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Roll Camera! Memphis Film Prize Kicks Off Fifth Year With Party at The Cove

The Memphis Film Prize’s annual kickoff toast.

The traditional signal that it’s time to make a movie for the Memphis Film Prize is a bracing shot of tequila. For five years, the national organization has offered $10,000 for the best made-in-Memphis short film of the year. To qualify for the prize, you first have to register your project—and that’s what the party at the Cove tonight at 6 p.m. is about. “We can’t wait to kick off our fifth year in Memphis!” says Memphis Film Prize local coordinator David Merrill. “We invite all filmmakers, cast, crew, film enthusiasts, and the Film Prize fans in the community to celebrate this new year of Film Prize with us.”

Last year’s winner was “Night Out,” co-directed by Abby Myers and Kevin Brooks. But this year, it could be your film. The key, says Gregory Kallenberg, executive director of the Prize Foundation, is building a network of collaborators to bring your vision to life. “We are helping build a homegrown, independent film scene in Memphis. A film scene not just of talented filmmakers, screenwriters, production artists, and actors, but one that involves the entire Memphis community.”

Once you’re registered, you’d better get filming. The deadline to turn in your rough cut is June 9, 2020.

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Memphis Film Prize Awards $10,000 to Brooks and Meyers’ “A Night Out”

Courtesy Memphis Film Prize

(left to right) Memphis Film Prize Executive Director Gregory Kallenberg, cinematographer Andrew Fleming, directors Kevin Brooks and Abby Meyers, actress Rosalyn R. Ross, and Memphis Film Prize Filmmaker Liaison David Merrill.

The Memphis Film Prize screened the ten finalists’ films to packed houses Friday and Saturday. The winning film, announced at an awards brunch on Sunday, was A Night Out by co-directors Kevin Brooks and Abby Meyers. The film stars Rosalyn R. Ross as a woman trying to cheer herself up after a bad breakup by going to a nightclub. It represents a significant technical achievement, as all of the action takes place in one continuous, 10-minute shot in an around Molly Fontaine’s in Victorian Village. This is Brooks’ second Film Prize win in a row, after taking home last year’s prize for his short film Last Day.

This year’s prize also included, for the first time, Best Performance awards. Best Actor went to Percy Bradley’s comedic performance in Clint Till’s Hangry, where he plays a retired reverend in an assisted-care facility who is done with the bad food they serve and helps himself to some of the staff’s fried chicken.

Best Actress went to Latrice D. Bobo for her turn in Arnold Edwards’ Pages. Bobo plays a suicidal woman who connects with her similarly depressed upstairs neighbor.

This is the fourth year the Memphis Film Prize has solicited films made in Shelby County for its contest. You can read more about the filmmakers who competed this year in the current issue of the Memphis Flyer.

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Memphis Film Prize Calls For Entries At Fourth Annual Kickoff Party

Kevin Brooks (center right) won the 2018 Memphis Film Prize with his short film ‘Last Day’.

The fourth annual Memphis Film Prize will call for entries at a gala kickoff party at The Cove on Thursday, February 7th at 6:30 PM.

“We are gearing up for another huge year,” said David Merrill, Memphis Film Prize Filmmaker liaison. “Our goal is to continue to grow independent filmmaking in Memphis and create an indigenous film capital in our city.”

Begun as an offshoot of the Louisiana Film Prize, the festival offers a unique competitive structure. Filmmakers are required to register their films in advance, and Film Prize officials sometimes show up on competitor’s sets. The entries, which usually range from 40 to 60 short films, are winnowed down to 10 films, which are shown at the two-day event and voted on by festival-goers. The winning short film receives $10,000. Past winners have included McGhee Monteith’s “He Could Have Gone Pro,” Matteo Servente’s “We Go On,” and Kevin Brooks’ “Last Day.” The 2018 edition of the festival set records for attendance, doubling the audience from 2017.

“Last year, Film Prize was elevated to a new level by the talents of the filmmakers,” said
Gregory Kallenberg, Executive Director of the Prize Foundation. “The local community has been key in making all of the filmmakers and the festival successful, and we want everyone to celebrate that success and kick off a new and glorious year with us on February 7th.”

You can find more information about the Memphis Film Prize at their website

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Memphis Film Prize 2018

Memphis Film Prize Filmmaker’s Liaison David Merrill says he’s proud of what the young film festival has accomplished since it spun off the Louisiana Film Prize in 2016. “Our $10,000 annual prize has spurred the creation of more than 120 films in Shelby County,” he says. “Some of them might have happened anyway, but the Film Prize got a lot of people off the couch … We’ve given away $20,000 to Memphis filmmakers. The first year’s winner was McGhee Monteith with ‘He Could’ve Gone Pro’. Last year, it was Matteo Servante’s ‘We Go On’ with a screenplay by Corey Mesler.”

