Journey to Spirit Island
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László Pal
| Journey to Spirit Island | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Directed by | László Pal |
| Screenplay by | Crane Webster |
| Story by | Crane Webster László Pal |
| Produced by | Bruce Clark |
| Starring | Bettina Bush Brandon Douglas Marie Antoinette Rodgers |
| Cinematography | Vilmos Zsigmond |
| Edited by | Bonnie Koehler |
| Music by | Fred Myrow |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 mins. |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Journey to Spirit Island is a 1988 U.S. Emmy Award-winning family adventure film directed by László Pal, produced by Bruce Clark, with a screenplay by Crane Webster from a story by László Pal and Crane Webster. It stars Bettina Bush, Brandon Douglas and Marie Antoinette Rodgers, with cinematography by the Oscar-winning Vilmos Zsigmond.[1][2]
Set on the Olympic Peninsula and a nearby, unspoiled San Juan island, the film follows a young Native American girl, her brother, and their two new friends as they battle land developers determined to build a holiday resort on the sacred burial site known as Spirit Island.[3][4][5]
Two brothers, Michael (Brandon Douglas) and Willie (Gabriel Damon), are on vacation from Chicago to Spirit Island with a teenage Native American girl named Maria (Bettina Bush) and her brother Klim (Tarek McCarthy). They plan to save Spirit Island to preserve their heritage, but a conflict arises regarding the development of tribal burial grounds. When her grandmother organizes a protest against desecrating their ancestors' sacred burial ground, Maria takes up the fight. The antagonists are land developers who aim to transform Spirit Island into a vacation resort.
Cast
- Bettina Bush as Maria
- Brandon Douglas as Michael
- Marie Antoinette Rodgers as Jimmy Jim
- Gabriel Damon as Willie
- Tarek McCarthy as Klim
- Tony Acierto as Hawk
- Nick Ramus as Tom
- Atilla Gambasci as Phil
- Rod Gibbens as Peter Mackel
- Frank Salsedo as Hoots
- Skeeter Vaughan as Harry
- Edie Hottowe as Lucy
Release
"Journey to Spirit Island" went unreleased until 1992 when it premiered in the U.S. on the Disney Channel.[6]
Reception
The TV Guide Reviewer of "Journey to Spirit Island" commented: "This film, beautifully photographed by topnotch cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, is good hearted family fare marred by a hopelessly naïve conclusion".The reviewer added: "...Ostensibly a lesson in environmental protection, respect for Native American culture and the exploitation of that culture by the 'white man', 'Journey to Spirit Island' negates what impact it might have had by making an Indian the villain and a white businessman the noble hero".[7]
Hal Erickson for Allmovie, praised "the superlative photography by Vilmos Zsigmond.[4]
In his review for the Radio Times, John Ferguson concluded: "The members of a largely unknown cast give winning performances, director Laszlo Pal expertly brings together the mystical and adventure elements of the tale and the rugged northern locations are gloriously captured by Zsigmond".[8]
