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Music Video Monday: “Strawberry Mansion” by Dan Deacon

Filmmaker Kentucker Audley got his start in Memphis at the Digital Media Co-Op, and was a two-time winner at Indie Memphis. He now resides in New York, where he has made two features with director and producer Albert Birney. In 2021, I interviewed Audley when Strawberry Mansion opened the first Sundance satellite screening in Memphis. Now, it is open in select theaters across the country — sadly, not in Memphis, but it is at the Belcourt Theater in Nashville — and will debut February 25th on VOD platforms. To give you the flavor of the film’s beautiful, magical realist vibes, here’s the trailer.

Electronic music legend Dan Deacon created the appropriately trippy score for Strawberry Mansion, and has released the main theme as a single. Birney and Audley directed this amazing video, which incorporates some images from the film along with some new creatures and outstanding glitch work. Check it out!

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

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Indie Memphis and U of M Present The Debuts: Three of the Best First Films of the Last 15 Years

Film festivals are where most filmmakers get their start. Indeed, finding fresh new voices and seeing radical new visions in a too-often bland and homogeneous filmscape is a big draw for festivals like Indie Memphis. Now, the fest is teaming up with the University of Memphis to bring three first films from directors who went on to do big things. 

The Debuts screenings, May 5-6 at the Malco Summer Drive-In, are curated by University of Memphis Department of Communication and Film professor Marty Lang. The first film in the series (May 5th) is one of the most consequential first films of the 21st century. Barry Jenkins’ Medicine for Melancholy screened at Indie Memphis in 2008. Set in the booming San Francisco of the Aughts, the film stars Wyatt Cenac, who went on The Daily Show fame, and Tracey Higgins, who would later appear in The Twilight Saga, as two young lovers who try to come to terms with their place in the racial and economic hierarchy of their allegedly free and egalitarian city. Jenkins went on to win Best Picture in 2016 for Moonlight; his new historical fantasy project, The Underground Railroad, drops on Amazon Prime on May 14th. The screening will be followed by a discussion led by members of the Memphis Black arts organization The Collective. 

Then, on May 6th, a double feature kicks off with the debut film by Jeff Nichols. The Little Rock, Arkansas native is the brother of Lucero’s frontman Ben Nichols. His first film was Shotgun Stories, starring Michael Shannon. The 2007 film is the story of a feud between two sets of Arkansan half-brothers who find themselves in radically different circumstances, despite their blood connection. After the screening, Nichols will speak with Lang about the making of the film, and his subsequent career, which includes the Matthew McConaughey drama Mud and Loving, the story of the Virginia couple whose relationship led to the Supreme Court legalizing interracial marriage. 

The second film on May 6th is Sun Don’t Shine by Amy Seimetz. The 2012 film stars Memphis filmmaker and NoBudge founder Kentucker Audley and Kate Lyn Sheil (who later went on to roles in House of Cards and High Maintenance) as a couple on a tense road trip along the Florida Gulf Coast. Seimetz went on to a prodigious acting career, as well as leading the TV series adaptation of Steven Soderbergh’s The Girlfriend Experience and directing one of 2020’s most paranoid films, She Dies Tomorrow. Lang will also interview Seimetz about beginning her career with Sun Don’t Shine

Tickets to the screenings are available on the Indie Memphis website.

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Sundance in Memphis: Kentucker Audley Returns with Strawberry Mansion

It’s been 30 years since the U.S. Film Festival in Park City, Utah, changed its name to the Sundance Film Festival. It has since become America’s most prestigious festival, launching the careers of people such as Steven Soderbergh and Paul Thomas Anderson. In 2005, Memphis went to Sundance, when Craig Brewer’s Hustle & Flow won the Audience Award, and Ira Sachs’ Forty Shades of Blue took home the Grand Jury Prize. This weekend, Sundance will come to Memphis for the first time.

The pandemic has forced film festivals to adapt to a world where traveling long distances and congregating indoors with strangers is a bad idea. Last fall, the Indie Memphis Film Festival held a hybrid online and in-person festival that featured socially distanced screenings at the Malco Summer Drive-In. Sundance adopted a similar hybrid model, but on a much larger scale, by partnering with regional film festivals all over the country. Sundance and Indie Memphis will host nightly screenings at the drive-in from Thursday, January 28th, to Tuesday, February 2nd.

Runnin’ down a dream — in Strawberry Mansion, director Kentucker Audley plays a dream auditor on a fantastical journey of discovery.

Memphis’ opening night film comes from a hometown filmmaker. Kentucker Audley’s cinematic education began in the early 2000s at Memphis’ Digital Media Co-Op. “Walking into that place out of the blue, knowing nothing about movies or anybody involved in moviemaking, changed my life very simply and very profoundly,” says Audley. “For the next six years, I was there every day. It was just a really vital, exciting place to be. It opened my eyes to so many different things about moviemaking — and culturally. It was just sort of a worldview that I came into. Most of that was based around Morgan Jon Fox, who was probably my most profound influence coming of age in Memphis.”

After winning a string of awards at Indie Memphis for films such as the autobiographical Open Five, Audley’s brutally honest, no-frills filmmaking gained recognition as part of the mumblecore movement, alongside actors and directors such as Greta Gerwig and Josephine Decker. His film Open Five 2, which won Best Hometowner Feature at Indie Memphis in 2012, was partially about his decision to move to Brooklyn. “I had to win back my ex-girlfriend, who is now my wife,” he says.

In Brooklyn, Audley started his own online indie film platform, NoBudge, and the ironically understated “MOVIES” merchandise brand, while pursuing an acting career. In 2017, he co-directed Sylvio — a comedy about an urbane gorilla who becomes a talk show host — with Albert Birney. They teamed up again for Strawberry Mansion. “Our story takes place in a world where the government records and taxes dreams,” Audley says.

Audley plays a dream auditor who is assigned to examine the dreams of an 80-year-old woman (Penny Fuller) who is behind on her dream taxes. “He goes into her dreams and sees that they’re wildly different than his dreams or anything he’s ever seen,” says Audley. “He stumbles upon this secret that unlocks the potential for him to become a higher form of himself.”

Audley says Birney first sent him a draft of the script almost 10 years ago. “I didn’t know him at the time, and the script was sort of beyond my understanding. I was in Memphis making these hyper-personal, naturalistic mumblecore movies, and this was very fantastical and surreal — playful and childlike in its innocence.”

They continued to talk about the idea as they made Sylvio. “We collaborated for many years trying to figure out how we can make this thing feel like both of us. It’s influenced by a lot of the movies from the 1980s we saw growing up.” Audley says they wanted Strawberry Mansion to feel like “finding a random VHS and popping it in. You don’t know what world you’re being invited into. And then, you’re not sure exactly what you watched, but it was exciting and strange.”

Premiering your film at Sundance is always a big deal, even if this year it comes without the snowy crush of celebrities in the ski mecca of Park City. All the films in the festival’s lineup will screen online, with different lineups available at all the satellite screens. Strawberry Mansion will debut simultaneously in Key West, New Orleans, and Tulsa, but it is Memphis that means the most to Audley. “When I heard Memphis was a part of the satellite screenings, I was completely thrilled. I just couldn’t imagine a better scenario for the first screening of this movie. It’s just sort of like coming full circle — especially screening at the Summer Drive-In! It’s like a dream to have my movie screen there. It takes years to make a movie, and most of it is agonizing and so stressful. Then when something like this happens, it makes it all worth it.”

Tickets for Strawberry Mansion and other Sundance films Jan. 28-Feb. 2 at the Malco Summer Drive-In are available at the Indie Memphis website.

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She Dies Tomorrow

Kate Lyn Sheil as Amy in She Dies Tomorrow

Wystan Hugh Auden won the Pulitzer Prize for his book-length poem “The Age of Anxiety” in 1948. To which I say, 1948? Whatever. Auden knew nothing of anxiety.

Fear? Certainly. Uncertainty? Probably. But when it comes to anxiety, the world of 1948 ain’t got nothing on 2020. There’s the slow creep of climate change, and the possibility of nuclear war never went away. Economic anxiety is real, even though it’s no excuse for racism. And if you’re a person of color, there’s the background hum of racism. Then there’s social media, which increasingly feels like a gun blasting weaponized anxiety directly into your face. We swim in anxiety to an extent Auden never thought possible.

That pervasive, contagious anxiety is what She Dies Tomorrow is all about. Amy (Kate Lyn Sheil) is a recovering alcoholic in the throes of a recent trauma, the details of which become clearer as the film progresses. Alone in her newly-purchased, almost empty house, she has an unexplained psychedelic experience and promptly falls off the wagon. She calls her friend Jane (Jane Adams) for comfort, and puts on her sparkliest dress. When Jane arrives, Amy tells her the secret: She has an overwhelming sense that death is coming for her when the next sun rises.

