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Short Stories: Indie Memphis Hometowner Narrative Shorts are Weird, Wondrous, and Woke

For a person who’s never been a film critic in any real capacity (okay, I thoroughly bashed a couple films while on my college newspaper staff a lifetime ago), I was both eager and anxious to take on the task of covering a snippet of what’s on offer in the Indie Memphis Film Festival.

The selection of eight short films in the Hometowner Narrative Shorts Competition — clocking in around an hour and half total —will close out the festival on Monday, October 25th, at Crosstown Theater. They run the gamut from weird and whimsical to thought-provoking and heart-tugging.

Kayla Myers, Indie Memphis Film Festival programmer, says, “One of the first things that struck Brighid [Wheeler] and I in programming is that almost all of the filmmakers in this bloc are filmmakers whose work we’ve seen before, but it showcases an incredible amount of growth and daring choices.

“I think people will be excited to see this work, especially with them being able to screen in person, since so many of our local filmmakers have only really been screening virtually. The pandemic has been such a trying time for all of us, but there are some bright spots in the fact that this work was created, a lot of it, during the pandemic, and we get to showcase it.”

Here’s a rundown of what to expect.

Director Laura Jean Hocking received the first-ever Indie Memphis Women’s Short Film grant for “Hot Singles.” The film opens with Daisy (Shannon Walton) seeking shelter from an apocalyptic event in a flower shop basement. Alone and unable to get cell service, she begins to unravel as days pass. A glimmer of hope arrives as she sees a flickering bar of signal strength — but there’s just one person she’s able to get through to, and unfortunately it’s not her father.

Jean Jackson directs “The Nest,” a Beats by Dre Black Creators short film, and a five-minute glimpse into the cyclical and mundane life of Byrdie (played at various ages by Chelsea Dargba, Autumn Whetstone, and Sallay Fofanah), who’s trapped in a repetitive loop of daily routines, alone in her room — until one day she chooses to venture outside, ready to embrace all that lies beyond the door.

2019’s Best Hometowner Narrative Short winner Kyle Taubken is back with “In a Bad Way.” The film introduces us to Mike (Keith Johnson) after he’s lost big at the casino. The money was meant for his kids’ Christmas presents, and he has a chance to make it right. Will the gambling addict save Christmas?

In “Beale Street Blues,” director Daniel R. Ferrell explores a world of crooked cops on the streets of Memphis. As an FBI investigation is underway, officer Arthur Breedan (Keith Johnson) enlists his cousin Floyd (Edward Fields) to assist in his ongoing scheme of robbing drug dealers. Though Floyd is hesitant, Breedan pushes, and things go a little too far — potentially bringing the rogue cop one step closer to justice. “Beale Street Blues” was funded by the 2020 Indie Grant for Proof of Concept, which means Ferrell intends to expand it into a feature film.

Joshua Woodcock directs “Main Street,” starring JS Tate, who is homeless and living along Main Street after losing his wife. His lonesome days are spent reading through her old journal pages, collecting change from passersby, and having solo lunches in the park. Until he meets an unexpected friend who, for a time, brings much-needed companionship.

“Chocolate Galaxy” is a futuristic musical journey.

Noah Glenn’s “The Devil Will Run” is a standout among this hometowner selection. Bryce Christian Thompson stars as 7-year-old Shah, who is convinced a hole in his backyard is a portal to hell, and whose brother teases him for it. After a precious and pivotal backyard scene with his best friend Nella (Posie Steinmetz), Shah confronts his fears. “The Devil Will Run” was a 2019 Indie Grant recipient and was co-written by Glenn and IMAKEMADBEATS.

“Chocolate Galaxy” (directed by Blake Heimbach, Ryan Peel, and David Parks) is — and I’m pulling this directly from the Indie Memphis site — “an Afrofuturistic Space Opera.” That’s an apt description for the Black Mirror-esque musical journey that takes Fuzzy Slippers (David Parks) to Sector 9 for a night out, where he meets — and falls for — The Goddess (Taylor Williams). Set design, costumes, and interspersed animation transport the viewer — moonrocks or not.

In “Watch,” directed by Mars Lee McKay, Sarah (Adrienne Lamb) finds an old tube TV on the street while she’s taking out the trash. It mysteriously powers on, and through shifting scenes and static, has a message for her.

The Indie Memphis Hometowner Narrative Shorts Competition films are available for online viewing Oct. 20th-25th and will screen at Crosstown Theater Oct. 25th beginning at 9 p.m., $10.

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Music Video Monday: Drique

Get dressed up for Music Video Monday.

MVM newcomer Drique brings a slow-burn R&B sound with her new single “Pull Up.” She glams it up and hits the clubs with some help from Krucial. Director Daniel R. Ferrell and cinematographer Jason Thibodeaux helped create this stylish visual.

Music Video Monday: Drique

If you would like to see your new video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

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Music Video Monday: K. Reese

Roll into your week with Music Video Monday.

