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Memphis Filmmaker Nathan Ross Murphy releases new movie September 15th

Nathan Ross Murphy plays the title role in ‘The Indignation of Michael Busby,’ which he wrote and directed.



Nathan Ross Murphy will release his latest film, The Indignation of Michael Busby, on September 15th on Vimeo.

It’s the award-winning Memphis filmmaker’s first official comedy. “There have been comedy elements under the surface in a lot of things that I’ve made,” says Murphy, 34. “This is the first outright movie where I could say, ‘This is a dark comedy.’”

The short film “navigates a couple of twists and turns as far as the plot goes. And genre. Very unexpected. To best sum it up, a daydreaming cubicle worker who contemplates another lousy day at the office. We get to see some characters that he runs into on his daily routine and they’re not too nice to him.”

Murphy plays the title role. “It was a challenge to myself. Which I wanted to do. I love character acting and just breaking out of the mold that is myself and becoming a different person. This guy is pretty far away from me. Might be the farthest away from any character I’ve ever played. He’s very timid. Life is constantly stepping on him. I guess I can relate to that one, but I think he wears it externally, which I don’t.”

“Timid” is not a word anyone would associate with Murphy. The Indignation of Michael Busby is his fifth film. “I’m almost done writing my second feature script, but it’s going to be the first feature I’m going to get off the ground. Carriers. It’s a supernatural ghost thriller drama.”

A native Memphian, Murphy began drawing and painting when he was “a little baby,” he says. “That’s still a hobby. I don’t do it as much. Most of my focus is on filmmaking.”

Murphy, who wrote and drew comic books as a child, created “Sky Carter,” a “dumb little kid” who mistakenly is given powers from “the universe control center.” “He’s kind of an imbecile, but he’s got these powers. It was like a funny comic super hero thing.”

Murphy also was “just a huge movie bug. I always loved the experience. I loved the theater.”

He decided to become a filmmaker when he was five years old after he saw Jurassic Park at the old Winchester Cinema. “I remember leaving the theater. It was the first time I couldn’t tell the difference between what was real life and what was fake in a movie. Jurassic Park blurred the lines for me. I thought that T-Rex could come through the screen. I had never seen anything so frightening. It terrified me, but excited me at the same time. It was such a mind-blowing experience.”

Murphy knew having something to do with movies would be his life.  “Whatever that was, I wanted to do something with it.”

Movies became more of  “a learning experience” for Murphy, who wanted to know “how to achieve this shot, check out different perspectives.”

He also became fascinated with cameras. “All we had were the portable cameras. Disposable. So, that’s what I grew up with. But I would try to work on photography with those.”

Murphy also shot movies with his mother’s video camera. “I didn’t have any editing software, so I would film a take and hit ‘stop’ and I would pick up from another angle and start filming again. And try to shoot it like it was edited. So it would all run together.”

He always acted. “I would ‘act’ in the mirror all the time. I was doing that since I was a little kid. Really, just studying movies and picking up on the little bitty things. Really good acting, you have a control over the tiniest movements in your face. What you build, put together to make a performance, is a series of those little movements. It’s a matter of trying to master those physically. Determining when to use what movement, what expressions.”

His acting experience is “a culmination over the years of staging all kinds of movies, all kinds of different actions, different expressions, and trying to figure out the merits and work on myself for my stories. What experiences I want to attach to these characters. I think it’s been a life-long process studying it. I’ll never stop studying it. There’s too much to learn.”

Murphy began writing movie scripts in middle school. “I would write about adventures with my friends and stuff. A lot of it was working on the craft. The wording.”

He played soccer, lacrosse, and rugby in high school, but Murphy wasn’t a big fan of school. “It just felt like prison to me. I was creative outside of it, but I spent most of my time in school just wanting to get out of there.”

Murphy considers Space Licorice, which he made when he was 25, his first actual movie. He acted, directed, and wrote the film. “It was this extra terrestrial parasite movie, but it was very trippy. It was abstract. Kind of a scary movie as well.”