Jane, a biologist, has a skeptical view of Amy’s Thanatos ideation. Sure, we’re all going to die at some point. But tomorrow? Judging from the way her alcoholic friend is sucking down white wine, she’s in danger of a massive hangover tomorrow, but probably not death. But Amy is insistent. She’s going to die tomorrow, and her final wish is for her skin to be used to make a cool leather jacket.

Jane Adams comforts her doctor in She Dies Tomorrow

Jane chalks it up to the babbling of a drunk, tells Amy to get some rest, and plans on checking up on her tomorrow. Relapses happen. But when she gets home, she has a psychedelic experience of her own. Jane is seized with a sudden fear that she is going to die tomorrow. Not even a fear, really—more like a resigned certainty.

Jane was trying to avoid her sister-in-law Susan’s (Katie Aselton) birthday party, but alarmed by her new knowledge of imminent demise, she shows up in her pajamas. Soon, her brother Jason (Chris Messina) and party guests Brian (Tunde Adebimpe) and Tilly (Jennifer Kim) are also convinced they’re about to kick the bucket. What you would do if you knew you were going to die tomorrow is a perennial party game question, and the victims of Amy’s fearful contagion all have different ideas for terminal activities. A surprisingly large number of them involve doing some killing of their own.

Writer/producer/director Amy Seimetz is, like Greta Gerwig and Josephine Decker, a product of the indie underground. She was a producer on Barry Jenkins’ first film Medicine for Melancholy and acted in Gaby on the Roof in July and Tiny Furniture. She has a Memphis connection, having starred in Kentucker Audley’s Open Five as an out-of-towner being introduced to the joys of the Bluff City. Audley, whom she directed with Sheil in Sun Don’t Shine, stars in flashbacks as Amy’s boyfriend Craig, whose fate goes a long way toward explaining the origin of this plague of fear.

Or maybe not. She Dies Tomorrow may sound like a great grindhouse horror title, but this film is indie to its core. Seimetz is unconcerned with slashing, splattering, or answering questions, only conjuring a mood of pervasive anxiety. After all, if your questions about the future had answers, you wouldn’t have anxiety, would you? With some beautiful imagery, natural acting, and a dash of gallows humor, Seimetz channels the unquiet spirit of the age. Call it Panic Attack: The Motion Picture.

She Dies Tomorrow

She Dies Tomorrow is playing at the Malco Summer Quartet Drive-In.

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2017: The Year In Film

In America, it was the worst of times, but inside the multiplex, it was the best of times. Mega-blockbusters faltered, while an exceptional crop of small films excelled. There was never a week when there wasn’t something good playing on Memphis’ big screens. Here’s the Flyer‘s film awards for 2017.

Worst Picture: Transformers: The Last Knight
There was a crap-flood of big budget failures in 2017. The Mummy was horrifying in the worst way. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales sank the franchise. There was an Emoji Movie for some reason. What set Michael Bay’s nadir apart from the “competition” was its sneering contempt for the audience. I felt insulted by this movie. Everyone involved needs to take a step back and think about their lives.

Zeitgiestiest: Ingrid Goes West
In the first few years of the decade, our inner worlds were reshaped by social media. In 2017, social media reshaped the real world. No film better understood this crucial dynamic, and Aubrey Plaza’s ferociously precise performance as an Instagram stalker elevates it to true greatness.

Most Recursive: The Disaster Artist
James Franco’s passion project is a great film about an awful film. He is an actor dismissed as a lightweight doing a deep job directing a film about the worst director ever. He does a great job acting as a legendarily bad actor. We should be laughing at the whole thing, but somehow we end up crying at the end. It’s awesome.

Overlooked Gem: Blade Runner 2049
How does a long-awaited sequel to one of the greatest sci-fi films of all time, directed by one of the decade’s best directors, co-starring a legendary leading man and the hottest star of the day, end up falling through the cracks? Beats me, but if you like Dennis Villaneuve, Harrison Ford, Ryan Gosling, smart scripts, and incredible cinematography, and you didn’t see this film, rectify your error

Best Scene: Wonder Woman in No Man’s Land
The most successful superhero movie of the year was Patty Jenkins’ Wonder Woman. Midway through the picture, our hero leads a company of soldiers across a muddy World War I battlefield. Assailed on every side by machine gun fire and explosions, Wonder Woman presses on, never wavering, never doubting, showing the fighting men what real inner strength looks like. In this moment, Gal Gadot became a hero to millions of girls.

