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From a purely narrative 
perspective, it would have been convenient if the 180 Meridian Cinema, on the 
Fijian island of Taveuni, had more in common with the Royal Theater, of Archer 
City, Texas, whose demise was used to represent the closing of several different 
frontiers, in <B>The Last Picture Show</B><BR> <BR>Like <B>Peter Bogdanovich</B>&#146;s 
deeply evocative coming-of-age drama, <B>Steve James</B>&#146; bittersweet documentary, 
<B>Reel Paradise</B>, could have ended with a lonely farewell to an iconic institution 
in the middle of nowhere. Instead of <B>Red River,</B> the title on the fading 
marquee might have been &#133; well, <I>Jackass</I>.<BR> <BR>How&#146;s that for 
a buzz kill?<BR> <BR>Actually, the last picture shown at the 180 Meridian Cinema, 
before its American proprietor scampered back to America with his family, was 
<B>Buster Keaton</B>&#146;s <B>Steamboat Bill Jr.</B> But, it could very easily 
have been <B>Jackass: the Movie</B>, which, when it was shown at the 180 Meridian, 
caused enough of a storm that it was banned by Fiji&#146;s Censor Board, as being 
&#147;too gross and abusive for our multiracial society.&#148;<BR> <BR>If <I>Jackass 
</I>had been the last film shown before the theater temporarily closed its doors 
it&#146;s conceivable that <B>John Pierson</B>&#146;s legacy would have been reduced 
to introducing the dirt-poor children of Taveuni to shopping-cart-slalom races, 
jock-strap bungee jumps and the conscription of rental cars for demolition derbies. 
<BR> <BR>Like so many Melanesian cargo-cultists, the youth of Taveuni would worship 
<B>Johnny Knoxville,</B> Steve-O and Bam Margera from afar, preying for a miracle 
on the order of a refurbished S.S. Minnow washing up on their shores. Village 
elders would wait patiently at dockside for the day the Piersons returned to paradise 
with a fresh print of J<B>ackass: the Movie</B> and DVDs of <I>Don&#146;t Try 
This at Home</I>.<BR> <BR>&#147;Well, there aren&#146;t any shopping carts on 
Taveuni, and no one wears jock straps,&#148; Pierson said in his defense. &#147;The 
audience did laugh hysterically throughout much of the film, but there were other 
things, which made no sense to them. The scene in which the guys took a rental 
car to a demolition derby elicited hardly a peep.<BR> <BR>&#147;For one thing, 
there&#146;s no way to rent a car on the island. So, when they took out full insurance 
coverage, entered the car in a demolition derby and said to the stunned sales 
agent, &#145;Why are you hassling me, it&#146;s got a full tank of gas?,&#146; 
it had no meaning to them.&#148;<BR> <BR>The Censor Board, Pierson conceded, had 
a better case. Its members apparently were more concerned about the scenes in 
which the lads&#146; rowdy antics freaked out Japanese store owners.<BR> <BR>&#147;Most 
of the shops in Fiji are owned by Indians,&#148; he added. &#147;The board was 
concerned that the native Fijians would act out scenes from the movie in Indian-owned 
stores.&#148;<BR> <BR>Indeed, the Pierson family -- dad John, mom Janet, son Wyatt, 
daughter Georgia (imagine a sitcom version of <B>The Mosquito Coast</B>) -- was 
filmed debating whether such copy-cat behavior was an inevitable by-product of 
any movie, let alone <I>Jackass</I>.<BR> <BR>Janet was adamant in her concerns, 
and advised against screening the film. John was quick to point out that <I>Jackass</I> 
was simply a contemporary version of the <B>Three Stooges</B>, who, even when 
mocking island cultures in their short, &#145;Some More of Samoa,&#146; always 
left audiences in stitches.<BR> <BR>The priests and nuns of the local Roman Catholic 
high school had similar concerns about the Piersons&#146; cultural mission. Foremost 
in their list of grievances was Pierson&#146;s free-admission policy, which, they 
feared, might cause the natives to lose the motivation to work, and choose attendance 
at the cinema over evening Mass. (They also took literally John&#146;s hyperbolic, 
if harmless comparisons to such stars as Curly as &#147;gods.&#148;)<BR> <BR>While 
Pierson grudgingly agreed to certain compromises over show times and other turf 
battles, he was steadfast in the ticket policy. If he started charging for admission, 
one of two scenarios would play out, 1) the locals would cut into their meager 
household budgets for the privilege of being entertained, or 2) no one would show 
up. <BR> <BR>Access to satellite-delivered entertainment on the island was sparse, 
and, while pirated DVDs were readily available, the same couldn&#146;t be said 
of dependable sources of electricity. The other nearest theater was hours away 
by boat. <BR> <BR>Clearly, Pierson&#146;s mission to Fiji was one of love for 
the cinema, not a desire to profit from it. His reward came in watching audiences 
laugh uproariously at all the right moments, and cry together when prompted by 
the performances they were watching on the screen. <BR> <BR>Although his challenge 
easily could be construed as some sort of intellectual parlor game, there&#146;s 
no question that Pierson was in need of some extreme R&amp;R. <BR> <BR>For most 
of his adult life, he had championed the cause of independent film in a tough 
pre-Miramax marketplace. He helped launch the careers of <B>Spike Lee, Kevin Smith, 
Michael Moore </B>and <B>Richard Linklater,</B> among others, and authored <B>Spike, 
Mike, Slackers &amp; Dykes. </B>John and Janet were partners in several ventures, 
including the IFC show <I>Split Screen</I>.<BR> <BR>In 2002, Pierson fell in love 
with the idea of purchasing the &#147;most remote&#148; cinema in the world, and 
