Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

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

Categories
News

Tennessee Ranks 34th in Protecting Kids from Tobacco

PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Tennessee ranks 34th in the nation in funding programs to protect kids from tobacco, according to a national report released today by a coalition of public health organizations.

Tennessee currently spends $10 million a year on tobacco prevention programs, which is 31 percent of the minimum amount of $32.2 million recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Last year, Tennessee ranked last in the nation, spending nothing on tobacco prevention.

The report’s key findings for Tennessee include:

— Tobacco companies spend more than $406 million a year on marketing in
Tennessee. This is more than 40 times what the state spends on tobacco
prevention.

— Tennessee this year will collect $511.5 million from the tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes, but will spend just 2 percent of it on tobacco prevention.

Earlier this year, the state Legislature approved a plan proposed by Governor Phil Bredesen to allocate $10 million for programs to keep kids from smoking and help smokers quit, a historic move for a state that has no history of spending money on tobacco prevention. Bredesen also proposed and the legislature approved a new smoke-free workplace law and a 42-cent increase in the state cigarette tax.

Said William V. Corr,
Executive Director of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids: “Despite this
progress, Tennessee still spends less than a third of the CDC’s recommended
minimum for tobacco prevention. It’s critical that Tennessee build on its
progress because tobacco companies are spending huge sums to market their
deadly and addictive products. Tobacco prevention is an important investment
that protects kids, saves lives and saves money for taxpayers by reducing
tobacco-related health care costs.”

Nine years after the 1998 state tobacco settlement, the report finds that the states this year have increased total funding for tobacco prevention programs by 20 percent, to $717.2 million. But most states still fail to fund tobacco prevention programs at minimum levels recommended by the CDC, and altogether, the states are providing less than half what the CDC recommends.

Only three states — Maine, Delaware and Colorado — currently fund tobacco prevention programs at CDC minimum levels.

Categories
Theater Theater Feature

Warts and All

Talk about your odd couples: Frog likes his next-door neighbor Toad, even though he’s a neurotic wart-covered mess of complaints. And Toad likes Frog every bit as much, even though he’s preternaturally cheerful (even in the morning) and also covered in unsightly warts. The two old friends rake one another’s leaves and like to chat pleasantly over hot tea and homemade cookies. And no matter how much they fight, they always make up. Story-wise, that’s about all there is to A Year With Frog and Toad, the Tony-nominated musical based on Arnold Lobel’s beloved series of children’s books. There’s no big adventure. In fact, there’s very little plot at all. There’s just Frog, Toad, and all their woodland friends. And that’s enough.

The most frustrating aspect of most contemporary adaptations of children’s stories is the adaptor’s need to insert some level of irony, presumably aimed at the adults in the crowd. In recent years, film adaptations of Dr. Seuss classics like How the Grinch Stole Christmas and The Cat in the Hat have been pumped up with scatological humor and edgy sexual innuendo. Frog and Toad proves how unnecessary all of that is. Being merely charming, completely un-edgy, and rather smart, it manages to delight children and adults alike.

A Year With Frog and Toad plays out like a series of variety-show skits with songs and comedy routines based on the passing seasons. If the plot and dialogue are simplistic, the lyrics are delightfully clever and sophisticated in a way that is reminiscent of dry-wit lyricists from a bygone era or perhaps a recent episode of The Backyardigans.

“Three things you cannot dispute,” we’re told in the song “Get a Load of Toad.” “Bamboo comes from a bamboo shoot, rutabaga comes from a rutabaga root, and Toad looks funny in a bathing suit.” And he does.

More than anything else, A Year With Frog and Toad proves that children — even very young ones — can be entertained without technical wizardry. At a recent Saturday matinee, the youngsters sat mesmerized, and during intermission many tried to imitate the anthropomorphic movements of the actors playing animals.

Brian C. Gray and Kevin Todd Murphy are wonderful as Frog and Toad, respectively, but both are nearly eclipsed by an extraordinary chorus led by Amber Snyder and Corey Cochran in a variety of roles.

Did I say that there were no ironic winks and nudges for adults? Because there is one. Overwhelmed by his newfound success as a mailman, Snail (Cochran) strips down to a gold-lame-accented mail carrier’s uniform while singing, “I’m coming out — of my shell.” Although the gay allusions soared over the kiddies’ heads, the joke was out of place. That’s not to say it was anything short of fun or fabulous.

Chicago-based director/choreographer Scott Ferguson earned an excellent reputation in Memphis directing camp classics like The Rocky Horror Show and The Mystery of Irma Vep, but his more recent production of the Mark Twain musical Big River was something of a mess. Oddly enough, it’s Ferguson’s eye for kitsch that makes the completely sincere A Year With Frog and Toad such a winner. Who else might have imagined birds flying south for the winter as mid-20th-century flight attendants or transformed a pair of moles into fur-wearing Russian spies.