Best Memphis Movie: Good Grief
Melissa Anderson Sweazy and Laura Jean Hocking’s documentary Good Grief rose above a highly competitive, seven-film Hometowner slate at Indie Memphis to sweep the feature awards. It is a delicate, touching portrait of a summer camp for children who have lost loved ones due to tragedy. Full disclosure: I’m married to one of the directors. Fuller disclosure: I didn’t have a damn thing to do with the success of this film.

MVP: Adam Driver
Anyone with eyes could see former Girls co-star Adam Driver was a great actor, but he came into his own in 2017 with a trio of perfect performances. First, he lost 50 pounds and went on a seven-day silent prayer vigil to portray a Jesuit missionary in Martin Scorsese’s Silence. Then he was Clyde Logan, the one-armed Iraq vet who helps his brother and sister rob the Charlotte Motor Speedway in Stephen Soderberg’s Logan Lucky. Finally, he was Kylo Ren, the conflicted villain who made Star Wars: The Last Jedi the year’s best blockbuster.

Best Editing: Baby Driver
Edgar Wright’s heist picture is equal parts Bullitt and La La Land. In setting some of the most spectacular car chases ever filmed to a mixtape of sleeper pop hits from across the decades, Wright and editor Jonathan Amos created the greatest long-form music video since “Thriller.”

Best Screenplay: The Big Sick
Screenwriter Emily V. Gordon, and comedian Kumail Nanjiani turned the story of their unlikely (and almost tragic) courtship into the year’s best and most humane comedy.

Best Performance By A Nonhuman: Sylvio Bernardi, Sylvio
In this hotly contested category, 2014 winner Caesar, the ape commander of War For The Planet Of The Apes, was narrowly defeated by a simian upstart. Sylvio, co-directed by Memphian Kentucker Audley, is a low-key comedy about a mute monkey in sunglasses (played by co-director Albert Binny) who struggles to keep his dignity intact while breaking into the cutthroat world of cable access television. Sylvio speaks to every time you’ve felt like an awkward outsider.

Best Performance (Honorable Mention): Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks: The Return
David Lynch referred to his magnum opus as an 18-hour film, but Twin Peaks is a TV series to its core. The Return may be the crowning achievement of the current second golden age of television, but without MacLachlan’s beyond brilliant performance, Lynch’s take-no-prisoners surrealism would fly apart. I struggle to think of any precedent for MacLachlan’s achievement, playing at least four different versions of Special Agent Dale Cooper, whose identity gets fractured across dimensions as he tries to escape the clutches of the Black Lodge.

Best Performance: Francis McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Sometimes the best film performers are the ones who do the least, and no one does nothing better than Francis McDormand. As the mother of a murdered daughter seeking the justice in the court of public opinion she was denied in the court of law, McDormand stuffs her emotions way down inside, so a clenched jaw or raised eyebrow lands harder than the most impassioned speech.

Best Director: Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird
Lady Bird is destined to be a sentimental, coming-of-age classic for a generation of women. But it is not itself excessively sentimental. Greta Gerwig and star Saoirse Ronan are clear-eyed about their heroine’s failings and delusions as she navigates the treacherous psychic waters of high school senior year. Gerwig, known until now primarily as an actor, wrote and directed this remarkably insightful film that is as close to perfection as anything on the big screen in 2017.

Best Picture: Get Out — In prepping for my year-end list, I re-read my review for Get Out, which was positive but not gushing. Yet I have thought about this small, smart film from comedian Jordan Peele more than any other 2017 work. Peele took the conventions of horror films and shaped them into a deeply reasoned treatise on the insidious evil of white supremacy. Sometimes, being alive in 2017 seemed like living in The Sunken Place, and Peele’s film seems like a message from a saner time.

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Kentucker Audley Returns to Indie Memphis with Sylvio

“I had reached the end of my line in the style I had been working in, this kind of hyper-naturalism—movies like the Open Five series and Team Picture,” says director Kentucker Audley. “You know, all my talky Memphis movies. I decided to do something completely different.”

Audley, who currently resides in Brooklyn, decided to take a left turn into comedy with co-director Albert Birney. “You know how it happens…you meet on the film festival circuit and you try to cook up something together. You find people you like who you share a passion with. He had been developing this character on the social media platform Vine, and had gotten a really big following there. I was a big fan of the videos, and a big fan of Albert’s, so we decided to do it.”

