a police officer in another way," Carson says, adding that the film should narrow the gap between youth and police. The B.C. Crime Prevention Association has already purchased CHOICE, as well as the B.C. Women in Action in Comox and various police and victim services in Victoria, Saskatoon, Prince Rupert, Duncan, Kelowna and Summerland. Schools, service groups, RCMP can order the film through Carson by calling 250-956-4441, extension 32. To download clips, see behind-the-scenes still photos and follow Minihan's career see www.smiley-films.com. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens