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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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Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018

Memphis music was vibrant as ever in 2018. Every week, the Memphis Flyer brings you the latest and best video collaborations between Bluff City filmmakers and musicians in our Music Video Monday series. To assemble this list, I rewatched all 34 videos that qualified for 2018’s best video and scored them according to song, concept, cinematography, direction and acting, and editing. Then I untangled as many ties as I could and made some arbitrary decisions. Everyone who made the list is #1 in my book!

10. Louise Page “Blue Romance”

Flowers cover everything in this drag-tastic pop gem, directed by Sam Leathers.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (13)


9. Harlan T. Bobo “Nadine” / Fuck “Facehole”

Our first tie of the list comes early. First is Harlan T. Bobo’s sizzling, intense “Nadine” clip, directed by James Sposto.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (11)

I used science to determine that Fuck’s Memphis Flyer name drop is equal to “Nadine”.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (12)

8. Aaron James “Kauri Woods”

The smokey climax of this video by Graham Uhelski is one of the more visually stunning things you’ll see this year.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (10)


7. Daz Rinko “New Whip, Who Dis?”

Whaddup to rapper Daz Rinko who dropped three videos on MVM this year. This was the best one, thanks to an absolute banger of a track.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (9)


6. (tie) McKenna Bray “The Way I Loved You” / Lisa Mac “Change Your Mind”

I couldn’t make up my mind between this balletic video from co-directors Kim Lloyd and Susan Marshall…

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (7)

…and this dark, twisted soundstage fantasy from director Morgan Jon Fox.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (8)

5. Brennan Villines “Better Than We’ve Ever Been”

Andrew Trent Fleming got a great performance out of Brennan Villines in this bloody excellent clip.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (6)


4. (tie) Nick Black “One Night Love” / Summer Avenue “Cut It Close”

Nick Black is many things, but as this video by Gabriel DeCarlo proves, a hooper ain’t one of ’em.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (4)

The kids in Summer Avenue enlisted Laura Jean Hocking for their debut video.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (5)

3. Cedric Burnside “Wash My Hands”

Beale Street Caravan’s I Listen To Memphis series produced a whole flood of great music videos from director Christian Walker and producer Waheed Al Qawasmi. I could have filled out the top ten with these videos alone, but consider this smoking clip of Cedric Burnside laying down the law representative of them all.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (3)

2. Don Lifted “Poplar Pike”

I could have filled out the top five with work from Memphis video auteur Don Lifted, aka Lawrence Matthews, who put three videos on MVM this year. To give everybody else a chance, I picked the transcendent clip for “Poplar Pike” created by Mattews, Kevin Brooks, and Nubia Yasin.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018

1. Lucero “Long Way Back Home”

Sorry, everybody, but you already knew who was going to be number one this year. It’s this mini-movie created by director Jeff Nichols, brother of Lucero frontman Ben Nichols. Starring genuine movie star (and guy who has played Elvis) Michael Shannon, “Long Way Back Home” is the best Memphis music video of 2018 by a country mile.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 Memphis Music Videos of 2018 (2)

Thanks to everyone who submitted videos to Music Video Monday in 2018. If you’d like to see your music video appear on Music Video Monday in 2019, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com. 

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This Week At The Cinema: Indie Memphis Winners and BTS

‘Magic Bullet’

Tonight at Studio On The Square, The Ballad of Shirley Collins. It would be hard to imagine what contemporary music would look like without the invaluable folk and blues archives of Alan Lomax. The songs he and his partner Shirley Collins collected on their epic road trip across the US in 1959 provided the basis for a couple of generations of music. Collins gets her due in this documentary, presented by Indie Memphis, that follows her through those years and into a successful career as singer of traditional English songs, before losing her voice in mysterious circumstances. Tickets available at Indie Memphis.

This Week At The Cinema: Indie Memphis Winners and BTS

Wednesday night, what’s sure to be the best shorts program of the year happens at Crosstown Arts: The Indie Memphis Award Winners Encore. Films include “Black 14,” an exquisitely edited, all-archival documentary film about a 1969 anti-racism protest by black college football players in Wyoming, and Narrative Short Film winner “Magic Bullet” by Amanda Lovejoy Street. The Hometowner short award winners include narrative short “Bonfire” by Kevin Brooks; Music Video Award winner “I’m Yours” by Faith Evans Ruch, directed by Melissa Anderson Sweazy; “Minority” by Will Robbins, and the experimental documentary “Windows” by Jason Allen Lee. More details at the Indie Memphis website.