Birney created the character Sylvio, a stoic gorilla trying to make it in a human world, in eight second videos on Vine. Audley wrote a feature film to expand the character’s depth. But while the project was still in production, Twitter bought Vine and unexpectedly shut it down. “Don’t get me started,” says Audley. “It was frustrating. To me, Twitter is pretty much the devil, but Vine is a form of creative expression that people were using creatively. There was a real community of people there. It felt sort of cruel to take that away from people who had been using it and developing an audience. I guess its a symbol for the way this whole American capitalist system is going.”

Since Sylvio hit the festival circuit earlier this year, it has drawn laugh and acclaim. “I thought we were going to make a movie for the fans. I thought it was an experimental, strange movie that not a lot of people could get into. But I’ve been very surprised that it has been recieved very well. Critically, we’re thrilled. The audience response is very touching. People are touched by the plight of the gorilla. That was our main goal. To try to communicate something about humanity, something we all feel, but using a stoic, silent gorilla to speak truth to humanity and the plight of trying to express yourself. I hope we accomplished it.”

Audley says he’s excited to return to Memphis where he got his start in filmmaking. “I always love coming back for the festival. It’s always been very supportive. Those are my people. I still consider myself a Memphian. I have a lot of friends down there, and I feel a part of the community and its growth. I’m rooting for Memphis.”

Sylvio screens on Saturday, November 4 at Circuit Playhouse. For tickets and more information, go to the Indie Memphis web site.

Kentucker Audley Returns to Indie Memphis with Sylvio

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Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 3: Cannibals, Pies, and Love In Action

The polls are closed, and our list of Indie Memphis classics is coming at you. Here’s part 1 and part 2 if you need to catch up.

Bunnyland (2008)

Bret Hannover was doing investigative documentary thrillers long before Gone Girl and the “Serial” podcast made them fashionable. Bunnyland foreshadowed many of the now-familiar tricks of the genre with a slightly less serious subject: An East Tennessee man with a pocket full of grudges and a loose relationship with the truth.

“The film is such an interesting portrait of a complex man who MAY HAVE murdered hundreds of bunny rabbits at the golf course he was fired from days earlier. A man who MAY HAVE caused a fire that left a tenant dead on his teepee-graced land. A man who claimed to hold the largest pre-historic rock collection in the world. A man who claimed to be “the last Indian on the trail of tears.” In classic Brett Hanover fashion, the film is composed of strange angles and is filled with pragmatic figures who readily spout elusive prevarications that Brett just allows to talk, and talk.” -Morgan Jon Fox

“And He Just Comes Around And Dances With You?” (2008)

Towards the end of the 00s, a new subgenre of indie film emerged when a group of Chicago filmmakers made a big splash at South by Southwest. It was (unfortunately) called “mumblecore”, for the quiet, thoughtful, sometimes improvised dialog in the films. But Memphis filmmakers had been doing the same thing since the turn of the century. Kentucker Audley emerged from the Memphis scene in 2008 with a pair of short films: “Bright Sunny South” and “And He Just Comes Around and Dances With You?” The latter is a slow burn story of fiercely controlled emotion. The audience gets half of a phone conversation between a rootless young man and his girlfriend, who has met a new guy while on vacation. It’s a front row seat to the dissolution of a relationship, and you can see it at this link.

“This was an Andrew Nenninger film, before he became Kentucker Audley. Going thru the years of programs I realized how many of his early films have been big influences on me. I think about this one a lot.” -Laura Jean Hocking

“Bohater Pies” (2009)

Corduroy Wednesday, a film collective consisting of Edward Valibus, Ben Rednour, and Erik Morrison, made their Indie Memphis debut in 2006 with Grim Sweeper, a comedy about guys who clean up murder scenes for a living. “Bohater Pies” is a fan favorite of the raft of comedy shorts they produced in the 00s on the buildup to their magnum opus The Conversion. This five minutes of cinematic chaos takes no prisoners as it takes you back to an inscrutable Cold War Eastern European setting. Look for not only the usual Wednesdays, but also cameos by experimental auteur Ben Siler and comedian Jessica “Juice” Morgan. YOU MUST OBEY.

“I’m thinking there are a lot of people who saw this and thought, “WTF are these guys (Corduroy Wednesday) smoking?”; I saw it and thought, “Oh cool! WTF are these guys smoking?” -Laura Jean Hocking

Bohater Pies from Corduroy Wednesday on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 3: Cannibals, Pies, and Love In Action (2)

Open Five (2010) and Open Five Two (2012)

Kentucker Audley’s second and third features took the mumblecore genre on an extended road trip to and from Memphis. It’s an unfailingly intimate peek into the desperate but free the lives of young millennials trying to make sense out of the world. Both films won Best Hometowner Feature at Indie Memphis and kickstarted Audley’s career as an actor and director.

