TEAR DOWN – The house at 1513 Halibut Point Road is torn down this morning to make way for new house construction. The waterfront house was built in 1966 for Richard Eliason, who over the years served terms as Sitka’s mayor and state representative and senator. Fisherman Paul Morgan was lead carpenter on the 3,655-square-foot mid-century modern house. It reportedly sold for around $1 million most recently. (Sentinel Photo by James Poulson)

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Daily Sitka Sentinel

Film Reviews Sitka's '22 Cruise Season, Seeks Input

By GARLAND KENNEDY

Sentinel Staff Writer

On the heels of Sitka’s busiest tourist season, a film that explores opinions on and impacts of cruise ship tourism on the town will premiere Sunday afternoon. The year’s last large cruise ship departed in late September, closing out a season in which a record shattering 383,000 cruise passengers visited Sitka.

The hour-long film “Cruise Boom” documents a variety of perspectives on the impacts of cruise tourism in Sitka and includes footage from Assembly meetings and interviews with stakeholders, but co-director Ellen Frankenstein hopes the film inspires questions more than it provides answers.

“The film doesn’t make any conclusions,” Frankenstein said in an interview. “It’s sort of like, ‘Wow, this is like industrial tourism.’ And I think the thing is that there’s an element in the film asking a lot about how much the community actually gets from this, and how can we get as much as possible out of being a place people visit?

Atman Mehta, left, and Ellen Frankenstein film footage for their documentary. (Photo/ artchangeinc.org)

“I really want to encourage conversations about what type of tourism people want in the community, how they shape it and interact with it.”

She said the film at present is a work in progress.

“We’re not going to go back to the drawing board and start again, but it’s important on the local level that we inspire some more conversations and have people kind of think about what is good for the community, what do they value in the community,” Frankenstein said.

Along with Sunday’s showing, Sitkans will have an opportunity to provide feedback on the film, either on paper forms at the premiere or online.

Frankenstein wants to know “what thoughts are evoked about Sitka and your sense of this place and why you live here? What are your concerns and hopes for tourism here? How can the film be useful to the community?”

“Cruise Boom” stands out from Frankenstein’s other films because the topic is relatively light. She’s covered issues from domestic violence to executions, but unlike those situations, cruise tourists tend to be having an enjoyable experience.

“The people visiting and traveling, They’re having a good time… Even though this film raises a lot of questions, and we want to stimulate discussion, it also feels important to show a little bit of the joy that people have when they get to see Alaska and they get to see Sitka,” she said.

“Cruise Boom” co-director Atman Mehta said he hopes “Cruise Boom” offers a wide range of perspectives and fuels conversations.

“Our intention and our hope with the film, within the limits of feasibility, was to have it be as kaleidoscopic as possible and capture many perspectives,” Mehta said over the phone. “Especially with something as potentially transformative as having half a million cruise tourists disembark in Sitka… we wanted to explore as many of those as possible: social, cultural, economic, political. Hopefully in the film, you see a lot of these perspectives.”

In the process of making the film, Mehta was surprised by some of what he learned about the economics of the cruise industry.

“I’m really interested in economics at large,” he said. “The cruise industry is incredibly consolidated. It’s one of the most profitable industries and also, it’s very lightly taxed.”

The film has given Frankenstein a newfound appreciation for the amount of work that went on behind the scenes in Sitka before the first ship moored at the Sitka Sound Cruise Terminal in the spring.

“The people in the city, how much they really care about the community and how many people at the Assembly and the Planning Commission were trying to make tourism a good experience for the people who live here, as well as the visitors… I’ve gained a great respect for the public process and the work the city has done to try to prepare for the growth in tourism and taking care of the community,” she said.

“Ending this film is really hard,” she said. “This film doesn’t really have an end, because we don’t know what’s next.”

It shows only one hour of the 30 hours actually filmed in the making, she said.

“‘Cruise Boom’ was filmed over 14 months with the participation of countless individuals, locations, businesses and organizations,” she said. “The filmmakers want to note their appreciation for all the support of the community in that process.”

Frankenstein runs the non-profit organization ArtChange Inc., which is also the umbrella for Sitka Cabaret, Sitka Tells Tales and the radio show, “Our Grandparents’ Teachings.”

“Cruise Boom” premieres at 4:30 p.m. Sunday at the Coliseum Theater on Lincoln Street. Tickets cost $9 and are available at Old Harbor Books or at the door.

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20 YEARS AGO

April 2005

Photo caption: SEARHC Mt. Edgecumbe workers unveil a new sign on Tongass Drive proclaiming the campus is tobacco-free. CEO Ken Brewer said the effort to ban tobacco on the campus has been in the works for years. Pictured from left are Brewer, Therese Horan, Doug Osborne, Mark Gorman and Wilbur Brown.

 50 YEARS AGO

April 1975

Alaska Native Brotherhood and Sisterhood observed the 63rd Founders Day on March 24. Mary Perkins gave the opening prayer, William Peters was master of ceremonies, Henry Benson led the Battle Song, and  Ray Nielsen gave the roll call with individual response given by Andy Hope.

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