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Indie Memphis Youth Fest Spotlights New Generation of Filmmakers

From its inception 25 years ago as a forum for Memphis filmmakers to show their work, Indie Memphis has had artist development as a big part of its mission. The ultimate expression of that mandate is the Youth Film Fest. Now in its seventh year, the Youth Film Fest returns in-person this Saturday, August 27th, after two years of meeting virtually. 

The one-day fest will be held Downtown at the Orpheum Theatre’s Halloran Centre. This year’s keynote speaker will be Craig Brewer, director of Hustle & Flow and Coming 2 America. Brewer is a Memphis filmmaking pioneer who wrote, directed, and produced his first movie The Poor & Hungry here in 2000. He will be speaking on the subject of storytelling and the importance of understanding not only what techniques will move the audience, but also why and how each story is being told. 

During the spring and summer, the Indie Memphis CrewUp program brings together groups of students between grades 7 and 12 to create a short film under the tutelage of a professional to screen at the Youth Film Fest. This year’s batch of nine films, all produced with budgets of $500, will screen at 12:15 p.m. A second batch of 11 short films created by Mid-South students will screen at 5 p.m. The audience will vote for their favorite film, which will win a $300 prize. The winner of the jury prize will receive $500. 

A new production grant program modeled on the highly successful IndieGrants awards $5,000 to one youth filmmaker for a short-film proposal. The first Youth Grant winner in 2019 was Janay Kelley. Her film “The River” will make its world premiere at 2 p.m., accompanied by an informational session about the requirements of the grant program. 

Workshops will be held throughout the afternoon, including makeup with Mandie J, production design and title graphics with Mica Jordan, stunt choreography with Jyo “Six” Carolino, directing actors with Princeton James, cinematography with Jason Thibodeaux, and the delightfully titled “Producing & Other Weird Jobs” with Sharrika Evans. 

The day will end with a group dinner and trivia contest at 6:45 p.m., and the awards show at 7:30 p.m. 

Registration begins at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday, August 27th. Passes, which can be either in-person or, for those unable to attend, virtual, are available at the Indie Memphis website. 

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Indie Memphis Youth Fest Awards Budding Filmmakers

Thirty-seven student made films screened in person and online last weekend during the sixth annual Indie Memphis Youth Film Fest, September 18th-19th.

“We have always been fortunate to have great, up-and-coming filmmakers in our Youth Film Fest. But this year felt particularly special because of the obvious challenges that were presented to these students over the last year plus,’ said Indie Memphis’ Director of Artist Development and Youth Film Joseph Carr at the virtual awards ceremony on Sunday. “It’s already hard enough to make a good film, but for these filmmakers to overcome everything that the world has thrown at them and remain committed to their projects is so deeply inspiring. The future of Memphis filmmaking, and beyond, is in great hands.”

The jury for this year’s festival was Berlin-based filmmaker Jon-Carlos Evans, Executive Director of the Seattle-based National Film Festival for Talented Youth Dan Hudson, and Kiwi Lanier of the Sidewalk Film Center + Cinema in Birmingham, Alabama. They awarded the Grand Prize to Paul Coffield for “The Lantern Bearer.” The award comes with a $500 cash prize. Coffield also shared the Crew Up Mentorship Audience Award with Asher Crouch, Nyx Love, and mentor Joshua Cannon for the film “Navesmire.”

“Touch”

Another dual winner was a favorite of both audience and professionals. “Touch” by director Georgia Carls took home both the $300 Memphis Youth Audience Award and a Special Jury Award worth $250.

“Attention Deficit”

The Jury Award for the Crew Up category, which applies to films created under the Youth Fest’s mentorship program, went to Rachel Ellis, Sam McElroy, Jacobian Taylor, and mentor Robert Bear for “Attention Deficit.”

Graham Whitworth

Graham Whitworth’s proposed project “Burning Bridges” was awarded a $5,000 package from VIA Productions, which includes services and equipment from the Memphis-based film and television production house which will be used to complete the director’s short film.

“The Pen Pal”

Anaya Murray’s film “The Pen Pal” earned her the Rising Filmmaker Award. Ethan Torres’s “Crumbling Down” won the Indie Youth Spirit Award, and the National Youth Audience Award, which gave $300 to a non-Memphis filmmaker, was awarded to “Home” by Michelle Saguinsin.

Janay Kelley, a Youth Fest alum who won the 2018 Grand Jury Prize and the 2019 Production Package, said the festival had changed the way she sees herself.

“Receiving the production package award impacted how I saw myself as a creator and as a filmmaker. One thing that I would like to say to you all [youth filmmakers] is that every single last one of you is a filmmaker now. You don’t have to wait until you get a big expensive camera — many of you have shot on your phones — you are a filmmaker now.

“Regardless if you’ve won an award or know all the filmmaking jargon, you will become an even better filmmaker in the future. As you build towards your artistic future make sure that you are centering and nurturing yourself as a person. When I first started making my films I was trying to make things that I thought other people wanted to see and not the films that I wanted to make. So, make sure that every time you are making art, that you are essentially doing it for yourself and that you are putting out the stories that you want to put out. These are the things that you are giving the world so treat them as a gift because you all are a gift.”

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Indie Memphis Youth Fest Showcases the Future of Film in the Bluff City

Courtesy Indie Memphis

A filmmaking workshop at Indie Memphis Youth Film Fest 2018

Indie Memphis’ Youth Film Fest has been the film organization’s most successful new recent addition. It has taken the festival’s mission of developing Memphis talent to its logical conclusion: Start early, and give the kids tools to succeed.

