Blog — THE MAP TO PARADISE

Viewing entries by
Danielle Ryan

Art series of film b-roll - Interview with the artist, Jaimee Paul

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Art series of film b-roll - Interview with the artist, Jaimee Paul

Artist Jaimee Paul has an obsession with Paynes Grey. This is her choice of colour used in a new series of artworks, depicting b-roll of nature from The Map to Paradise, including images of ice bergs, the reef, a sea turtle, seals, penguins, a manta ray, whales and fish.

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THE SOUNDS OF NATURE - by Composer Daniel Clive McCallum

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THE SOUNDS OF NATURE - by Composer Daniel Clive McCallum

 I began my journey into the soundtrack of this incredible film by exploring the sounds of nature. I researched and incorporated whale and dolphin song, boat sounds, bird sounds, and bee hive sounds, to craft a score that marries music with nature. Bee hive sounds, for example, change as the hive transitions from feeling secure to feeling under attack. 

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Elegant Lady Elliot: the Perfect Model, not just in Name

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Elegant Lady Elliot: the Perfect Model, not just in Name

Names matter. Words matter. They insinuate and symbolise things. They can form and shape history. They transmit messages and meaning to our brains: when you hear of a reef named Marion or a coral cay named Lady Elliot, I think there is an assumption that someone must have thought that this place was beautiful and unique enough to protect it. 

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Protection is forever

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Protection is forever

Most people think because something has been protected, it is protected forever. While in theory, this should be case, it is not true.

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A Greek fisherman's tale

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A Greek fisherman's tale

George is in his 50s. He has never married, and never wants to marry. Well, not a human wife. He is married to the sea. 

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Good Guys vs. the Bad

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Good Guys vs. the Bad

I remember thinking back to our expedition in Costa Rica; musing over how small I felt in the jungle as we slashed our way through overgrown pathways and how easy it might be to hide behind the impenetrable green wall, if you had the courage to keep your nerves quiet. 

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The trouble with filming in the wild

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The trouble with filming in the wild

The trouble with following a story about people and nature is that often peoples’ schedules don’t match the cycles of nature and the weather.

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THE MERMAID LEGEND

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THE MERMAID LEGEND

We bonded with the President of Palau over Disney’s legend of Moana. 

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Cocooned by a school of fish

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Cocooned by a school of fish

I was not sure how long I had been hovering there, wondering why these fish with their forlorn-looking stare had decided that I was worthy of becoming the centre of their social pack, but I tried as hard as I could not to move. I did not want to scare off my new fishy friends. 

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A BIRD’S EYE VIEW

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A BIRD’S EYE VIEW

Up in the air, everything makes sense. A bird’s eye view truly is the best way to see for yourself how the land is connected to the sea. You can see what lies underneath the water - maybe a reef, or a kelp forest. 

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CHASING GIANTS IN THE BLUE - Part 3

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CHASING GIANTS IN THE BLUE - Part 3

The weather was turning. The wind was picking up and the sea had become so choppy that it was impossible to see the blow of a whale. 

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CHASING GIANTS IN THE BLUE - part 2

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CHASING GIANTS IN THE BLUE - part 2

I was sitting in a zodiac in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea, feeling that same sense of excitement I had felt in Antarctica earlier this year - intuitively knowing that our encounter with the fin whales was not over yet.

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CHASING GIANTS IN THE BLUE - PART 1

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CHASING GIANTS IN THE BLUE - PART 1

The swell started off calm, but then strange smoky clouds of a mystical orange hue began to roll in, masking the distant sky. A slight chop developed as a brisk wind picked up. I decided to put on my jacket, so I could sit more comfortably on the deck of ‘The Pelagos’ with my eyes glued to the horizon. 

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WHEN POWER IS USED FOR GOOD

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WHEN POWER IS USED FOR GOOD

Before we continue, it is a fair question to ask - what does a fancy cocktail party have to do with saving the world’s oceans? 

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THE BLOOD MOON

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THE BLOOD MOON

It’s not everyday that you meet the great grandson of a great warrior king. I only discovered Brian Daga was a son of kings when I started asking him questions about human skulls. 

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A POLICE-WOMAN’S DREAM

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A POLICE-WOMAN’S DREAM

A silver-haired woman with a warm gentle face approached us and proudly introduced herself as the nation’s first police-woman.

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MOTHER MOIRA

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MOTHER MOIRA

Moira never dreamed of becoming a chief as a child. She grew up going to church every day and every night, singing songs, and even writing some of her own. Like other girls in her village, she would garden and collect shells, and she would grow up to marry her husband and have four children. 

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Shattering the glass slipper fantasy

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Shattering the glass slipper fantasy

Mary Jean was a teenager when she began working at a guesthouse owned by her uncle washing dishes and cleaning rooms. Often the guests would ask her what the underwater world was like, but she was unable to respond. 

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JEROME & THE SEA CREATURES OF APO

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JEROME & THE SEA CREATURES OF APO

Jerome was a curious child. While exploring the shallows of the sea around his small island-home of Apo Island in the Philippines, he once touched the poisonous skin of large stonefish. He wanted to pick it up and take it home to eat. Instead, when he went to touch the stonefish, it released poison deep into his veins. 

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The Legend of Apo

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The Legend of Apo

When Mario was 11 years old, there was no diving industry on Apo Island. There was dynamite and siren fishing, hook and line and net fishing. Everything in the ocean was free for taking – the sharks, the manta rays, the sea turtles, and even the sea cucumbers. 

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