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Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies

Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint pause for refreshment in North By Northwest.

We’ve got some good stuff on Memphis screens this week, if you’re looking for fare beyond the multiplex.

On Wednesday, January 29th, at Studio on the Square, Indie Memphis is getting warmed up for the new cinema with Pedro Almodóvar’s Pain and Glory. The 70-year-old Spanish filmmaker’s latest earned Antonio Banderas a Best Actor award when it debuted at Cannes. Banderas, who starred alongside the great but perpetually underutilized Penelope Cruz, is up for Best Actor at next weekend’s Academy Awards, and the film is in contention for Best International Feature. It’s also Spain’s biggest box office hit in a decade.

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies

On Thursday, January 30th, the annual Morris and Mollye Fogelman International Jewish Film Festival kicks off with a gala screening at the Malco Paradiso. The Keeper tells the true story of Bert Trautmann, a German soldier during World War II who relocated to the UK after spending time in a POW camp. Trautmann became the goalie for Manchester United and led the storied football team to victory in the 1956 FA Cup. His love for a Jewish woman causes controversy and calls into question everyone’s assumptions. The screening starts at 7 p.m., and you can find more details about the month-long festival at the JCC Memphis website.

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies (2)

Back at Studio on the Square on Thursday night, one of the best films from a GOAT. Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest re-teamed him with Cary Grant, whom he first worked with in 1941’s Suspicion. Grant plays Roger Thornhill, a caddish ad executive who inadvertently gets caught up in Cold War spy-jinx while he romances possible secret agent Eva Marie Saint. The blockbuster hit of 1959 has inspired countless imitators through the decades and remains the commercial pinnacle of Hitch’s career. One of these days, I’ll get the opportunity to use my favorite line from the film: When a train station clerk notices Grant’s sunglasses and asks if there’s something wrong with his eyes, Grant responds, “Yes, they’re sensitive to questions.” The film screens at 7 and 9:45 p.m. Here’s the original trailer:

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies (3)

See you at the movies! 

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See Indie Memphis Winners Tonight at Crosstown

A still from Indie Memphis 2019 Best Narrative Short winner ‘I’m The One Who’s Singing’

Still glowing from the success of the 2019 festival, Indie Memphis is giving you a chance to see the short films the jury chose as the best of the fest.

Tonight at Crosstown Arts’ 430 Cleveland gallery is a program of award winners from all over the country. First up is Best Narrative Short winner, “I’m The One Who’s Singing” by Blair Seab McClendon, in which a woman must break the news of a death in the family to her incarcerated brother. Next is the horror/sci fi award, Best After Dark Short, “We Die Alone” by Marc Cartwright. Jas Marie’s seven-minute experimental short “Mirrors” won the Departures category.

Mirrors from NuJas Productions on Vimeo.

See Indie Memphis Winners Tonight at Crosstown

The animation prize went to “Into The Flame,” an occult-themed fantasia by director Sean McClintock.

On the documentary side, grand prize winner Atieno Nyar Kasagam’s “Sidelot” connects land use issues in Detroit, Kenya, and Alabama. The Hometowner documentary award went to “Floating Pilgrims” by director and University of Memphis professor David Goodman.

And finally, the Hometowner Narrative Short prize went to “Soul Man” by Kyle Taubken, featuring an instant classic performance from actor Curtis C. Jackson.

See Indie Memphis Winners Tonight at Crosstown (2)

The show starts at Crosstown Arts’ 430 Cleveland gallery at 7:00 p.m. 

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Music Video Monday: Indie Memphis Winners

Talibah Safiya

Have all you cinephiles recovered from Indie Memphis yet? I’m done fighting that post-fest funk, and now it’s time to take stock. Today on Music Video Monday, we’re presenting the winners of the two video awards. 

An incredible 44 videos screened to a party atmosphere at Black Lodge last Sunday night. The winner of the Sounds Music Video Award, which covers American and international entries, was DarriusTheGreatest & Ttropicana’s dancehall-inflected “Got It, Got It.” In true Indie Memphis tradition, the it’s a low-budget scrapper the prevailed over videos made with lots more resources.

Music Video Monday: Indie Memphis Winners (2)

The Hometowner Music Video award went to Talibah Safiya’s “Healing Creek,” directed by Memphis wunderkind Kevin Brooks. Shot Super-8 style, this simple, beautiful visual concentrates on bringing out Safiya’s considerable natural charisma.

Music Video Monday: Indie Memphis Winners

I’ll have more on this year’s Indie Memphis tomorrow. If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com. 

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Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway

Shannon Walton in Sweet Knives video for ‘I Don’t Wanna Die’

You’re going to be hard pressed to see everything great on Indie Memphis Sunday, so some triage is in order. We’re here to help.

First thing in the morning is the Hometowner Rising Filmmaker Shorts bloc (11:00 a.m., Ballet Memphis), where you can see the latest in new Memphis talent, including “Ritual” by Juliet Mace and Maddie Dean, which features perhaps the most brutal audition process ever.

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway

The retrospective of producer/director Sara Driver’s work continues with her new documentary Boom For Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Micheal Basquiat (1:30 p.m., Studio on the Square). Driver was there in the early 80s when Basquiat was a rising star in the New York art scene, and she’s produced this look at the kid on his way to becoming a legend.

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway (2)

The companion piece to Driver’s latest is Downtown 81 (4:00 p.m., Hattiloo Theatre). Edo Bertoglio’s documentary gives a real-time look at the art and music scene built from the ashes of 70s New York that would go on to conquer the world. Look for a cameo from Memphis punk legend Tav Falco.

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway (4)

You can see another Memphis legend in action in William Friedkin’s 1994 Blue Chips (4:00 p.m., Studio on the Square). Penny Hardaway, then a star recruit for the Memphis Tigers, appears as a star recruit for volatile college basketball coach Pete Bell, played by Nick Nolte. It’s the current University of Memphis Tigers basketball coach’s only big screen appearance to date, until someone makes a documentary about this hometown hero’s eventful life.

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway (5)

The Ballet Memphis venue hosts two selections of Memphis filmmakers screening out of the competition at 1:50 and 7:00 p.m., continuing the unprecedentedly awesome run of Hometowner shorts this year. There are a lot of gems to be found here, such as Clint Till’s nursing home comedy “Hangry” and Garrett Atkinson and Dalton Sides’ “Interview With A Dead Man.” To give you a taste of the good stuff, here’s Munirah Safiyah Jones’ instant classic viral hit “Fuckboy Defense 101.”

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway (3)

At 9:00 p.m., the festivities move over to Black Lodge in Crosstown for the Music Video Party. 44 music videos from all over the world will be featured on the Lodge’s three screens, including works by Memphis groups KadyRoxz, A Weirdo From Memphis, Al Kapone, Nick Black, Uriah Mitchell, Louise Page, Joe Restivo, Jana Jana, Javi, NOTS, Mark Edgar Stuart, Jeff Hulett, Stephen Chopek, and Impala. Director and editor Laura Jean Hocking has the most videos in the festival this year, with works for John Kilzer, Bruce Newman, and this one for Sweet Knives.

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway (6)

If experimental horror and sci fi is more your speed, check out the Hometowner After Dark Shorts (9:30 p.m., Playhouse on the Square), which features Isaac M. Erickson’s paranoid thriller “Home Video 1997.”

Indie Memphis Day 5: High Art, Music Videos, and Penny Hardaway (7)

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Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On

Bakosó: AfroBeats of Cuba

On Saturday at Indie Memphis 2019, the focus turns outwards. The only Hometowner feature is the essential Memphis ’69 (2:00 p.m., Ballet Memphis) which I wrote about in this week’s cover story. (Although, if Indie Memphis were around in 1989, Jim Jarmusch’s Mystery Train (6:30 p.m., Playhouse On The Square) would technically qualify for the Hometowner competition.)