This year’s festival takes place this Saturday, September 7th, at the Orpheum Theater’s Halloran Center. Youth festers will be greeted by keynote speaker Caitlin McGee. The actress, who has appeared in Halt and Catch Fire and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, is the star of the NBC series Bluff City Law, currently filming in Memphis, which will premiere September 23rd.
Courtesy NBCUniversal

Caitlin McGee, star of Bluff City Law

The day of workshops will include a seminar on music videos by Unapologetic Records’ IMAKEMADBEATS, a screen-acting workshop by Rosalyn R. Ross (who recently landed her own role in Bluff City Law), Matteo Servante and Ryan Earl Parker speaking on the synergy between director and cinematographer, and Mica Jordan on production design. Jamey Hatley, Indie Memphis’ first Black Filmmaker Screenwriting Fellow, will teach writing for the screen.

Screenings begin in the afternoon with a program from the CrewUp Mentorship program. Teams of three students from grades 7-12, paired with an adult filmmaker-mentor, created these nine films on offer. A lineup of short films from students outside the Memphis area bows at 2:30 p.m. Eleven films from Memphis filmmakers screening out of juried competition roll at 3:45 p.m., with admission on a pay-what-you-can basis. Finally, at 6:15 p.m., the competition screening will pit 19 young filmmakers from Germantown, Whitehaven, Hutchison, Arlington, Millington, White Station, St. Benedict, Ridgeway, and the homeschooled. The winner will receive $500 cash and a $5,000 production package from Via Productions.
Justin Fox Burks

IMAKEMADBEATS will head a workshop on music videos at the 2019 Indie Memphis Youth Film Fest

The festival is free for kids, but the competition screening is $10 for the general audience. You can find more information and purchase your tickets at the Indie Memphis website.

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Music Video Monday: Epps

This Music Video Monday, we have a winner!

Last weekend, the second annual Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival took over the Orpheum Theatre’s Halloran Centre. 7th to 12th grade students from all over the Memphis area came together for workshops on everything from writing to acting to audio recording to editing. Director Tom Shadyac, who recently announced his new film Brian Banks will be shot in Memphis, gave the keynote address and Craig Brewer, who is currently writing and directing for the smash Fox TV series Empire, hosted the awards ceremony.

Among the award winners from the student film competition was MVM alumnae Galen Hicks, Sam King, and Michael Price for trillcloud’s “No Diamonds”. The Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award went to director Vivian Gray’s music video for “Steps” by Epps. The video features compelling black and white cinematography and a love of creepy layering effects. It’s got a big cast and crew, so be sure to stay to the end for the full credits, where you will see the names of the next generation of Memphis filmmakers.

Music Video Monday: Epps

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

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Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival Cultivates Next Crop Of Memphis Filmmakers

While the main festival doesn’t start until November 1, Indie Memphis is busy helping the next generation of Bluff City filmmakers get off the ground.

12-year-old Chris Stromopolos (left) starring in Raiders of the Lost Ark: The Adaptation

The Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival takes place this Saturday at the Orpheum Theatre’s Halloran Centre. Indie Memphis Executive Director Ryan Watt says the festival has had a youth block for some time, but it was time to spin it off into its own event. “This is the first step towards what we hope will be a bigger and more active youth program.”

The response to the new program has been overwhelming. “I was blown away by how many submissions we got. This thing is going to be really cool. We’re going to be showing 27 short films at the Halloran Centre all day long. And it’s 100% free for K-12.”

The program will begin at noon on Saturday with a free lunch for attendees. In addition to the youth film competition, there will be a series of classes by Memphis area filmmakers. “You’ll hear from Craig Brewer on storytelling, Morgan Jon Fox on acting, and Jordan Danelz on cinematography,” among others, says Watt.
The festival will provide additional inspiration with the story of real-life kids who lived their filmmaking dreams. Tonight, the documentary Raiders! The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made will screen at Studio on the Square. It tells the story of Chris Strompolos and Eric Zala, two kids from Ocean Springs, Mississippi who decided to remake Stephen Spielberg and George Lucas’ classic Raiders of the Lost Ark, shot for shot, using only a VHS camera and whatever other materials they could get their hands on. Remarkably, after six years of work, they succeeded—almost. (How did they pull of the scenes in the submarine? They used an ACTUAL submarine!) The documentary’s frame is the tale of how the childhood friends came back together as adults to film the only scene they couldn’t get right the first time, the epic “Flying Wing” fight.

A screening of Raiders of the Lost Ark: An Adaptation will be the climax of the Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival

Then, on Saturday night, the Youth Film Festival attendees will be treated to the actual product of Stromopolios, Zala, and their friends’ labors. Raiders of the Lost Ark: The Adaptation first premiered over a decade ago at the Oxford Film Festival, and it is a must-see for anyone who has ever wanted to make their own movies. It highlights both the determination and resourcefulness of the young cast and crew, and the enduring perfection of Lawrence Kasdan’s screenplay, which continues to work just fine even when the visuals don’t measure up to Spielberg’s vision. Before the screening, the winners of the festival competition will be announced. The grand prize is a full day’s production services from Via Productions worth $4,000, plus $500 cash and an automatic entry into the main Indie Memphis competition for the winning film. There will also be an audience award worth $500, and a $250 award for the movie that best represents Memphis.

For more information, and to buy tickets to the events, go to Indiememphis.com

Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival Cultivates Next Crop Of Memphis Filmmakers