Reflecting on the Grist… the inspiration and the process
In the late 1990s I attended a weekend film school through Pacific New Media taught by Doug Olivares, a cinematographer, and the following year a group of us started a film club. A theme was suggested, and we had a month to create a short film based on it. This story began as a short film based on the theme of “forgiveness.” I wanted to avoid clichés and create a subtle message.
I had been inspired by the many stories of U.S. and Japanese veterans of Pearl Harbor reaching out and making peace with one another during the December memorials. To me, these men were the embodiment of forgiveness and peace.
To create the film I used still images, photographs of my sons and grandparents and real headlines from the 1940s. I turned the color photographs black and white to be consistent with the era. I did the voice over.
I was really happy with the way the short film turned out, and I received compliments on it by my peers at the film group, so I used it as the basis for a short fiction.
To frame the story I used the daughter helping her mother sort through photographs and artifacts as an opening to discuss Pearl Harbor. The story takes place in December, during the anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attack.
Regarding timing… the story was written twenty years ago. The daughter would be my parents’ generation, as my grandparents were in their 30s when Pearl Harbor was bombed. Today she’d be in her 80s.
It is told in first person and present tense, and it does a time jump from the visit prior to the reunion to the visit after.
I once read it at a library event, Out Loud in the Library, and someone thought it was a true story. It was nice to know someone believed it so authentic to be true.