Laura E. Jordan’s costumes are exemplary, while Tim McMath’s set faithfully renders the look and feel of the original children’s books.

If there is serious complaint to be registered regarding Frog and Toad, it’s with the music direction. And even there, Renee Kemper, who pulls double duty as both musical director and keyboardist, does an excellent job. The problem stems from the fact that she’s the show’s only musician.

It’s a tragedy that when regional theaters stage smaller-scale musicals like A Year with Frog and Toad, they are often faced with the choice of using either a bare-bones band or prerecorded music. It’s unrealistic to say so, but neither choice is really acceptable.

Through December 23rd at Circuit
Playhouse

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Do French Fries Make You Strong?

My husband, Warren, is a really good cook. He’s also an archaeologist who often goes on digs for weeks at a time, leaving the monkeys — Satchel, age 4, and Jiro, age 2 — and me to fend for ourselves. Prior to my husband’s most recent departure, I got my hands on a list of places where kids eat free (or almost free) from MemphisLovesKids.com. I organized it by day and came up with a plan to get the monkeys a free meal every day for a week.

When I told Warren about my plan, he said, “You are probably going to get sick.”

Monday: CiCi’s Pizza

We arrived at the CiCi’s in Poplar Plaza shopping center at 5:45 p.m. The monkeys and I paid our $9.24 and hit the buffet line.

According to a large sign, CiCi’s uses “100% real mozarella, freshly prepared sauce, freshly made dough, and garden-fresh vegetable toppings.” Equally admirable was the salad bar that had lettuce other than iceberg and several enticing pizza toppings. There was also fusilli pasta that came with a choice of red or Alfredo sauce, garlic bread, and cheese bread.

The pizza bar had 16 varieties of piping-hot pies ranging from pepperoni to Hawaiian. Desserts included brownies sprinkled with confectioner’s sugar, apple cinnamon pizza, and strudel. The monkeys were psyched.

Satchel had four pieces of cheese bread, one slice of pepperoni pizza, some plain pasta with Parmesan cheese, and 1.5 brownies. Jiro had two slices of pepperoni pizza, two Hawaiian Punches, and one brownie. I had a small salad and three slices of pepperoni pizza.

Satchel asked, “Mama, does pizza make you strong?”

“Yes,” I said proudly. “Pizza has something from all five of the food groups.”

CiCi’s Pizza, 3474 Plaza Avenue, Suite 1 (452-6225)Buffet hours: 11 a.m.-10 p.m. dailyChildren 3 and under: 99 cents; child buffet: $3.18

Tuesday: McAlister’s Deli

The McAlister’s kids’ menu offers seven choices: toasted cheese sandwich, PB&J, Mac’s Dog (a hot dog), kids’ nachos, ham-and-cheese sandwich, turkey-and-cheese sandwich, and cheese pita pizza. The sandwiches come with chips, and everything comes with Teddy Grahams (which I hid from the monkeys). Drinks are extra. While the kids’ meal prices were pretty fair ($1.19-$2.75), I have to admit, having to pay for drinks took a little bit of the fun out of the “free-ness.”

Satchel chose nachos, and Jiro chose pizza. (He was rallying for day two at CiCi’s the whole drive over.) I ordered the chicken Caesar wrap.

When I looked at Satchel’s plate, I felt very embarrassed by the cold, hard reality of the nachos. Jiro took one look at his pizza that was “covered in blood” (as Satchel noted) and went right for the chips and dip. Satchel insisted on a piece of pizza in return. As he was about to take his first bite of Jiro’s pizza, Satchel said, “Ooh fly!” I shooed it away but not quickly enough. He said, “I can’t eat it now that the fly puked on it.”

Then he turned his attention back to his own plate and asked, “Do nachos make you strong?”

I carefully considered my answer in light of the fact that he had nothing else to eat. “Um, sort of,” I said.

McAlister’s, 3482 Plaza Avenue in Poplar Plaza (452-6009)Kids eat free Tuesdays after 5 p.m. (two kids per adult)

Wednesday: IHOP

I had informed Satchel that we were having breakfast for dinner at IHOP. He excitedly asked, “Does that mean we get dinner for breakfast?”

When we pulled into the almost empty parking lot at 5:45 p.m., I was a little shocked. The only other times I’d been to IHOP (Sunday morning or the wee hours of the weekend), it was packed. Several large window signs pictured chocolate-chip happy-face pancakes and declared, “Kids Eat Free All Day Wednesday.”