“Even though we often butted heads back in the day, Kentucker Audley and I also always bonded over one thing…many people (ok, maybe only about 5?) loved to accuse us both of somehow rigging Indie Memphis. Our films both sucked, we both didn’t deserve awards, and jurors gave us accolades because it would benefit them! Ok. I’ll never forget the first time I saw Team Picture. I was both in awe, and sorta jealous, and I sorta hated it. I was in awe because I knew I was witnessing something cool, I was jealous because I knew now I would have someone else who would also be able to rig the juries!!!! But mostly, I just liked knowing another prolific filmmaker who I knew was about to take off and connect with a world outside of Memphis, as he is currently doing. Love that guy.” -Morgan Jon Fox

It was just nice to see Memphis in a mumblecore film. -Anonymous

“There was a moment when I was watching [Open Five Two], the scene in the van at night, that I thought, ‘Damn, he looks like a movie star.'” -Laura Jean Hocking

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 3: Cannibals, Pies, and Love In Action (3)

“Cannibal Records” (2010)

John Pickle started making short comedy films in the 1990s, when he became a legend for his out of control cable access show Pickle TV. Former Indie Memphis executive director Les Edwards once described Indie Memphis’s 1999 lineup as “mostly John Pickle movies.” He starred in the 2006 feature The Importance of Being Russell as the titular redneck character he created for his cable access show who travels back in time. “Cannibal Records” was the short film he created for Indie Memphis 2010, which he not only wrote and directed, but also wrote and performed all of the music. Think Little Shop Of Horrors meets Reanimator, and you get a sense of where this genius comedy short is coming from. Pickle is still active as a musician, animator, and music video director. This year, he breaks a long Indie Memphis hiatus with “Return of the Flesh Eating Film Reels”.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 3: Cannibals, Pies, and Love In Action

This Is What Love In Action Looks Like (2011)

In June, 2005, Collierville teenager Zach Stark came out to his parents as gay. They forced him to enroll in a gay reparative therapy facility called Love In Action. The night before he left home, he posted a long, tearful message about his plight on the early social media network MySpace. A grassroots protest movement sprang up in response to the injustice, and director Morgan Jon Fox was there with his camera. At Indie Memphis 2005, he screened a rough cut of the documentary that was as moving as it was raw and angry. “The movie evolved over time. I’m not used to spending so much time on a film, so I put out a prelim cut of it that was a whole ‘nother feature film on its own that doesn’t even exist any more. I literally do not have a cut of it. it’s gone. It’s just an entry in a program now,” says Fox.

That could have been the end of it, but Fox continued to work on the project on and off for the next five years. By the time the final documentary was ready for Indie Memphis 2011, Love In Action had closed and its director John Smid had come out as gay and reputed his former actions. The film transformed from a vitriolic tirade into a testament to the power of compassion and acceptance. “That protest embodied that. I felt like the process of making a film for six years, it’s easy to get lost and angry and upset. But once I finally got to edit it, with the help of Live From Memphis—Sarah Fleming and Christopher Reyes were such huge elements in bringing that film over the finish line. I just wanted to embody what made the protests so successful: We love you for who you are. To quote Natural Born Killers, only love kills the demon.”

This Is What Love In Action Looks Likes is a landmark in LBGT cinema and helped kick off a national movement against so-called “ex-gay” treatments. In a world where political protests are regularly organized via social media, it’s more prophetic and relevant than ever. “I think documentary get people involved. It’s an uplifting story that touches on something that is still very current. It was my favorite Indie Memphis premiere of one of my films, because I got engaged. I was nervous as hell, because I had a secret. I was going to propose to my now-husband, Declan Michael Dealy Fox. Looking up at the totally sold out audience at Playhouse On The Square was an incredible way to premiere a film that was six years in the making.”

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 3: Cannibals, Pies, and Love In Action (4)

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Indie Memphis 2015 Day 6: Experiments and Pathos

Sunday brings two films featuring Kentucker Audley, the Memphis filmmaker, actor, and indie film advocate whose films Open Five and Open Five 2 both won Hometowner awards at past Indie Memphis festivals. 

