When she was 14, Mari Walker fell while body surfing and hit the sand pretty hard, resulting in a hospital stay and surgery.
While recovering, her parents bought her a video camera, unknowingly giving her life direction.
At the time, Walker, now 29, was a sophomore at Hudson’s Bay High School, and she asked a teacher if she could make a documentary short about Buddhism for a project. The teacher agreed, and Walker filmed the short in her house, using a wheelchair as a dolly. While editing the project the night before it was due, a corrupted file cost her most of her work, setting her up for a sleepless night full of stress and tears.
“My parents thought that would be the end of my film career,” she said. “Instead, it made me realize that’s what I want to do with my life. I must have made 60, 70 projects in high school: short films, PSAs, things to promote orchestra shows.”
Walker went to Emerson College in Boston, where she studied film, and moved to Los Angeles, where she has directed, edited and produced various works. Now, she’s returning to her home county to show off three such projects, all of which are screening in the eighth annual Columbia Gorge International Film Festival, which runs until Sunday.