The kids’ menu was a paper placemat with pictures of each item, things to color, and activities to do. I asked the monkeys to point to what they wanted. Jiro immediately pointed to the chicken strips, and Satchel predictably pointed to the chocolate-chip happy-face pancake.

I didn’t want to eat since I was planning to attend a party later in the evening, but I had to in order to get a free kids’ meal. I brought my mom along so that both monkeys could eat free. I figured I should stick with breakfast and ordered the Migas (eggs, tomatoes, cheese, jalepenos, and tortilla strips). My mom ordered the chicken-breast dinner.

The monkeys busied themselves with the crayons and the menu activities. Jiro quickly grew bored and attempted to swing from the low-hanging light fixture above our table. When informed that this was not appropriate, he let out several shrill protests that made me happy that there were very few people around.

When the monkeys’ food came out, Jiro took one look at Satchel’s chocolate-chip happy-face pancake and lunged across the table. Satchel blocked him, and more shrieking ensued. Eventually, we were able to convince Satchel to share, and he cut off an entire eye and half the forehead for his brother.

“Mama, do pancakes make you strong?” Satchel asked.

I opted for the truth: “No, but you had a really good lunch, so it’s okay.”

Once everyone was done and we were paid up, I enthusiastically said, “Now that we had breakfast for dinner, let’s have broccoli and apples for dessert!”

IHOP, 2060 Union (725-4448)Kids eat free all day Wednesday (one kid per adult)

Thursday: Piccadilly

My friend, Andria, caught wind of my “kids eat free” spree and decided that she and her 3-year-old, Miss M., would meet us at the Piccadilly cafeteria at 6 p.m. At the boys’ school, I’d run into our mutual friend Shiloh and invited her and her 2-year-old daughter, Lydia, along too.

We arrived to find the place bustling with lots of kids, lots of seniors … lots of everybody. The line for food was long but not too long. Satchel immediately ran up to the glass to see what treasures were lurking behind it. He pointed at the black-eyed peas and said, “Ooh, I want some of those beans!”

When we got to the front of the line, Andria, Shiloh, and I looked at each other and simultaneously groaned. The food selection started with dessert. Blue Jell-O was the first thing, followed by cupcakes with pink and blue icing and sprinkles.

I had no intention of blowing our almost-free meals on extras. I asked the server if dessert was included with the kids’ meals, and, to my amazement, she said yes. Jiro wanted both a cupcake and Jell-O but eventually went with just the cupcake. Satchel happily chose chocolate pudding. As we made our way toward the entrees, Satchel immediately zoned in on the fried chicken. “What about fish?” I asked hopefully.

“No. Chicken!” he said.

Then Jiro piped in and said, “I want chicken!”

As my friends and I were ordering, Jiro looked at me and said, “I need to go pee-pee.”

“Can you hold it?” I asked. He nodded yes, but two seconds later said no. I looked around at the scene and wondered how I was going to manage leaving mid-order. Thankfully, Shiloh agreed to order the sides for me.

I rushed Jiro to bathroom as fast as I could and got us back in line in time to get rolls and drinks. When we got to the end of the line, a nice woman was waiting to help me carry our trays to a table.

Then, as if things couldn’t get any better, both monkeys sat down and started eating. Jiro really wasn’t interested in anything besides his chicken. Once it was gone, he set his sights on the cupcake.

He had a couple licks of icing and decided it wasn’t all that. Then he started looking at me with pleading eyes and mouthing a word I could not understand. After a few minutes of me going, “Huh? Wha?” he grabbed my hand and led me back to the food line to where the blue Jell-O was.

“Jelly!” he said.

Once back at the table, a waiter came over and gave everyone a balloon. Satchel was clearly making up for the week’s lack of nutritional dinners. He ate his chicken, all of his mashed potatoes (and gravy), and broccoli. Then he ate half of my green beans and almost all of the black-eyed peas I’d ordered at the last minute, remembering his initial request. Then he looked at Shiloh and said, “Can I have some of your salad?” It was amazing. Finally he ate his pudding. When he was done, he calmly said, “I need to poop now.”

Piccadilly, 3425 Poplar Avenue (324-6442)Kids’ meal: 99 cents to $1.99 on Thursdays and 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturdays

Friday: Time-out

Warren came home for the weekend, and I just couldn’t motivate myself for another restaurant visit. Our choices for Friday were already slim (and far away): Gus’s Fried Chicken in Bartlett or the American Café in the Wolfchase Galleria. We opted to stay home and eat spaghetti, salad, broccoli, and bananas.