Chyna Robinson’s No Ordinary Love has two screenings on Saturday — 10:30 a.m. at Hattiloo and 7:00 p.m. at Studio on the Square. I interviewed her for the cover story, and here’s a look at the film’s trailer:

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On

If you’re in the mood for some cartoons on Saturday morning (which I always am), trek down to Theaterworks for the Departures: Animated Shorts bloc, which includes Riley Thompson’s “When Planets Mate.”

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (5)

After a Cat People screening at 11:00 a.m., the Sara Driver retrospective begins in earnest at 1:15 with her rarely seen 1986 feature Sleepwalk.

Sleepwalk

I have not seen Portrait of a Lady On Fire (3:30 p.m., Playhouse on the Square), but the name is amazing, and it certainly gives good trailer.

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (6)

This is the second year Indie Memphis has given out an award for lifetime achievement in cinematography. This year’s recipient is Sean Price Williams, and you can see him in action with One Man Dies A Million Times (3:50 p.m., Studio on the Square).

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (7)

Music documentaries are always an Indie Memphis highlight. Bakosó: Afro Beats of Cuba by director Eli Jacobs-Fantauzzi chronicles the fascinating and vibrant musical culture of our neighbor to the south.

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (2)

Flint, Michigan has been in the news for mostly bad reasons in the past few years —the community still doesn’t have potable water! Directors Roni Moore and James Blagden went to Flint to find the humanity among the downtrodden. In Midnight In Paris, they go to the prom with the town’s teenagers. 

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (8)

Speaking of teenagers, The World Is Full Of Secrets (9:30 p.m., Studio on the Square) is director Graham Swon’s charming tale of sleepover ghost stories and real life anxiety.

TRAILER: OFICIAL – The World is Full of Secrets from Novos Cinemas on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (3)

Finally, a truly spooky midnight movie. The story of Kuroneko (11:40, Studio on the Square) comes from a Japanese folk tale of two women who were murdered by marauders during a civil war and return as ghosts who haunt a bamboo forest, seeking revenge. It’s another spooky pic by Sara Driver that will haunt your dreams on Saturday night.

Indie Memphis Day 4: The Beat Goes On (4)

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Indie Memphis Day 2: All Hallow’s Eve

Horror Noire

Indie Memphis hasn’t had a Halloween night since 2014, but this year the calendar aligned to supply the festival with a fright night.

This being a Very Serious Film Festival (TM), it’s not all ghouls and goblins. The evening starts out with a timely and enlightening documentary, Horror Noire (4:30 p.m, Hattiloo Theatre).

It’s an old cliche that, if you see a black person in a horror film, they’re going to the first to die. This production by the Shudder streaming network, which specializes in horror, goes beyond just dissecting that particular trope. Director Xavier Burgin starts with Birth of a Nation.

The seminal 1915 film, famous for its technical innovations, pre-dated the horror genre by about 16 years (if you accept Dracula as the first “true” horror film, which is a huge debate we don’t have the bandwidth to pursue here) and was considered a historical epic by its creators.

But to the black people who watched the “heroic” Klansmen lynching their ancestors, it certainly qualified as horror. African Americans got their first horror hero with Duane Jones’ timeless performance in 1968’s Night Of The Living Dead, which Horror Noire uses as a jumping-off point to explore the evolving relationship between the genre and race. Interviewees include veteran horror and sci-fi actor Kieth David and the current best horror director in the business, Jordan Peele.

The centerpiece of Indie Memphis’ spooky night is Blacula, (6:30 p.m., Playhouse on the Square) the 1972 classic which I wrote about in this week’s Memphis Flyer cover story. Check out this awesome trailer for a little taste of the ebony bloodsucker.