running it as a combination art-, revival- and second-tier theater. Somehow, he 
convinced Janet and their children -- who were 16 and 13 at the time -- to trade 
the wilds of New York, for one year, anyway, for tropical idyll in the South Pacific. 
<BR> <BR>The 1977 graduate of the NYU film school enlisted the support -- financial 
and otherwise -- of several of the now-important filmmakers, whose work he had 
supported. Along with a Smith-brokered deal with the Weinsteins, their contributions 
allowed Pierson to show a disparate menu of films in the 180 Meridian, which was 
built in 1954 and could seat 280 in its raked auditorium. <BR> <BR>Although Janet 
initially was reluctant to be a play a central role in <B>Reel Paradise</B>, she 
eventually warmed to the idea.<BR> <BR>&#147;Besides loving Steve's work, it was 
important to me how much he appreciates being married and loves his own kids,&#148; 
she explained. &#147;I believed he's a filmmaker who's sensitive to all his subjects, 
not at all condescending. It meant a great deal, too, that <B>P.H. O'Brien</B>, 
our longtime friend and &#145;<I>Split Screen</I> collaborator, was going to shoot 
the film.<BR> <BR>&#147;He came over and spent a month before the shoot just hanging 
out and experiencing Fijian life.&#148; <BR> <BR>For James, the job of directing 
<B>Reel Paradise </B>represented something of a returned favor. Pierson had been 
an early cheerleader for <B>Hoop Dreams</B>, and they regularly exchanged phone 
calls, e-mails and Christmas cards.<BR> <BR>&#147;My film, <B>Stevie</B>, was 
at Sundance 2003, and I received an e-mail from John, wishing me good luck,&#148; 
James recalled. &#147;He also asked if I might consider coming to Fiji and directing 
a documentary on the family&#146;s experiences there, which I&#146;d been following 
on their website.&#148;<BR> <BR>Since the documentary already was fully funded, 
and O&#146;Brien was in place, all James would have to do was show up and shoot.<BR> 
<BR>The intention was to film the final month of the Piersons&#146; sojourn, which 
was expected to culminate in a 10-day film festival. Nothing to it.<BR> <BR>Instead, 
several other scenarios began playing out in real time. Among them, a dispiriting 
break-in at the Piersons&#146; home (their second), confrontations with a belligerent 
Aussie landlord, John&#146;s bout with dengue fever, conflicts with the clergy, 
Georgia resisting Janet&#146;s well-meant advice and curfew, Wyatt&#146;s dissing 
of his parents&#146; beloved indie-film movement, an absentee (and presumed drunken) 
projectionist, a capricious power generator and missing passports. <BR> <BR>&#147;The 
Pierson family was the heart of this film, not what it said about the impact of 
the movies on the natives or any other kind of cultural statement,&#148; James 
allowed. &#147;In that way it&#146;s like <B>Hoop Dreams</B> and <B>Stevie</B>. 
They would argue, but never lose their senses of humor.<BR> <BR>&#147;For everything 
that went on, there was an underlying connection between them. In this way, the 
film is subtle, but revealing.&#148;<BR> <BR>Perhaps the film&#146;s most telling 
moment comes when Wyatt is required to fill in for his sick father and introduce 
<B>Apocalypse Now Redux</B> at the 180 Meridian.<BR> <BR>Despite the boy&#146;s 
reservations about the exhibition of films neither he nor the audience is likely 
to enjoy -- free or otherwise -- Wyatt handles the task admirably. Meanwhile, 
outside, John was captured peeking through a window and beaming with pride.<BR> 
<BR>James put the final budget at $500,000, typical for a bare-bones documentary 
these days. The biggest problem came in the licensing of material from the movies 
shown in the theater, while the camera was rolling.<BR> <BR>The filmmakers caught 
a break from the participants in <B>Jackass, Bringing Down the House, Chicago 
</B>and <B>Johnny English</B>. They weren&#146;t so fortunate with rights holders 
to the Bollywood pictures shown, alongside studio and indie products from Hollywood, 
Australia, New Zealand and Asia.<BR> <BR>&#147;In years past, we might have shot 
the images on the screen and not thought twice about putting them in a documentary, 
because it was under the cover of journalism,&#148; James said. &#147;Today, with 
documentaries being presented as entertainment, distributors are demanding clearances, 
for their protection. It can be expensive.&#148;<BR> <BR>Although Miramax put 
up the money for <B>Reel Paradise</B>, the company allowed the producers to shop 
it around when relations with Disney got choppy. It is being distributed by Wellspring 
Media.<BR> <BR>The Piersons now reside in Austin, where John teaches film at the 
university and Janet is on the board of the city&#146;s film society. They are 
preparing a boxed set of <I>Split Screen</I> episodes for DVD.<BR> <BR>Wyatt is 
in high school (basically, back at the same level as before he left), and Georgia 
is attending the Culinary Academy of Austin. Both have since returned to Fiji 
on vacation, and remain in contact with friends there.<BR> <BR>As for the fate 
of the 180 Meridan, Pierson said that he&#146;d love for other burned-out cineastes 
to consider working vacations in Fiji, where they could program his theater-at-the-end-of-rainbow 
to their heart&#146;s content.<BR> <BR>&#147;They could think of it as a revolving 
time-share,&#148; he quipped.<BR><br> </font><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"> 
</font> </p><p align="right"><font size="2" face="Times New Roman, Times, serif"><i>September 
2 , 2005<br> <a href="mailto:dretzka@moviecitynews.com" target="_blank">- Gary 
Dretzka</a></i></font><p>






