Film offers chance to sea lions
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Marisa O’Neil
When filmmaker Alan De Herrera heard that fishermen off the Southern
California coast shoot sea lions that compete for their fish, he
decided to shoot the mammals himself -- with a camera.
De Herrera’s documentary, “California Sea Lions,” shot off the
California coast, will debut at next week’s Newport Beach Film
Festival. The Fullerton resident got the idea for the film after he
rode on a boat and a fisherman told him that the practice of shooting
sea lions was common.
“I’d never shot a wildlife documentary,” said the 31-year-old
Fullerton College graduate. “I became obsessed with what was going on
and was surprised that nobody had ever made a documentary film about
California sea lions.”
He started researching the marine mammals and went with his
snorkeling gear to Seal Rock off Laguna Beach. There, his interest
was further piqued by a face-to-face encounter with a sea lion.
“I held my breath and dove down and she started swimming around
me,” he said. “She came right into my face and looked me eye to eye,
like, ‘I’m accepting you into our world.’”
On his way home, he paid a visit to Laguna Beach’s Friends of the
Sea Lion, now known as the Pacific Marine Mammal Center. After
speaking with the center’s director, Michele Hunter, about his
experience, he resolved to make the film with their help.
De Herrera’s crew, including people from the center, shot the film
over three years in the Channel Islands and other areas with large
sea lion populations.
“It was a very rewarding and exciting experience to go out there
and watch [De Herrera] film,” said Dean Gomersall of the Pacific
Marine Mammal Center. “We usually see sea lions when they’re sick or
injured. It was great to watch them in their natural environment.”
Sea lions are intelligent animals, De Herrera said, who interacted
with the crew during underwater filming. The pups even played “fetch”
with pebbles the crew tossed and tug-of-war with pieces of kelp.
The Discovery Channel bought stock footage from the project and De
Herrera hopes that the documentary will air on television at some
point. His production company, Rio Films, is planning two more nature
documentaries then wants to shift to the IMAX film format.
“California Sea Lions” will also tour local schools to educate
students about the local wildlife and the problems they face. Ocean
pollution is leading to increased cases of cancer in the animals, De
Herrera said, and they have high levels of pollutants like
polychlorinated biphenyls in their blubber.
“The commercial fishing industry, and sea lions have to work
together,” he said. “They need to allow them to feed themselves not
make it competitive. Sea lions around the world are shot and clubbed
and drowned in nets. We want to show what an amazing animal it is.”
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