August 29, 2018 โ What convinced Angela Sanfilippo, president of the Gloucester Fishermenโs Wives Association, that filmmaker David Wittkower could tell the story of the decline of the New England commercial fishing industry was that he wanted to interview fishermen and let them speak in their own voice.
โThat never happened,โ she said. In most stories in the media about the industry, fishermenโs words โare always twisted,โ she said. But she sensed that wouldnโt happen with Wittkower, that heโd let fishermen tell their own stories.
โThis documentary tells the story of what people have endured through the years, and what weโre still enduring,โ said Sanfilippo, whose organization helped finance โDead in the Water,โ Wittkowerโs documentary on the industry, which screens at the Chatham Orpheum Theater on Saturday, Sept. 8 at 10 a.m.
Wittkower, who lives in Los Angeles but spent his middle and high school years in Rockport, where his parents still live, said he became interested in the plight of the commercial fishing industry about four years ago when he noticed fewer and fewer fishing boats docked in Gloucester. He began talking to folks and eventually made his way to Sanfilippo, who gave him the lowdown about how catch limits, days at sea restrictions and other regulations were killing the industry and making it impossible for young people to take up fishing.
Read the full story at The Cape Cod Chronicle