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<a href="/press/nytimes3.html"><img src="/press/images/nytmsm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
I'm seated, with my mother, on a palace veranda, cooled by a breeze from the royal garden. Before us, on a dais, is an empty throne, its arms and legs embossed with polished brass, the back and seat covered in black-and-gold silk. In front of the steps to the dais, there are two columns of people, mostly men, facing one another, seated on carved wooden stools, the cloths they wear wrapped around their chests, leaving their shoulders bare.

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<a href="/press/robfiji.html"><img src="/press/images/robkay.jpg" BORDER=0></a><p>

Then there's Hollywood's interpretation of the island...
<p>

To see that, check out Reel Paradise, a movie about the saga of American film maker maker John Pierson who in 2002 relocated his family 
to Taveuni for a year to show free movies at the venerable Meridian Cinema near Waiyevo.
<p>
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<a href="/press/dvdtalk.html"><img src="/press/images/dvdtalk.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Interview with John and Janet Pierson - Reel Paradise</b><p>

On the latest episode of DVD Talk Radio, DVD Talk Editor Geoffrey Kleinman speaks with John and Janet Pierson about the DVD release for Reel Paradise.
<p>

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<a href="/press/austin.html"><img src="/press/images/austinsm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>No Family Is an Island</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">BY SPENCER PARSONS</font><p>

The Piersons on 'Reel Paradise'
<p>

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<a href="/press/austin3.html"><img src="/press/images/austinsm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Reel Paradise: Review</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">BY Marc Savlov</font><p>

When it comes to mid-life crises, some guys buy Porsches, some nail hot blondes, 
      and some just muddle through. Freshly minted Austinite and famed producer's rep/author/gadabout John Pierson chose to relocate his entire family.
    
<p>

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<a href="/press/npr.html"><img src="/press/images/npr.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>'Reel Paradise': Moving Theater Experience in Fiji</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">by Alex Chadwick</font><p>

American movie buff and independent filmmaker John Pierson moved his family to Fiji in 2002 in search of "the world's most remote theater."
<p>

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<img src="/images/ebert.gif"><p>
<b>Reel Paradise: Review</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Roger Ebert</font><p>

Steve James' new documentary, "Reel Paradise," is about a couple with similar idealism, who also move to a small town and buy the movie theater.