This moodily lit video for “Moves” by hip hop artist K. Reese is some eye candy. Director Daniel R. Ferrell and cinematographer Jason Thibodeaux crush the blacks and light with creamy neon to give K. Reese’s ode to cruising at night a perfect video setting.

Music Video Monday: K. Reese

If you’d like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Indie Memphis 2018 Saturday: Van Duren, Brian de Palma, and Shorts Galore

Saturday is the most packed day of Indie Memphis 2018.

Kristina Amaya, Karla Jovel, and Leslie Reyes road trip through Los Angeles in Sepulveda.

It begins with Sepulveda (10:30 a.m., Hattiloo Theatre), a film about friendship I wrote about in this week’s cover story.

August at Akiko’s (10:45 a.m., Studio on the Square) by director Christopher Makoto Yogi is a meditative visit to Hawaii, made by a native of the island paradise.

Indie Memphis 2018 Saturday: Van Duren, Brian de Palma, and Shorts Galore

The Hometowner Youth Filmmaker’s Showcase (10:45 a.m., Playhouse on the Square) presents 17 shorts from the recent Indie Memphis Youth Festival, including the winning film by 16-year-old Jaynay Kelley, “The Death of Hip Hop”.

Jaynay Kelley’s ‘The Death Of Hip Hop’

The first Hometowner feature of the day has a distinctly international flavor. Waiting: The Van Duren Story (1 p.m., Playhouse On The Square) is simultaneously a story out of music history and the saga its own creation. Van Duren is a Memphis musician who spent time in the Ardent/Big Star orbit in the 1970s. His two albums of immaculate, forward-looking power pop fell victim to the same kind of dark machinations as Alex Chilton and company. When Australian filmmakers and music fans Greg Carey and Wade Jackson discovered these obscure records, they had no context for the music and set out to discover the story of how Van Duren fell through the cracks. The film chronicles their own journey of discovery and Van Duren’s wild ride through the music industry. Both the filmmakers and their subject will be on hand for the screening, and Van Duren will perform at Circuit Playhouse at 3:30 PM.

Van Duren meets Bruce Springsteen in Waiting: The Van Duren Story

The feature documentary Wrestle (3:30 p.m., Playhouse On The Square) has been on a festival circuit roll lately, taking home both the Audience Award and the Best Sports Documentary Award at the recent Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival. Wrestle, which follows a team of high school athletes from J.O. Johnson High School in Huntsville, Alabama, was praised by the Hot Springs judges for its “intimate and personal cinematography and elegant editing.” Co-director Suzannah Herbert has a Memphis connection: her father is artist Pinkney Herbert.

Wrestle

When asked about recommendations for what to see at any film festival, I always point people towards shorts blocs. These programs are always full of diverse, different films not bound by the rules of mainstream feature filmmaking. Plus, if you don’t like one film, just wait a few minutes and it’ll be over, and the next one will probably be better! Shorts are also the best way to discover up and coming new filmmakers.

The first of two shorts blocs Saturday afternoon is the Narrative Competition (3:45 p.m., TheatreWorks). The seven short films in this year’s main competition come from Canada and the U.S. The 19-minute “Magic Bullet” is from director Amanda Lovejoy Street, who previously appeared at Indie Memphis as an actress in Amber Sealey’s 2011 feature How To Cheat.

Magic Bullet Trailer from Amanda Street on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis 2018 Saturday: Van Duren, Brian de Palma, and Shorts Galore (2)

The Hometowner Narrative Short Showcase (6:30 p.m., TheatreWorks) includes films from Memphis filmmakers Jessica Chayney and Amanda Willoughby; Nathan Chin; Justin Malone; and O’Shay Foreman. Alexandra Van Milligan and Sammy Anzer’s “Stand Up Guys” is episode 3 of a web series by a local improv troupe. “Dean’s List” by Daniel R. Ferrell is a high school noir thriller that made its debut at this year’s Memphis Film Prize. “U Jus Hav To Be” is a story of workplace ennui directed by and starring Anwar Jamison, an Indie Memphis veteran and film educator. “The Best Wedding Gift” is the latest by prolific comedy director and Indie Grant benefactor Mark Goshen Jones, a two-hander with Savannah Bearden as a scheming bride-to-be and Jacob Wingfield as a best man who is in for a big surprise.

Savannah Bearden in ‘The Best Wedding Gift’

The Music Video Competition (9 p.m., Theaterworks) brings videos from the US, Israel, Australia, Greece, and this one from the German band Fortnite and directors Sven D. and Phillipp Primus.

Fortnite 'Gasoline' TEASER from Sven D. on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis 2018 Saturday: Van Duren, Brian de Palma, and Shorts Galore (3)

Finally, at 11:30 p.m., a horror thriller gem from early in the career of Brian de Palma. Sisters stars future Lois Lane Margot Kidder as a knife-wielding psychotic who really, really doesn’t like cake.

Indie Memphis 2018 Saturday: Van Duren, Brian de Palma, and Shorts Galore (4)