German
Filmmaker
Aspires
to
Share
Nosara’s
Recycling
Project
with
the
World
By
Arianna
McKinney,
Voiceofnosara.com
What
director
and
producer
Ayana
de
Vos
loves
most
about
making
films
is
that
you
can
touch
people.
“If
a
film
is
nicely
done,
it
is
powerful
and
hopefully
reaches
the
people,”
she
said.

She
hopes
to
reach
people
around
the
world
with
a
documentary
about
recycling
in
tropical
countries
that
she
is
filming
in
Nosara.
The
90-minute
feature-length
film
will
document
the
creation
of a
new
recycling
center
at
the
Nosara
dump,
a
project
being
organized
by
Ayana’s
husband,
Tobias
Holler,
who
is
an
assistant
professor
of
architecture
at
New
York
Institute
of
Technology.
During
the
months
of
July
and
August,
35
of
his
architecture
students
will
be
volunteering
their
time
and
energy
to
build
the
new
recycling
center,
and
Ayana
will
be
capturing
the
activity
on
film.
Ayana
knew
she
wanted
to
make
a
film
about
the
recycling
center
as
soon
as
the
project
was
suggested.
She
is
drawn
to
making
documentaries
about
positive
community
initiatives
in
different
places
around
the
world
so
that
other
people
learn
about
the
projects
and
might
be
inspired
to
help
with
the
project
or
to
develop
a
similar
project
in
their
own
community.“All
together
we
can
make
a
difference,”
is
the
message
that
Ayana
hopes
will
reach
people
around
the
world.
For
example,
Ayana
filmed
a
documentary
about
the
last
orangutans
living
in
the
wild
in
the
vanishing
rainforests
of
Borneo,
Indonesia.
The
film
was
broadcast
all
over
Europe,
generating
more
support
and
more
funding
for
the
project
to
protect
the
orangutans.
That’s
the
kind
of
change
that
makes
Ayana
feel
successful
as a
filmmaker.
Although
she
has
shot
numerous
documentaries
during
her
10-year
career,
the
documentary
she
is
filming
in
Nosara
will
be
her
first
independent
film.
She
explained
that
she
didn’t
want
TV
production
involved
in
the
film
because
documentaries
made
for
specific
programs
are
generally
made
in a
short
amount
of
time
and
she
always
had
more
ideas
for
the
documentaries
that
the
limited
timeframe
wouldn’t
allow
her
to
explore.
For
her
film
about
Nosara,
however,
she
wanted
the
luxury
of
time
to
give
the
film
enough
love
and
shoot
it
until
she
thinks
it’s
done.
Ayana
said
one
of
the
most
important
things
about
the
film
will
be
showing
what
happens
when
people
try
to
make
a
change
with
whatever
they
have
to
offer.
The
people
here
in
Nosara
will
be
central
to
the
film.
Through
them,
Ayana
hopes
to
get
to
know
what
local
people
really
think
of
the
project
and
tell
from
the
bottom
of
their
hearts
why
this
recycling
project
is
important.
“This
place
is
all
about
nature,”
Ayana
noted.
During
her
interviews
with
people
in
the
community
she
has
learned
that
people
feel
the
most
important
aspect
is
education.
Currently,
every
bag
of
garbage
has
to
be
opened
and
the
recyclable
material
has
to
be
sorted
out
by
hand.
Ayana
first
visited
Nosara
two
years
ago
and
fell
in
love
with
the
area.
“There’s
no
way
you
can’t
fall
in
love
with
it,”
she
said.
“I
love
animals
although
I’m
really
scared
of
the
snakes.
I’ve
never
seen
so
many
wild
animals
in
my
life.”
Ayana
joked
that
she’s
from
Jamaica,
where
the
most
dangerous
creature
is a
caterpillar.
Ever
since
she
was
a
little
girl,
Ayana
de
Vos
always
wanted
to
be a
filmmaker.
In
Germany’s
competitive
arena,
Ayana
made
that
dream
come
true
through
perseverance
and,
according
to
her,
a
lot
of
luck.
When
she
was
only
22,
she
got
an
internship
at
one
of
Germany’s
major
film
companies,
SpiegelTV.
After
three
or
four
months,
she
was
encouraged
to
go
somewhere
else,
being
told
that
she
was
too
young
to
get
hired
on
by
the
company.
However,
she
stuck
it
out,
bartending
on
the
side
to
survive
economically
and
proving
to
the
company
how
much
she
wanted
it.
After
about
9
months
she
got
hired
on
and
was
sent
to
the
journalism
academy.
Ayana
said
that
the
educational
program
in
Germany
is
very
competitive;
450
people
wanted
in,
but
the
academy
could
only
take
12.
“I
got
very
lucky
again,”
she
recalled.
Ten
years
into
her
career,
Ayana
is
exploring
new
horizons,
making
this
independent
film
in
Nosara
and
also
preparing
her
first
screenplay
about
a
black
German
getting
married,
dealing
with
the
theme
of
racism
in
the
form
of a
comedy,
which
she
says
is
“a
nicer
way
of
telling
the
story.”
Although
Ayana
is
interested
in
narrative
films,
she
feels
she
isn’t
a
good
writer.
“I
think
I
can
express
myself
the
best
through
music
and
pictures.
Film
has
so
many
tools
you
can
use.”
Those
tools
include
picture,
voice,
atmospheric
sound
and
music
as
well
as
narrative.
She
plans
to
incorporate
narrative
into
the
documentary
she
is
filming
in
Nosara,
using
actors
to
mix
a
narrative
story
into
the
documentary
to
create
a
different
kind
of
film.
She
hopes
to
finish
the
film
by
August
2013
and
plans
to
show
it
at
several
film
festivals
as
well
as
presenting
it
to
companies
in
Germany
and
possibly
PBS
in
the
United
States.
Through
this
film,
she
hopes
to
showcase
the
collaboration
between
Nosara
residents
and
foreigners
to
bring
about
a
positive
change
in
the
community.