Magic Bullet Trailer from Amanda Street on Vimeo.

This Week At The Cinema: Indie Memphis Winners and BTS (2)

Thursday night at the Paradiso, Korean boy-pop sensations BTS get the Truth Or Dare treatment with Burn The Stage: The Movie.

This Week At The Cinema: Indie Memphis Winners and BTS (3)

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Don Lifted Premieres Contour Visual Album

Lawrence Matthews combines two of his multi talents with his newest project. Like his first album under the name Don Lifted, Alero, Contour is an autobiographical remembrance of teenage trauma. Each song on the album comes with an accompanying video, created by the artist along with Martin Matthews, Kevin Brooks, and Nubia Yasin.

Contour the visual album will bow tonight at Studio on the Square with a free screening at 8 p.m. The album will then go on sale and hit streaming services at midnight Friday. To give you a flavor of the work, here’s “Take Control Of Me”, a video from Alero  directed by frequent Matthews collaborator Kevin Brooks.

Don Lifted Premieres Contour Visual Album

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Kevin Brooks Wins Memphis Film Prize

Memphis director Kevin Brooks has won the 2018 Memphis Film Prize with his short film “Last Day”.
Courtesy Memphis Film Prize

Kevin Brooks (third from left) accepts the Memphis Film Prize he won for his short ‘Last Day’. From the left is Film Prize Filmmaker’s liaison David Merrill, ‘Last Day’ star Ricky D. Smith, Brooks, and Louisiana Film Prize founder Gregory Kallenberg.

Friday and Saturday, the Memphis Film Prize attracted sold-out audiences to Malco Studio on the Square for a program of 10 short films by Memphis filmmakers. Organizers said that, when the attendance was tallied, they were expecting record crowds.

Brooks prevailed in a strong field with his story of an innocent man (played by Ricky D. Smith) facing a criminal trial that he expects to lose. He spends the morning with his wife (Rosalin Ross) and young daughter, who has a school talent show that evening.

Brooks, a prolific director, has previously won awards at Indie Memphis, and was the recipient of a Sundance fellowship. He is also the Memphis Film and Television Commission’s youngest-ever board member. The cash component in the Memphis Film Prize award is $10,000. 

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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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Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

Skate into the week with Music Video Monday.

Don Lifted is back with the third single from his upcoming record Contour, which was recently mastered by Mike Bozzi (Too Pimp a Butterfly, Damn, Ctrl, Flower Boy) of Bernie Grundman Mastering in Hollywood, Calif.

Each of the album’s songs will come with a video, which means you’re going to be seeing a lot of Don Lifted around these parts in the coming months.

“Pull Up (Duratec V6)” was shot by Nubia Yasin, Kevin Brooks, Bailey Smith, and Martin Matthews. The skaters in the video are Kirkwood Vangeli of Fluxus Skateboard Co., Indigo, and Chuck Craig. Don Lifted, aka Lawrence Matthews, directed, edited, and also skateboarded for the video.

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

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

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Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

Today’s music video will have you cruising into Monday.

The second single from Don Lifted’s new album Contour, “Muirfield” is an older song revitalized by feature artist Healy. The video was shot by Kevin Brooks.

Don Lifted says this song is special to him. “Every time I listen or watch the video it puts me back to 17. Dropping you off before curfew, walking back to my car, and rolling my windows down and playing In Rainbows driving home. Every sense heightened in ways I didn’t know possible. I could smell the air and feel each instrument and vocal inflection by Thom Yorke as if he was singing in the car with me. I’d take the longest way home to feel for longer, close my eyes and put my hands out the window, sing, yell, cry, and be thankful for what I was feeling. For it was new and pure and untainted and we were new pure and untainted. Hope you enjoy.”

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

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

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“1,300 Men: Memphis Strike ’68” To Screen At Main Library

Reporting the story of the 1968 Sanitation Workers Strike is a lifelong obsession for journalist-turned-director Emily Yellin. Her parents David and Carol Lynn Yellin were founding members of a group dedicated to reconciliation and commemoration in the wake of the April 4, 1968 assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis. Yellin was six years old at the time. “The first meeting of the Memphis Search for Meaning Committee was in our house on Park Avenue across from Audubon park. I begged my mom to go to the meeting, but she said no. I guess I was persistent enough, so finally she said I could come, but I couldn’t speak, only listen. I could be the secretary, and told me to take notes. At the end of the meeting, she asked to see my notes. The notes read ‘We had a meeting’…I consider that my first reporting work. I reported the facts, and I learned a very important journalism lesson: Listen more than you talk.”
Darius B. Williams for Striking Voices

J. L. McClain, a Memphis Sanitation worker who was among the 1968 strikers, is featured in ‘1,300 Men’.

In the 1990s, Yellin was reporting for the New York Times on assassin James Earl Ray’s quest for a new trial. “The big reporter who came to town [from New York] took me out to dinner before we started working on that case. I said to him, ‘Yeah, I’ve been reporting on this since 1968.’”