Indie Memphis Day 2: All Hallow’s Eve

Meanwhile, back at the Hattiloo, the Narrative Feature competition kicks off with Di Lo Mio at 7:00 p.m. Here’s director Diana Peralta discussing the origin of the film, which explores the experience of Dominican immigrants, at her Brooklyn Academy of Music Cinema Fest appearance.

Indie Memphis Day 2: All Hallow’s Eve (2)

Happy Halloween, and stay tuned to the Memphis Flyer for more daily updates from Indie Memphis. 

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Inside The Furry World of Brett Hanover’s Radical Documentary Rukus

Morgan Jon Fox and Alanna Stewart in Rukus

[I first wrote about Brett Hanover’s radical documentary Rukus for last year’s Indie Memphis cover story. The film went on to win Best Hometowner Feature at the festival. Now, to celebrate its online release, the film gets an encore Indie Memphis screening at Studio on the Square on Wednesday, October 16th at 7 p.m.

Hanover’s full interview for the cover story last year was brilliant, so I have expanded my original story with new quotes about this remarkable film and the decade-long journey of self-discovery that produced it.]

Brett Hanover’s first documentary short “Above God” premiered at Indie Memphis 2006. The subject of “Above God” was Gene Ray, who became one of the first internet celebrities when his strange website filled with borderline nonsensical ramblings about a “Time Cube” went viral. “I was interested in internet cultures,” says Hanover, who was 16 years old when he made the film. “I was interested in how this one guy’s words got spread and interpreted by so many people.”

Another internet subculture that fascinated Hanover was that of furries, a small group devoted to dressing up in elaborate costumes that transformed them into anthropomorphic animals. Back then, furries were picked out for ridicule as weirdos with an incomprehensible sexual fetish. But Hanover saw something deeper in their endless Livejournal posts and secretive conventions.“As it evolved, and as it opened up to the internet, it became less focused on anthropomorphic comic books and more focused on having your own anthropomorphic avatar that people were playing online or with costumes. Then it became the site of identity play. Without being directly connected with mainstream LBGTQ culture, it got people thinking about their identities in the same way, almost in parallel. Now there’s a ton of crossover there. It’s interesting, because it used different kind of artwork, different ways of representing the body, different identity. It got to a similar place.

“The characters in furrydom are similar to other ways of using masks or clown personae throughout history. This is in the in-between space. Furries aren’t usually dressing up purely as a character, it’s a character based on you. You’re not dressing up as a Disney character. There’s an element of, ‘it’s me, but it’s not me.’ There’s also an element that is very tactile, but you’re playing a cartoon. It’s somewhere between performance and puppetry, between being the subject and being the object. It’s right on that boundary that a lot of theater traditions dance on.”

A mutual friend introduced him to a person in the online furry community who called himself Rukus. “Initially, when I first met him, I had a lurid fascination with what he was writing, because it was really intense, personal and raw. I was totally enamored of that. It was a way for me, someone who — as a teenager — had a lot of hangups around things that were sexual, a way to look at furry and exploring it vicariously through his life as a documentary filmmaker at age 17. When I say I am a documentary filmmaker, what does that mean at that point? It means a way to relate to somebody at a distance. I also think I had a crush on him.”

But Hanover soon discovered that Rukus was different things to different people. Little of his life story checked out, and he maintained a number of conflicting online personae.“It became an interesting mystery, to figure out what was real and what was embellished…If he’s not telling the truth about something, that means he’s not telling the truth about it for a reason. It says something about him.”

Director Brett Hanover

Hanover and Rukus became online friends, and even met in person after a Memphis furry convention. But eventually they drifted apart, and in 2008, Hanover got word that Rukus had committed suicide. “He was a survivor of trauma, he had been struggling with mental health issues his whole life,” Hanover says. “I became very obsessed with finding every trace of him online.”

In 2008, Hanover, with the help of his collaborators Alanna Stewart and Katherine Dohan, set out to make a documentary about Rukus and the online world where he had found connection. But Rukus could not be a conventional film. “The more I read through all his things, the more I wanted to tell the story from my perspective, and have it be very clear that this is a partial view of Rukus. That view is very much skewed, but it at least shows the audience the way it’s skewed…If I’m going to make a documentary about someone else that’s really personal, I need to do the same thing with myself. I had not done that, put myself into my other films.”

Hanover continued to work on Rukus for a decade, a time in which he went to college and became a teacher of film and media. “I never gave up. I despaired and agonized plenty. I feel like there’s ways in which the film took too long, just by virtue of being a perfectionist, and moving across the country for a new job, and stuff like that. But there’s also ways in which it needed to take that much time…Having a few years distance on things really helped. There was an outline in the beginning, but it was being written as it went along. Early on, I did an interview with Rukus’ boyfriend, and wrote and shot some scenes based on that. Some of them didn’t work out that well, so a few years later I interviewed Rukus’ boyfriend again and told him what had gone wrong with those scenes, and asked him to reflect on that. Then I wrote more scenes based on that. It became a feedback process with the subjects.”

Hanover and Stewart co-wrote and acted in many of the staged sequences, some of which reflected the ups and downs of their own relationship “During the time we were shooting, part of the time we were in a relationship, and part of the time we weren’t in a relationship any more, but we were still friends and collaborators. It was a lot of stuff like, we just worked through something in our relationship, and now we’re going to write a scene about it, and play out the scene, and now we realize that something else is wrong with the scene, and that something is also wrong in real life. It turned into a psychodrama for a couple of years.”

The finished film is a kaleidoscope of documentary and narrative, sincere and put-on, real and fake. “The reason it’s like that is that everyone who is in it has different personae, who are all sort of real depending on what media they’re using to communicate, or who their audience is. Rukus had all these different characters that he would use. I think now, there’s more of a sense of, here’s your real identity, and if you’re pretending to be something else online, that’s fake. Back then, it was understood that these different facets of you would be expressed through different identities.

“I think the closest you can get to capital-T Truth in a documentary is to show your perspective. Give people a sense of your own biases, of how the thing you’re watching is being framed. Making myself into a character is a way of doing that, as opposed to saying that this is the story of Rukus. Which it’s not. It’s the story of Rukus told by this kid who was still figuring out his own story.”

Rukus (Trailer) from Brett Hanover on Vimeo.

Inside The Furry World of Brett Hanover’s Radical Documentary Rukus

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Indie Memphis’ Black Independence Series Concludes With Daughters of the Dust and Moonlight

Mahershala Ali in Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight.

Indie Memphis’ Black Independence Series saved the best for last. The month-long mini-festival concludes this week with a pair of powerhouse pictures.

The first, screening on Wednesday, October 9th at Malco Ridgeway, is the classic Daughters of the Dust. In 1991, the film won the cinematography award at Sundance Film Festival, and director Julie Dash became the first African-American woman to have her film released wide in the United States. It is a generational portrait of the women of the Gullah culture on the island of Saint Helena in South Carolina, which has preserved pre-slavery West African influences for hundreds of years.

The youngest woman, Yellow Mary (Barbara O) brings her new boyfriend to meet the family, causing a rift between her and matriarch Nana Peazant (Cora Lee Day), who is dead set on staying on the island and preserving the culture. The film is a dense, nonlinear, cinematic masterpiece that Beyonce has cited as a major visual influence on her Lemonade music video album.

Indie Memphis’ Black Independence Series Concludes With Daughters of the Dust and Moonlight

Recently, I was talking to my wife about the necessity of compiling a Best Movies of the 2010s list in December. We both agreed that Moonlight would have to be somewhere near the top. Barry Jenkins’ 2016 Best Picture winner’s list of accolades is so long it has its own separate Wikipedia page. After my first viewing, I talked about that crossfade shot that drew gasps in the theater for weeks to anyone who would listen. If you’ve seen the movie, you know which one I’m talking about.

If you haven’t seen it, here’s your chance to catch up in a unique venue—outdoors on the banks of the Mississippi at the River Garden on Riverside Drive. The show will start at 7:00 p.m., and will be proceeded at 5:30 by a DJ set from Kid Maestro. The screening and concert are free, so you have no excuses to miss one of the great cinematic masterworks of the twenty-first century.

Indie Memphis’ Black Independence Series Concludes With Daughters of the Dust and Moonlight (2)

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Indie Memphis Black Independence Film Series Continues With My Brother’s Wedding

Everett Silas in My Brother’s Wedding

Charles Burnett has been called “America’s least-known great director.” From Vicksburg, Mississippi by way of Los Angeles’ storied Watts neighborhood, Burnett’s debut film Killer of Sheep is considered a classic of the 1970s, winning Sundance in 1980 while it was still called the USA Film Festival.

His 1982 film My Brother’s Wedding was long considered a lost treasure. Burnett describes it as a “tragic comedy” of a man named Pierce Mundy (Everett Silas) who is torn between his troubled best friend and his brother, who is planning to marry a woman from a respectable family.

“The story focuses on a young man who hasn’t made much of his life as of yet, and at a crucial point in his life, he is unable to make the proper decision, a sober decision, a moral decision,” said Burnett about the film. “This is a consequence of his not having developed beyond the embryonic stage, socially. He has a distinct romantic notion about life in the ghetto and yet, in spite of his naive sensitivity, he is given the task of being his brother’s keeper; he feels rather than sees, and as a consequence his capacity for judging things off in the distance is limited.”

Burnett submitted a rough cut of My Brother’s Wedding to his producers, who entered it into the New York Film Festival over his objections that it was not yet done. After a lackluster festival reception, it was shelved for 25 years, until Burnett made a deal with Milestone Films to restore the film and let him finish the edit.

My Brother’s Wedding plays tonight at 7 p.m. at Studio on the Square. You can purchase tickets on the Indie Memphis website.

Indie Memphis Black Independence Film Series Continues With My Brother’s Wedding

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Indie Memphis’ Black Independence Film Series Begins Tonight

Robert Litsol looks for work in 1960s Paris in Med Hondo’s Soleil O

In September and October, Indie Memphis is devoting its weekly programming to the work of black artists. It ain’t easy making a low-budget movie essentially by yourself. It’s even harder if you’re black, and it’s 1965.

The programming kicks off tonight with Indie Memphis’ most enduring non-festival program, Microcinema. The program of short films by black women filmmakers from the 1980s and 1990s is guaranteed to feature movies you’ve never seen before, such as “Illusions.”

Before director Julie Dash became the first African American woman director to get theatrical distribution with 1985’s Daughters of the Dust, she made “Illusions.” That films is a 30-minute short about Ester Jeeter, a black woman in 1942 Hollywood who dubs the singing voice for a less-talented, white movie star. Also on the bill is Ngozi Onwurah’s “Coffee Colored Children,” about mixed-race families facing prejudice in America. The show is a Crosstown Theater, and tickets are free, but RSVP is requested.

Ngozi Onwurah’s ‘Coffee Colored Children’

On Wednesday, Malco Ridgeway  will screen a world cinema classic, Soleil O. Director Med Hondo, who just passed away last spring, spent four years crafting this $30,000 film about the plight of African immigrants from Mauritania, the former French colony in Africa. He self-financed most of the picture by translating and dubbing American films into French, and released it to great acclaim at Cannes in 1970. The film will be introduced by Rhodes College professor Dr. Abou Bakar Memah, who will help contextualize the world of post-colonial 1960s France where Hondo worked. You can get tickets at the Indie Memphis website.

Indie Memphis’ Black Independence Film Series Begins Tonight (2)