Saturday: Hooters

Baby’s first visit to Hooters: Jiro with a hot dog and crayons

At 1:30 p.m., Hooter’s had a pretty decent crowd. There were 20 to 30 men of various ages parked in front of a wall of TVs. Most of them were drinking beer and just hangin’. I was the only woman present (not on staff, that is), and we seemed to be the only people taking advantage of the “Kids eat free on Saturdays” offer.

I read the kids’ menu upside down from Jiro’s placemat as he began coloring: “Chicken wings, chicken strips, burger, grilled cheese, hot dog, PB&J, fish & chips. What do y’all want?”

“Fish & chips!” Satchel said.

“Hot dog!” Jiro said.

“Nobody wants chicken? They are famous for chicken!” I said.

“Okay, I’ll take chicken strips,” Satchel said.

“Why not try the chicken wings?” I prodded.

“Okay,” he said most agreeably.

Next I set about figuring out what I was going to eat. Thanks to the buxom ladies decorating my menu, everything looked good. (I also noticed that Warren was taking an unusually long time to order.)

Finally, I decided on the Hooters cobb salad. I thought for sure that Warren would get the wings, but he went for the chicken-breast sandwich (“Hold the chicken and the sandwich,” as The Office‘s Steve Carrell would say.)

Our food came out pretty swiftly, and the monkeys wasted no time descending on the curly fries.

Jiro asked, “French fries make strong?” as Satchel listened in.

“Yep,” I said as I avoided Warren’s stare.

Warren’s chicken breast was voluptuous and literally falling off the bun. My cobb salad, with buffalo chicken, was actually rather delicious. I tried to get Satchel to eat his wings, but after one bite he said they were too hot. Jiro took his hot dog out of the bun and squawked when he saw bun remnants sticking to it. Once Warren removed them, Jiro ate a few bites before chucking the rest of it across the table.

While we settled the check, I asked the manager why they offered a “Kids eat free” day when none of the other Hooters do.

“Uh, I don’t know. I can call corporate,” he said. He started walking away and then turned back. “This store was opened by a guy with four kids. I think he started it.” He caught his breath and continued, “The manager now has one kid and one on the way.” I smiled at him and nodded. “It’s good for business and good for the community,” he added. “Not everyone around here is that well off, so it helps people afford to eat out.”

I thanked him, gave our very attentive waitress a nice tip, and headed toward the car.

I joined Warren and the monkeys who were already strapped in their car seats.

“Did you like that restaurant?” I asked.

“Yes!” they hollered.

“What did you like best?”

“The curly fries!”

Hooters, 2653 Mt. Moriah (795-7123)

Kids eat free all day Saturday

Sunday: Checkers

I noticed the “$.69 Cheeseburgers, Shakes, Hot Dogs, Wed & Sun” sign on Monday night on our way home from CiCi’s. I’ve never been to Checkers before, but I figured that had to be a pretty good deal. Since I was on the last day of my “Kids eat free” week, I hadn’t eaten all day, and I just happened to have a car full of kids, I decided to try it out.

“Who wants a milk shake?” I asked the monkeys and their two cousins.

“Me! Me! I do! Me!” they responded.

“Anybody want a cheeseburger?”

“Yes! I do! Yes! Yes!” they responded.

I pulled up to the window and said, “I’ll take five chocolate shakes and five cheeseburgers.”

“I want vanilla,” my 10-year-old nephew said.

“Me too!” said my 5-year-old niece.

“And me!” said Satchel.

Before Jiro could chime in, I amended the order. “Make that four vanilla milk shakes and one chocolate. And five cheeseburgers.” I thought for a second. “Make four of those plain. No, just ketchup.”

“I like ketchup and mustard,” my nephew said.

“Okay. Four with ketchup and mustard and one with everything,” I said.

The voice in the box was annoyed and confused.

“Can I have French fries?” my nephew asked.

“There will be no French fries,” I said.

“Why?”

“They aren’t 69 cents.”

I pulled up to the second window and handed over $6.98. (I think they forgot to charge me for one shake.)

The worker handed me the shakes, and I immediately began putting the straws in. “They’re kind of small,” my nephew said.

“Well, it’s 12 ounces more shake than you had a minute ago.”

He couldn’t argue with that logic.

Epilogue

Although the “Kids eat free” week was fun for the monkeys and kept me from cooking, it caused me much distress in the breakfast and lunch department. I was working double time to sneak in fruits, vegetables, and milk. I’m not sure what most of the restaurants we visited have against fruit or vegetables with a kids’ meal or why they have candy machines everywhere, but clearly, when kids eat free, you get what you pay for.

Stacey Greenberg is a Flyer contributor and writer of diningwithmonkeys.blogspot.com.