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A PARADISE LOST is the enchanting, yet harrowing tale of the yellow finch of Palila v. Hawaii, a landmark case where nature took humanity to court to stave off extinction. The film unfolds through the POV of the animated Palila called Anuenue who stood as the client in 1979 court trials. Today, a Native Hawaiian conservationist struggles to save them amidst escalating threats of climate change, wildfires, introduced predators, diseases, and governmental neglect.
Director Biography - Laurie Harue Sumiye
Laurie is a Japanese-American artist, animator and filmmaker born and raised in Mililani, Hawaiʻi. She was selected as an inaugural Jackson Wild Multicultural Alliance Fellow in 2021, Firelight Documentary Lab Fellow in 2018-20, Sundance Institute/Women in Film Documentary Fellow in 2020, and UnionDocs Collaborative Fellow in 2010. Her short animated documentaries, STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE, about endangered Hawaiian birds, and OF MEMORY & LOS SURES, an oral history of a Latinx neighborhood in Brooklyn, have won awards and screened at festivals DOCNYC, BAMcinemaFest, and DOCUTAH. The film was part of an acclaimed transmedia documentary produced by UnionDocs, LIVING LOS SURES, which premiered at NYFF and exhibited at PS1MoMA. She started her career in documentary media creating artwork for PROJECT KASHMIR by Geeta V. Patel & Senain Kheshigi and MY BROOKLYN by Kelly Anderson. A PARADISE LOST is her first feature, which received funding and support from Pacific Islanders in Communications, Firelight Media, Doc Society and Blue Mountain Center, receiving their 2021 Harriet Barlow Commons Award. Laurie has an MFA in Integrated Media Arts from CUNY Hunter College and a BA in Art and BS in Communications from Bradley University, and studied art at Istituto Lorenzo de Medici in Italy. She has exhibited her artwork internationally in galleries, art fairs and museums, and been commissioned for business, nonprofit and private collections. Laurie was selected as an Artist-in-Residence at Digital Artist Studios (N. Ireland), Sacatar Institute (Brazil), Artfunkl (UK), A Studio in the Woods (New Orleans) and Bishop Museum (Hawaii). She taught filmmaking as Assistant Professor at the University of Hawaiʻi-West Oʻahu. Laurie was awarded a Sony Camera Grant and Honorable Mention at IF/Then Shorts x The Redford Center Nature Access Pitch at DOCNYC for animated short doc, MAKANA.
Director Statement
As an environmental artist & animator who makes documentary films, my stories are influenced by my visual art practice in drawing the essence of nature. My urgency in tackling our global crisis of species extinction in the Extinction Capital of the World takes on a much stronger metaphor now; we must defend the most vulnerable, marginalized as a matter of our own survival. Hawai’i is the place where I grew up, my roots, my family, part of my identity; I feel a responsibility defend our disappearing flora & fauna because I didn’t know about them growing up here and their connection to what makes Hawaii so special. My work envisions future possibilities, expressing love to protect ‘aina (land), raise awareness for its beauty, and celebrate humanity’s sacred connection within Nature.
- DirectorLaurie Harue Sumiye
- ScreenwriterLaurie Harue Sumiye
- ProducerAnne Misawa, Laurie Sumiye
- Executive ProducerCheryl Hirasa, Leanne K. Ferrer
- Co-ProducerNicole Tsien, Amber McClure, Tori Gallacher, Christen Hepuakoa Marquez, Douglas Peterson, Eric C. Chang
- CastKaipo Schwab, Hiwa Elms, Lindsey-Asing, Michael Sherwood, Marjorie Ziegler
- CinematographerAnne Misawa, Paul Atkins
- EditorLaurie Harue Sumiye, Satoko Sugiyama
- AnimatorLaurie Harue Sumiye
- ComposerThomas Osborne
- Sound DesignMax Braverman
A PARADISE LOST is the enchanting, yet harrowing tale of the yellow finch of Palila v. Hawaii, a landmark case where nature took humanity to court to stave off extinction. The film unfolds through the POV of the animated Palila called Anuenue who stood as the client in 1979 court trials. Today, a Native Hawaiian conservationist struggles to save them amidst escalating threats of climate change, wildfires, introduced predators, diseases, and governmental neglect.
Director Biography - Laurie Harue Sumiye
Laurie is a Japanese-American artist, animator and filmmaker born and raised in Mililani, Hawaiʻi. She was selected as an inaugural Jackson Wild Multicultural Alliance Fellow in 2021, Firelight Documentary Lab Fellow in 2018-20, Sundance Institute/Women in Film Documentary Fellow in 2020, and UnionDocs Collaborative Fellow in 2010. Her short animated documentaries, STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE, about endangered Hawaiian birds, and OF MEMORY & LOS SURES, an oral history of a Latinx neighborhood in Brooklyn, have won awards and screened at festivals DOCNYC, BAMcinemaFest, and DOCUTAH. The film was part of an acclaimed transmedia documentary produced by UnionDocs, LIVING LOS SURES, which premiered at NYFF and exhibited at PS1MoMA. She started her career in documentary media creating artwork for PROJECT KASHMIR by Geeta V. Patel & Senain Kheshigi and MY BROOKLYN by Kelly Anderson. A PARADISE LOST is her first feature, which received funding and support from Pacific Islanders in Communications, Firelight Media, Doc Society and Blue Mountain Center, receiving their 2021 Harriet Barlow Commons Award. Laurie has an MFA in Integrated Media Arts from CUNY Hunter College and a BA in Art and BS in Communications from Bradley University, and studied art at Istituto Lorenzo de Medici in Italy. She has exhibited her artwork internationally in galleries, art fairs and museums, and been commissioned for business, nonprofit and private collections. Laurie was selected as an Artist-in-Residence at Digital Artist Studios (N. Ireland), Sacatar Institute (Brazil), Artfunkl (UK), A Studio in the Woods (New Orleans) and Bishop Museum (Hawaii). She taught filmmaking as Assistant Professor at the University of Hawaiʻi-West Oʻahu. Laurie was awarded a Sony Camera Grant and Honorable Mention at IF/Then Shorts x The Redford Center Nature Access Pitch at DOCNYC for animated short doc, MAKANA.
Director Statement
As an environmental artist & animator who makes documentary films, my stories are influenced by my visual art practice in drawing the essence of nature. My urgency in tackling our global crisis of species extinction in the Extinction Capital of the World takes on a much stronger metaphor now; we must defend the most vulnerable, marginalized as a matter of our own survival. Hawai’i is the place where I grew up, my roots, my family, part of my identity; I feel a responsibility defend our disappearing flora & fauna because I didn’t know about them growing up here and their connection to what makes Hawaii so special. My work envisions future possibilities, expressing love to protect ‘aina (land), raise awareness for its beauty, and celebrate humanity’s sacred connection within Nature.
- DirectorLaurie Harue Sumiye
- ScreenwriterLaurie Harue Sumiye
- ProducerAnne Misawa, Laurie Sumiye
- Executive ProducerCheryl Hirasa, Leanne K. Ferrer
- Co-ProducerNicole Tsien, Amber McClure, Tori Gallacher, Christen Hepuakoa Marquez, Douglas Peterson, Eric C. Chang
- CastKaipo Schwab, Hiwa Elms, Lindsey-Asing, Michael Sherwood, Marjorie Ziegler
- CinematographerAnne Misawa, Paul Atkins
- EditorLaurie Harue Sumiye, Satoko Sugiyama
- AnimatorLaurie Harue Sumiye
- ComposerThomas Osborne
- Sound DesignMax Braverman