Olly Alexander, Kentucker Audley, and Joslyn Jensen in Funny Bunny

In director Allison Bagnall’s Funny Bunny, Audley plays Gene, whom we meet going door to door trying to sign up people for a clearly doomed campaign against childhood obesity. Audley’s performance, which finds the unsettlingly funny territory explored by Bill Murray in What About Bob?, is one of a trio of great turns in the film. Olly Alexander (Enter The Void, Penny Dreadful) plays Titty, an apparently insane twenty-something living in an empty mansion who is the only person who responds to Gene’s pitch. Titty is obsessed with webcam girl Ginger, played by Joslyn Jensen, whose prickly, manipulative exterior is slowly revealed to be a front to hide deep, disconnected pain. The story of three misfits finding solace in each other is one of festival’s major highlights. 

Kentucker Audley in Christmas, Again

Audley also appears in Christmas, Again. Director Charles Poekel made the film based on his own experiences as a Christmas tree salesman in Brooklyn, and Audley spent the 2014 season alternately shooting scenes and actually selling Christmas trees on the New York streets. Shot on actual 16mm film, the photography helps imbue the story with a sense of pathos and beauty. 

Laura Jean Hocking’s ‘Andromeda and the Sea Monster’

The Experimental and Animation shorts block is consistently one of the best programs at Indie Memphis, or any other festival. This year’s block includes a pair of short works by Laura Jean Hocking (full disclosure: I’m married to her). In “Double Feature”, she and Ben Siler shared a common pool of footage but edited two very different takes on the material. The second one, “Andromeda and the Sea Monster”, is an experimental animation piece that claims to be the credits to a feature that never materializes. But with credits such as “Fiji Vulcanologist” and “Technological Futurist”, you’ll wish you see the nonexistent full length. 
 

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The Conversion

In January 1989, Steven Soderbergh’s sex, lies, and videotape won the Audience Award for best feature at the Sundance Film Festival, kicking off the modern Indie film movement.

To audiences, “Indie” usually means quirky, low-budget, character-driven fare that is more like the auteurist films of the 1970s than contemporary Hollywood’s designed-by-committee product. But “Indie” originally referred to films financed outside the major studios by outfits like New Line Cinema, which produced Sam Raimi’s The Evil Dead (1981) and the Coen Brothers’ Blood Simple (1984). By 1990, The Coen Brothers had crossed over into the mainstream with Miller’s Crossing, a film that brought together the meticulous plotting, brainy dialog, and stunning visual compositions that would garner them acclaim for the next 25 years.

As the 1990s dawned, a whole crop of directors stood up with a mission to make good movies on their own terms — and that meant raising money by any means necessary. Robert Rodriguez financed his $7,000 debut feature El Mariachi by selling his body for medical testing. It went on to win the 1993 Audience Award at Sundance, and his book Rebel Without A Crew inspired a generation of filmmakers.

Richard Linklater’s 1991 Slacker threw out the screenwriting rulebook that had dominated American film since George Lucas name-checked Joseph Campbell, focusing instead on dozens of strange characters floating around Austin. The structure has echoed through Indie film ever since, not only in Linklater’s Dazed And Confused (1993) but also the “hyperlink” movies of the early 2000s such as Soderbergh’s Traffic and even more conventionally scripted films such as Kevin Smith’s 1994 debut, Clerks.

Quentin Tarantino is arguably the most influential director of the last 25 years. His breakthrough hit, 1994’s Pulp Fiction, was the first film completely financed by producer Harvey Weinstein’s Miramax. But even then, the definitions of what was an “Indie” movie were fluid, as the formerly independent Miramax had become a subsidiary of Disney.

Indie fervor was spreading as local film scenes sprang up around the country. In Memphis, Mike McCarthy’s pioneering run of drive-in exploitation-inspired weirdness started in 1994 with Damselvis, Daughter of Helvis, followed the next year by the semi-autobiographical Teenage Tupelo. With 1997’s The Sore Losers, McCarthy integrated Memphis’ burgeoning underground music scene with his even-more-underground film aesthetic.

In 1995, the European Dogme 95 Collective, led by Lars von Trier, issued its “Vows of Chastity” and defined a new naturalist cinema: no props, no post-production sound, and no lighting. Scripts were minimal, demanding improvisation by the actors. Dogme #1 was Thomas Vinterberg’s The Celebration, which won the Jury Prize at Cannes in 1998.

