Passion guides students to Spotlight
By Johanna Davy
June 8, 2003 9:00 p.m.
To survive in the film industry is no easy task.
For every Steven Spielberg or Quentin Tarantino, there are
thousands of would-be directors and screenwriters struggling just
to make ends meet. For a few UCLA graduate students, however, the
future looks a little bit brighter.
Every year the film school hosts the Spotlight Awards, a
weeklong festival honoring outstanding graduate student films in
three areas: directing, screenwriting and producing.
This year’s winners come from diverse backgrounds and have
all pursued different paths to get where they are today. But they
all share one characteristic: passion.
“This is not about money. This is about passion. I have to
tell stories,” said J.T. O’Neal, writer of “Black
Diamond.”
O’Neal is a Harvard-trained physician and Air Force
veteran who practiced medicine for several years, including stints
lecturing at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine. Although he
wrote his first screenplay at Harvard University, he never thought
of screenwriting as a career until his mother passed away eight
years ago and he decided to reassess his priorities.
“If I were to die tomorrow, what would I regret not having
done?” he asked himself. “And it was
screenwriting.”
O’Neal acknowledges that his film, about a jazz singer who
falls in love with a Negro League baseball player, will be a tough
sell to the studios because it’s a period piece with an all
black cast. Still, he’s glad to be honored by UCLA.
“(The award is) nice validation that someone thinks I
should be writing,” he said.
Monella Kaplan, producer of “The Visionary,” also
came to film in a roundabout way. After studying communications and
political science in her homeland of Germany, she worked for German
television before coming to Los Angeles.
“Journalism is just not challenging enough,” she
said. “Producing bridges the creative with the
business.”
She won this award last year for her film “Birth of the
Vampire” and is flattered to be receiving recognition for
“The Visionary,” an epic love story she compares to
“Shakespeare in Love.” Kaplan has nothing but praise
for her UCLA experience.
“I admire the teachers, they really inspired me,”
she said.
Unlike O’Neal and Kaplan, directing winner Chris Eska went
straight to film school after spending a year travelling after
college.
As an undergraduate at Rice University, he was planning to major
in pre-med or sociology when he took a film class for an easy A.
But when he found himself waking up at 5 a.m. to work on his films,
he knew he wanted to go to film school.
“(UCLA has) the best mix between Hollywood and the art
film,” he said.
Having spent extensive time in Japan, Eska was intrigued by a
culture where emotions are concealed, unlike in the United
States.
His film, “Doki Doki,” is the story of two strangers
who have waited for the same train together every morning for years
but have never spoken.
“(Shooting in Japan) was the best experience I’ve
ever had,” Eska said.
He’s glad to be getting recognition for his film, which in
addition to the Spotlight Award played at the Los Angeles Film
Festival.
“(Making a film), you lose objectivity, and then suddenly
you put it out there and everyone likes it. … It’s
incredible,” he said.
The other winners of the Spotlight Awards can undoubtedly look
forward to many more incredible things in their futures.