FIL-CANADIAN FILMMAKER WINS VARIOUS AWARDS
By
Tom Choy
Vancouver, British Columbia
“I never paint dreams or nightmares. I paint my own reality.” Frida Kahlo
And for the award-winning young filmmaker, Kathleen “Kat” Jayme(30) it
was her own fascination with basketball since she was a kid and her idolizing
the basketball game of former Vancouver Grizzlies star Bryant “Big Country”
Reeves that led her to write and produce her award-winning documentary “Finding
Big Country.”
But even before her love of basketball her eyes and destiny were already
pointed towards films. Her lolo (grandfather) on her mother side, Danilo
Santiago was a filmmaker for the
Premiere Productions in the Philippines. It was in her blood so to speak.
Kat was a tiny child when she started shooting hoops with her older
sibling. And her brother admitted how great a basketball player Kat is.
Kat would be a regular fan watching Big Country Reeves and the Grizzlies
play at the Roger’s Arena. Only a little kid then in the mid-90s, Kat would see
Bryant compete against the great player Michael Jordan when the Bulls visited
Vancouver.
Kat’s Finding Big Country won her three awards namely, “Channel Zero
Best Canadian Film” or “Video Award Winner” (2018), Toronto Reel Asian
International Film Festival; “Audience Must See BC Award” Winner(2018), Vancouver International Film Festival; and
the “SuperChannel People’s Choice Award(2018).
Finding Big Country was shown in several Vancouver theatres to a sold
out audience. The NBA channels featured the movie as well. Kat has made a
significant stride in filmmaking. Her eyes are set on other projects now.
She also made another documentary film “Paradise Island” in 2015 about
the Filipino kids who built sandcastles for money and the harsh realities of
living in the world-famous beaches of Boracay,
Philippines. This won Kat the
Eco-Tourism Award in 2016. This film was also featured in the 2015 Cannes Film
Festival.
Kat was a University of British
Columbia(UBC) Film Production alumna and the H. Norman Lidster Prize
Scholarship recipient honoring an outstanding documentary student.
Paradise Island is when life imitates art. Kat is an environmentalist
and when she showed this film in Vancouver’s Vancity Theatre, 100 percent of
the proceeds went towards Surfrider Foundation research and beach cleanups in
Vancouver.
In 2011, Kat wrote and directed two award winning short fiction films,
“Little Big Kid” which won a Leo Award for Best Student production in BC and
“Liz” which was among 20 films selected to play in Air Canada flights.
After UBC, Kat got an internship at the National Film Board of Canada
and was later offered a full time job.
If Kat is not making movies, she is also a motivational speaker and a
high school basketball coach. She played point guard in the Little Flower
Academy( high school team Angels).
Her next project is a daunting task—a documentary about the Vancouver
Grizzlies. Remember Shareef Abdur Rahim, Mike Bibby, Byron Scott, and Greg
Anthony? They all played for the Vancouver Grizzlies in the mid-90s. The team
was moved to Memphis and is now known as the Memphis Grizzlies. Most likely
these fomer basketball stars will be
featured in this next big project of Kat.
Kat is on a roll while she is just getting warmed up. She is only 30 and
it seems sky is the limit for her success in film-making. She has the
education, training, experience and awards that will bring her more successes
in her future.
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