<p>

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<a href="/press/latimes3.html"><img src="/images/latimes.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Reel Paradise: Review</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Kevin Crust</font><p>

MOVIE REVIEW: A family, a film house and Fiji.
<p>

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<a href="/press/latimes2.html"><img src="/images/latimes.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Taking popcorn fare to paradise</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Merrill Balassone</font><p>

It's like moviegoing is new again when a producer shows free films in Fiji.
<p>

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<a href="/press/sf.html"><img src="/press/images/sfsm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>How an American family moved to Fiji and brought Hollywood along for the ride</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Edward Guthmann</font><p>

After 25 years of making top-notch indie films, John Pierson needed to escape. So off to Fiji he went, bringing 
his family to begin a new life. He documented the experience in "Reel Paradise."
<p>

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<a href="/press/citybeat.html"><img src="/press/images/citybeatsm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Keeping It 'Reel' in Paradise</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By ANDY KLEIN</font><p>

In 2002, well known indie film figure John Pierson - producer's rep for She's Gotta Have It, Clerks, and Roger & Me, host of IFC's Split Screen series, and author of Spike, Mike, Slackers 
& Dykes - picked up his family and moved to Fiji for a year to show free movies. 
<p>

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<a href="/press/laweekly.html"><img src="/press/images/laweeklysm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>LA Weekly: Film</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Scott Foundas</font><p>

The final month of Pierson's quixotic quest is chronicled by documentary filmmaker Steve James in Reel Paradise and the result is an enormously warm, comic travelogue about how you can go to the ends of the earth and still not escape from temperamental 
teenagers, absentee landlords and the universal language of moving pictures.
<p>

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<a href="/press/nytimes2.html"><img src="/images/nyt.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Creating a Free Cinema Off Beaten Track in Fiji</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By STEPHEN HOLDEN</font><p>

Steve James's absorbing documentary follows a family to the rural Fijian island of Taveuni, where they showed free 
movies in the world's most remote movie theater.
<p>

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<a href="/press/variety1.html"><img src="/images/varietysm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>'Paradise' found in Fiji</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By LILY OEI</font><p>

Indiewood came out in droves Monday to celebrate the Gotham preem of Wellspring's "Reel Paradise."
<p>

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<a href="/press/nytimes1.html"><img src="/images/nyt.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>A Cinema So Indie It's 5,000 Miles Away</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By David Hochman</font><p>

The Pierson's experiences running a cinema in Fiji are the subject of the documentary "Reel Paradise."
<p>

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<a href="/press/indiewire.html"><img src="/images/indiewiresm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>On Screen and In a New City, Austin Embraces The Pierson Family</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Eugene Hernandez</font><p>

These days, aside from traveling to a few film festivals to talk about Steve James' Miramax doc about their time in Fiji, "Reel Paradise," 
the Pierson's have become key figures within the Austin film scene.
<p>

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<a href="/press/variety.html"><img src="/images/varietysm.gif" BORDER=0></a><p>
<b>Variety - Reel Paradise</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Todd McCarthy</font><p>

 Indie film guru John Pierson goes native, sort of, in "Reel Paradise," an engaging docu about his year-long 
 stint showing free movies to the locals at what's purportedly 
 the world's most remote cinema, the 180 Meridian in Taveuni, Fiji.
<p>

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<img src="/images/ebert.gif"><p>
<b>Sundance #3: Of heart and humor</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Roger Ebert</font><p>

Another Sundance doc is also a wonderful portrait of an unexpected lifetime. Steve James, who directed 
 "Hoop Dreams," is here with "Reel Paradise," the story of a New Yorker named John Pierson, who distributed 
 and represented the films of Spike Lee, Kevin Smith and many other indie directors, 
 and hosted "Split Screen," an IFC program on independent films.
<p>

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<img src="/images/stevejames.jpg"><p>
<b>Paradise Found</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Bill Chambers</font><p>

Hoop-dream master Steve James on his latest film, REEL PARADISE
<p>

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<td class=dotty><img src="/images/latimes.gif"><p>
<b>Isle of Forgotten Fans</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By John Pierson</font><p>

 I recently became the proud owner of the world's most remote movie theater. A year from now, you could be wearing a T-shirt that says, "I saw it at the 180 Meridian Cinema." At least that's how I see it.
 <p>

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<b>Fiji Favorites: Guys in Dresses</b><br>
<font class="smallblack">By Dave Kehr</font><p><p>

The Piersons are back, and the New York independent film community is happy to see them home.
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