Compared to other festivals, creating a short film for the Memphis Film Prize is a more intensive process. Prospective filmmakers must register their projects with the organization, and then check in periodically during production. The films that make it to completion are then put before a panel of judges, who pick 10 films to screen at the two-day festival. The winner is determined by audience ballot, but there’s a catch: In order to vote, audience members must watch all 10 films at the festival. This prevents ballot stuffing by people who would watch their friends films, then leave. “With this rule, we’re trying to build in a certain sense of fairness,” says Merrill.

The program’s success can be judged by the number of returning filmmakers. “Going into the third year, we’ve got ‘Opening Night’ by Kevin Brooks. I believe this is his third year to be in the top 10. Marcus Santi is also back in the top 10 for the third time with his film ‘Jack Squat: The Trial’. Rob Rokk has a film called ‘Outside Arcadia.’ All of these filmmakers have returned every year and gotten in the top 10 every year. We’ve got fresh blood — people who weren’t in the top 10 before — and we’ve got returning champions back to duke it out.”

Mario Hoyle (Don), Ricky D. Smith (Boss) in ‘Dean’s List’

Daniel Ferrell competed in the Memphis Film Prize last year, but didn’t make the cut. “That experience really inspired me to work hard and hone my craft so I could make it to the top 10 this year,” he says.

Ferrell’s film “Dean’s List” was the first to be called out at the announcement party. “I was jumping for joy. I couldn’t even believe it!”

The director, who started out making backyard movies with his friends, says “Dean’s List” came about almost by accident. “We were trying to make a movie about a female graffiti artist, but we couldn’t get it off the ground,” he recalls. “We had decided to shoot on April 28th, and we wanted to keep that date. So I got together with my friends and we quickly wrote the story about a young college kid who has to deliver a backpack to his boss, and something bad happens. It just kind of came together.”

Actor/director Donald Myers is a familiar sight on the Memphis film scene. He appeared in last year’s winner “We Go On,” written by Burke’s Book Store owner Corey Mesler. Myers says he found himself in the director’s chair when “Corey sent me the [‘Hypnotic Induction’] script and asked if I wanted to take it on.”

Myers and Mesler worked on the script over a couple of weekends to get it into filmable shape. “Corey’s a master of dialogue,” Myers says. “It’s about a bartender who has a smoking and drinking problem, and he doesn’t know how to cure it. He visits a hypnotherapist for treatment for his addictions. The encounter turns into a test of wills.”

Caroline Sposto and John Moore were tapped to play the lead roles. “I liked their chemistry, and when we put them to work at the table read, it all just came alive,” says Myers.

First time writer/director Lauren Cox was inspired to write “Traveling Soldier” by a Dixie Chicks song. “Since I was in middle school, I’ve always thought that would be a good movie,” she says.

After the birth of her first child, Cox, an actor who has appeared on House of Cards, decided to make a movie in Memphis. “My film work was out in California. I had zero Memphis connections,” she says.

2016 Film Prize winner McGhee Monteith recommended Andrew Trent Fleming, who co-directed and shot “Traveling Soldier,” while Cox took the lead role. “I would never have thought I would make an emotionally driven World War II movie, but then I just got really attached it to,” Fleming says. “It’s Lauren’s baby, but it means a lot to me. My grandad and grandma were so similar to these characters. I tried to help her achieve her vision, but I put my own touches in there, too.”

This year’s Memphis Film Prize festival takes place on August 3rd-4th at Studio on the Square. “The real winner is Memphis,” says Merrill. “Certainly someone is going to walk away with $10,000. But we get to see all these great films. Every year, they’re upping the ante.”

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Memphis Film Prize Launch Party Tonight

Since its inception in 2012, the Louisiana Film Prize has become a sought-after accolade for up-and-coming directors, and its generous purse is one reason why. Now director Gregory Kellnberg has teamed up with Fuel Film’s David Merrill to bring a version of the short film competition to the Bluff City. 

“We are incredibly excited to bring the Film Prize to one of my favorite cities in the country,” says Gregory Kallenberg,founder and Executive Director of the Film Prize Foundation. “Memphis has an amazing vibe and has a rich history inindependent filmmaking. We can’t wait to see the amazing work that will come out of the Memphis FIlm Prize.”

Tonight, a party at Local on the Square, Memphis Film Prize will celebrate the inaugural call for entries announcement. Filmmakers have until June 14 to submit a rough cut of their short film, which will vie on  for a $10,000 prize and a chance to go to Shreveport for the Louisiana Film Prize competition, which carries a grand prize of $50,000. The Memphis competition will be held on August 12-14, in conjunction with the On Location: Memphis film festival.

“The Memphis Film Prize presents a great opportunity for filmmakers and for the city of Memphis, to foster emerging talent and incentivize filmmaking while continuing to expand a network of film industry connections started by the Louisiana Film Prize.” says David Merrill of FuelFilm.

The kickoff party is tonight at Local on the Square at 6 PM.