David Yellin founded the Film and TV department at the University of Memphis. “He had the foresight to go to the TV stations and ask for the film they shot during the sanitation strike. There’s 25 hours of film—it wasn’t video, it was film, much of which they would have thrown away—of the strike and the aftermath.”

Now, 50 years later, Yellin has used that rare footage and combined it with contemporary interviews of 30 surviving strikers and their families for Striking Voices, a multimedia project that tells the stories of the forgotten foot soldiers of the strike that changed Memphis and America. “We’ve gotten our funding from locals who believe in this project,” says Yellin, who organized the nonprofit project with the help of Community LIFT.

The premiere of Yellin’s web series “1,300 Men: Memphis Strike ’68” on TheRoot.com coincided with the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the walkout on February 12th. The 10 episodes trace the story of the strike from the point of view of the men on the streets and the women and children who supported them. “One of our overriding goals was to give a human dimension to these men who, if you knew about them at all, you only knew them as men walking down Main Street carrying I AM A MAN signs. There are whole stories there, and I think it will be very important for everybody to take time to know these people’s stories. It’s a lot deeper than you might have thought.”
Darius B. Williams for Striking Voices

Striker Baxter Leach

Yellin’s crew were all Memphians, including editors Laura Jean Hocking, Kevin Brooks, and Suzannah Herbert; producers May Todd, Kierra Turner, Asia Sims, director of photography Richard L. Copley, and photographers Stephen Hildreth and Darius B. Williams. “My instincts told me that, as a white woman who grew up in East Memphis, that I was not necessarily the best person to do this project,” says Yellin. “At every step of the way, I had to consider that and be sure I wasn’t imposing my world view on somebody else’s story.”

This Sunday, April 22nd, “1,300 Men” will screen at the Benjamin L. Hooks Library. “We’re really looking forward to Sunday, because that’s our chance to show what we’ve produced for a national audience to a local audience. We’re gong to binge watch the story that we created for The Root for a local audience, and we’re going to have some of the sanitation workers and their wives there for a talk,” says Yellin.

In addition to the “1,300 Men” screening, an photography exhibit called “Striking Voices: The Portraits and Interviews” will be on display at the library adjacent to the screening room. “We interviewed more than 30 people, the men, their wives, and their children. Everyone we interviewed, Darius B. Williams took portrait photographs,” says Yellin.
Putting this long-gestating project together brought home the immediacy of the Civil Rights era, and the work that continues to be needed in Memphis. “There’s a legacy of [white supremacy] that we’re living with here more than almost any other city in the country,” says Yellin. “We think of the the legacies of slavery and Jim Crow as being something that happened to another generation. But what I really see is that it’s still happening in our generation right now.”

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Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

A world premiere from Don Lifted makes for a glorious Music Video Monday!

Artist, musician, and filmmaker Lawrence Matthews, aka Don Lifted, produced our top music video of 2016. His new video, “Poplar Pike”, begins his most ambitious work yet. “‘Poplar Pike’ is the first single of my coming album Contour, set to release this September. It is also one of eight videos created for the album by a collaborative group of filmmakers and writers including Nubia Yasin, Kevin Brooks, Martin Matthews, and myself,” he says. “The story of Contour takes place my senior year in high school through my freshman year in college. For this video, I intended to have a back yard bonfire party with a bunch of different people trying to create a fictional high school reality, one where I was cool and popular, and people came to my house in groups, and we road bikes and drove cars and danced around the fire, like how they do in high school movies. During the planning I told everyone wouldn’t it be sad if nobody showed up to the shoot… and on the two shoot days, exactly that happened. I took it as some ironic moment of art imitating my true high school experience.”

Don Lifted will debut some songs from Contour at MCA this Friday, March 23 at 8 PM. Here’s “Poplar Pike”:

Music Video Monday: Don Lifted

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