Meanwhile, in America, weirdness was reaching its peak with Soderbergh’s surrealist romp Schizopolis. Today, the film enjoys a cult audience, but in 1997, it almost ended Soderbergh’s career and led to a turning point in Indie film. The same year, Tarantino directed Jackie Brown and then withdrew from filmmaking for six years. Soderbergh’s next feature veered away from experiment: 1998’s Out Of Sight was, like Jackie Brown, a tightly plotted adaptation of an Elmore Leonard crime novel. Before Tarantino returned to the director’s chair, Soderbergh would hit with Julia Roberts in Erin Brockovich and make George Clooney and Brad Pitt the biggest stars in the world with a very un-Indie remake of the Rat Pack vehicle Ocean’s 11.

Technology rescued Indie film. In the late ’90s, personal computers were on their way to being ubiquitous, and digital video cameras had improved in picture quality as they simplified operation. The 1999 experimental horror The Blair Witch Project, directed by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sanchez, showed what was possible with digital, simultaneously inventing the found footage genre and becoming the most profitable Indie movie in history, grossing $248 million worldwide on a shooting budget of $25,000.

The festival circuit continued to grow. The Indie Memphis Film Festival was founded in 1998, showcasing works such as the gonzo comedies of Memphis cable access TV legend John Pickle. In 2000, it found its biggest hit: Craig Brewer’s The Poor & Hungry, a gritty, digital story of the Memphis streets, won awards both here and at the Hollywood Film Festival.

In 2005, Memphis directors dominated the Sundance Film Festival, with Ira Sach’s impressionistic character piece Forty Shades Of Blue winning the Grand Jury Prize, and Brewer’s Hustle & Flow winning the Audience Award, which would ultimately lead to the unforgettable spectacle of Three Six Mafia beating out Dolly Parton for the Best Original Song Oscar.

Brewer rode the crest of a digital wave that breathed new life into Indie film. In Memphis, Morgan Jon Fox and Brandon Hutchinson co-founded the MeDiA Co-Op, gathering dozens of actors and would-be filmmakers together under the newly democratized Indie film banner. Originally a devotee of Dogme 95, Fox quickly grew beyond its limitations, and by the time of 2008’s OMG/HaHaHa, his stories of down-and-out kids in Memphis owed more to Italian neorealism like Rome, Open City than to von Trier.

Elsewhere, the digital revolution was producing American auteurs like Andrew Bujalski, whose 2002 Funny Ha Ha would be retroactively dubbed the first “mumblecore” movie. The awkward label was coined to describe the wave of realist, DIY digital films such as Joe Swanberg’s Kissing on the Mouth that hit SXSW in 2005. Memphis MeDiA Co-Op alum Kentucker Audley produced three features, beginning with 2007’s mumblecore Team Picture.

Not everyone was on board the digital train. Two of the best Indie films of the 21st century were shot on film: Shane Carruth’s $7,000 Sundance winner Primer (2004) and Rian Johnson’s high school noir Brick (2005). But as digital video evolved into HD, Indie films shot on actual film have become increasingly rare.

DVDs — the way most Indies made money — started to give way to digital distribution via the Internet. Web series, such as Memphis indie collective Corduroy Wednesday’s sci fi comedy The Conversion, began to spring up on YouTube.

With actress and director Greta Gerwig’s star-making turn in 2013’s Francis Ha, it seemed that the only aspect of the American DIY movement that would survive the transition from mumblecore to mainstream was a naturalistic acting style. Founding father Soderbergh announced his retirement in 2013 with a blistering condemnation of the Hollywood machine. Lena Dunham’s 2010 festival hit Tiny Furniture caught the eye of producer Judd Apatow, and the pair hatched HBO’s Girls, which wears its indie roots on its sleeve and has become a national phenomenon.

The Indie spirit is alive and well, even if it may bypass theaters in the future.

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Indie Memphis Sunday: Open Five 2, Silver Linings Playbook, Not Fade Away

Kentucker Audley and Jake Rabinbach in Open Five 2

  • Kentucker Audley and Jake Rabinbach in Open Five 2

The final day of the 15th Indie Memphis Film Festival will feature a Big Star encore, a local premiere, perhaps the two highest-profile features of the fest, and the distribution of festival awards. As always, see IndieMemphis.com for a full schedule and ticketing info. But here are some selected highlights from today’s schedule:

After an unofficial, unlisted work-in-progress screening at last year’s festival, Kentucker Audley’s Open Five 2 (Circuit Playhouse, 5:45 p.m.) makes its official Memphis debut. A provocatively personal film that collapses the distance between fiction and documentary and is packed with memorable moments, it’s Audley’s best film yet. I wrote more about it in this week’s Flyer cover story.

Open Five 2 trailer: