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Gala guests love 'Pearl Harbor' -
The Honalulu Advertiser
By Derek Paiva and Catherine E. Toth
Advertiser Staff Writers
If the immediate post-screening reactions of some of the 2,000
guests invited to the gala world premiere of Disney's
"Pearl Harbor " are any indication, the studio may
just have the biggest hit of the summer on their hands.
Touchstone Pictures "Pearl Harbor" had its debut
about the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS John C.
Stennis last night in a $5 million premiere that featured
fireworks, food and a USO-themed party in the ship's large
below-deck hanger.
"It was incredible," said local chef Sam Choy on the
flight deck immediately after the screening. "The movie
had a nice balance between its love story and action
scenes."
Choy said his gaze darted often between the screen unspooling
the 43-minute Pearl Harbor attack and the Arizona Memorial
resting peacefully in the tranquil waters. "That's
chicken skin," he said. "You couldn't have asked for
a better place to premiere this film."
His one quibble about the movie?
"They should've had more Hawai'i things in there,"
said Choy. "They should've went a little more into
looking at local civilian families and what happened with
them."
Lt. Gov. Mazie Hirono raved more about the premiere than the
actual movie: "That whole experience was fantastic,"
she gushed. "The whole thing, to look at Pearl Harbor, it
was so perfect."
Mayor Jeremy Harris, a known movie buff, loved the movie, as
did wife Ramona.
"It gave me goose bumps," Harris said. "The
best moment of the whole evening was when one of the survivors
(Dick Fiske) played taps before the fireworks."
Asked about the lack of a local perspective in the film,
Harris said he didn't have any complaints.
"There's a thousands things that could've been in that
movie," he said. "I didn't find anything wrong with
what they did (with the movie). I think that the film and (the
premiere) will be great publicity for Hawai'i."
Added Ramona: "We're definitely going to see it
again."
But this movie served a purpose far greater than making
millions at the box office. To some of those who survived the
tragic attack on Dec. 7, 1941, this movie is a vehicle to
share their stories with a whole new generation and honor the
memory of fallen friends.
"Nothing's wrong with a big premiere," said Pearl
Harbor survivor Yuell Chandler, who was at Fort Kamehameha the
morning of the attack 60 years ago. "It's really a
celebration of the sailors entombed in the Arizona. It made me
feel good that people remembered." |