Luna: A Whale to Watch
The true story of a lonely orca leaps from printed page to silver screen, with a boost from new technology
- By Michael Parfit
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2011, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
“I certainly don’t want to go on record as saying the studio system is going to die, not in my lifetime,” David Courier told me with a laugh. “Huge special-effects-driven films and big Hollywood glamour are going to be around for a good while, because people often go to the movies as an escape. But then there are other people who go to movies just to see a good story. Independent cinema is providing a lot of the good stories.”
It is at least a partial shift in creative power. When the hard-boiled novelist Raymond Chandler went to Hollywood in the 1940s, he watched in frustration as studio executives demoralized the storytellers.
“That which is born in loneliness and from the heart,” Chandler wrote, “cannot be defended against the judgment of a committee of sycophants.”
So the irony is this: technology is freeing us from technology. The machines that once gave money veto power over originality are becoming obsolete, and freedom grows. Now, a story may rise more easily to our attention simply because it is stirring. People can follow their passions into the smoke of a shattered nation, as James Longley did, or into the life of a whale, or into the endless wild landscape of the imagination, and bring what they find back in their own hands.
And in the end the technology is just a tool. When Suzanne and I sit in the back of a theater behind the silhouetted heads of strangers, and feel through their stillness and laughter that they are getting to know a friend who was a gift from the blue, we never think about the equipment that made it all possible. As it should be with the things we humans are compelled to make—those tools work best that work in the service of life.
Michael Parfit has written for Smithsonian and other magazines since the 1980s.
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Related topics: Film-Making Whales Behavior Artists
Additional Sources
"Selective foraging by fish-eating killer whales Orcinus orca in British Columbia," by John K.B. Ford and Graeme M. Ellis, Marine Ecology Progress Series, Vol. 316: 185-199, 2006
"Culture in whales and dolphins," by Luke Rendell and Hal Whitehead, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 24:309-382, 2001









Comments (10)
tihs is so cute
Posted by on September 12,2012 | 07:40 AM
Hi there my children and myself spent almost everyday looking for or visiting with Luna it was about the greatest experience myself and my children could have ever had He was the most friendly and loving creature you could have known. I take great pride in saying Luna was the greatest whale on earth!!!
Posted by cheryl on November 19,2011 | 08:11 PM
A tragic ending to a beautiful, uplifting story! Thank you both for immortalising this magic mammal's brief - yet rich, meaningful and important - life on film so that audiences around the world can have the chance to learn to appreciate that animals and whales and dolphins do not exist for us to eat, but to enjoy their vitality and try to understand what they attempt to communicate with us, and to appreciate and value the love they extend to us, as Luna did. This young whale reminds me of one who also died two or three years ago when he got separated from his mother travelling south and entered what he hoped would be the safe harbour of Sydney's northern beaches area. Again, callous, spiritually clueless bureaucrats from a govt department took 'control' of what was a beautiful inter-species encounter for local residents and pre-emptively euthanised this young whale, without making any effort to even relocate until it was older to a facility such as SeaWorld on the Gold Coast where it could grow up safely and be fed.
PLEASE DISTRIBUTE THIS WONDERFUL STORY THROUGHOUT AUSTRALIA AND NZ AND ON DVD - you will find a very strong market for it Downunder (see Whale Rider, one of my favourite films made in my country of origin, New Zealand). Kudos to all who knew, loved and cared about spiritual soul Luna.
Posted by Jewel Rainbow Australia on October 14,2011 | 07:13 PM
This tragedy surpasses anything written by Shakespeare.
Posted by Cleve Gray on July 24,2011 | 08:56 PM
This is moving even before seeing the film about Luna -- it is so nice to know that films can be made outside the studio system. For those who want to make similar films (short or long) about stories close to home, can you recommend how ordinary people can learn the artistic aspects of cinematography as well as the technical techniques of digital production? Years ago, in Montgomery County, Maryland, I took a video production course offered at a very low rate by Montgomery Cable -- I think at the time cable stations were required to make training available so people could do public access programs. There was a producers course (which I signed up for -- we had to produce a four-minute video) and a technicians course (for the camera team and video editors), and I would love to sign up for the equivalent of that, now. Those same courses don't seem to be available now. I would like to be able to recommend similar courses to people just starting out as personal historians (people helping others tell their life story).
Posted by Pat McNees on July 11,2011 | 01:32 PM
That 'wall' between people and wild animals, isn't built by a commonsense fear? Carelessness can cause death. I love loving animals, but I know to keep a distance from those whose natures are not as gentle as Luna's rare personality. It's a matter of respect...for it's nature. In the same way I know to keep a distance from people whose natures are not gentle. Luna yearned for love, and should have received it. But not all killer whales are that gentle. We need to keep a healthy balance between wisdom and love. I look forward to the movie! I grieve that our little friend is gone.
Posted by MD Reser on July 6,2011 | 02:37 AM
I loved this video and love whales! I'm 9 years old and an animal lover. If there is some way I can help save Luna please let me know.
Posted by Rebecca Racz on June 30,2011 | 08:30 PM
Luna is already bigger than life ... through his life and through this film!
Posted by Toni Frohoff on June 27,2011 | 12:42 PM
Mike Parfit is a good friend and terrific writer, and this is one wonderful story worth your attention. Check out the trailer as well.
Posted by Alan Campbell on June 24,2011 | 07:53 PM
It'll break your heart but you must see this film! I knew L98 aka Luna and I've watched the original "Saving Luna", so I'm obviously biased. But there is some kind of magic about this whale and the film that you don't want to miss.
Posted by Stefan on June 24,2011 | 09:38 AM