Albuquerque Journal

The journey back

Filmmaker tells story of Hawaiian men keeping dance alive in prison

- BY ADRIAN GOMEZ JOURNAL ARTS EDITOR

It was a six-year journey.

And Ciara Lacy wouldn’t change a thing.

The Hawaiian filmmaker spent six years working on the documentar­y “Out of State.”

The film will screen at 3 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 19, at the New Mexico History Museum as part of the Native Cinema Showcase.

“I didn’t know if I could tackle this film,” she says quietly. “It took a lot of time and patience to complete. I’m very happy with the story that is being told.”

“Out of State” tells the story of two native Hawaiians who discover their indigenous traditions from a fellow inmate serving a life sentence.

It’s from this unlikely setting that David and Hale finish their terms and return to Hawaii, hoping for a fresh start.

Eager to prove to themselves and to their families that this experience has changed them forever, David and Hale struggle with the hurdles of life as formerly incarcerat­ed men, asking the question: can you really go home again?

“I don’t say this film is my idea,” Lacy says. “It was an idea given to me. I have moved back home to Hawaii. I wasn’t in a good place and I had to keep motivated. Then I heard about these men in the Arizona prison. They weren’t letting anything stop them. It was amazing.”

Lacy did research on the men doing hula dancing in the Arizona prison.

“They were doing something positive and trying to move forward in our culture,” she says. “I just connected with their efforts to come back from difficult circumstan­ces. If these guys could do it, then so could I. A lot of the men you see in the film are the type of men that are represente­d in our community.”

Lacy also put a lot of pressure on telling an authentic story.

“I wanted to make sure that we felt true and honest to our subjects,” she says. “We had to make sure it made sense to other people outside of our community. The story is powerful, no matter where you’re from. These men are being generous with their time and vulnerable by telling their story. It’s a big deal.”

 ?? COURTESY OF CHAPIN HALL ?? Inmates at the Saguaro Correction­al Center in Eloy, Ariz., perform a chant as a part of their protocol to celebrate makahiki, a period in the native Hawaiian lunar calendar when peace and prosperity are in focus.
COURTESY OF CHAPIN HALL Inmates at the Saguaro Correction­al Center in Eloy, Ariz., perform a chant as a part of their protocol to celebrate makahiki, a period in the native Hawaiian lunar calendar when peace and prosperity are in focus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States