Extraterrestrials take over the body of Tobias, who was played by John Dylan Atkins. He ends up cutting off his arm, which releases an “alien worm-like organism.” “It was a pretty bloody scene.”

Murphy, who played a “man in black,” says it was “up in the air whether I was real or a figment of his imagination” because of Tobias’s hysteria.

Nathan Ross Murphy in ‘Space Licorice.’

“I’m really big into space and astronomy. And horror as well. I’ve just always been fascinated by it. I love learning about space and just the unknown. And I think that’s what attracts me to the supernatural elements, the unknown.  I find it so fun. The ‘what if.’ Unexplored territories.”

Like all of Murphy’s movies, Paul Vinsonhaler did the music score to Space Licorice. “Paul is incredible. He’s our local Hans Zimmer. I think he’s the best composer ever. He’s just so talented. Paul has been my best friend since seventh grade.

 “When I was working on my film journey, Paul was teaching himself music production and composing. He is all self taught. His very first score was my very first movie.”

Space Licorice earned Murphy the Audience Favorite Award at the 2014 Indie Memphis Film Festival. “I was pretty blown away because I wasn’t expecting that. I never am. Especially being my first film.”

Whether he won an award for not, Murphy knew he’d continue making movies. The award was “a step further on the path that I wanted to be on,” he says. “So, I was happy with it. But I took that knowledge and everything I learned making that film and I now could apply it to the next one and make it even better.”

Murphy didn’t just act in his own films. He was in the 2011 motion picture, Losers Take All, which was filmed in Memphis. “I was the jock, the bully in that one.

“It took  place in the ’80s, so I remember the makeup lady saying, ‘Give him the ‘Kevin Bacon.’ That’s what they did to my hair. It was fluffy, puffy.”

Describing his scene with Kyle Gallner and Aaron Himelstein, Murphy says, “They end up saying something I don’t want to hear, I don’t appreciate too much, so I beat them up. And that’s pretty much the gist of it. I’m your typical ‘80s jock. Like I would have gotten killed in an ‘80s horror film really quick.”

Nathan Ross Murphy played a bully in ‘Losers Take All.’ With him is Drew Hollowell.

Murphy describes Bluff, the next movie he wrote, directed, and starred in, as “a heist that goes wrong and everybody starts scheming on one another. Double crossers. You can’t trust a thief. That’s another kind of dark comedy. It starts out like a serious movie and then it kind of takes a turn.”

He plays “James” in the movie. “He’s just one of the thieves. He’s got his own agenda like everybody else.”

Murphy likes to “throw people off” in his movies. In Bluff, he says, “I wanted people to feel like they just walked into a movie theater like an hour and 10 minutes late and everything was just getting ready to climax. And that’s how it starts off.”

He played the lead role in his next movie, Muddy Water. “That’s about a homeless boxer who is trying to get back in the ring, trying to get another fight. And you see there’s something else going on with him. He seems to be off mentally.”

Nathan Ross Murphy in ‘Muddy Water.’

Though he boxed with friends when he was younger, Murphy trained for his role. “As soon as I started training I realized, ‘Oh, I don’t know anything.’ I had zero form. I was terrible. My idea of boxing was, ‘Oh, I’ve got boxing gloves on and I’m punching.’ But I was very wrong.”

Muddy Water earned Murphy his second Audience Award at the 2016 Indie Memphis Film Festival.

That same year, Murphy played the antagonist in Katori Hall’s short film, Arkabutla. “I got to do a one-on-one scene with Khalil Kain, which was great because I grew up watching him. He was in Juice with Tupac (Shakur). He couldn’t have been kinder. He was wonderful. Crazy talented and a joy to work with. We rehearsed lines together and got to grab some sushi. It was pretty surreal.”

Murphy, who along with Eddie Hanratty runs a movie production company, Nimbus, has been keeping busy during the pandemic. He currently is working on Echoes, a short film he began in 2018. “It’s about this couple and a soldier freshly back from Vietnam and they run into some extraterrestrial phenomenon.  They come across a flying saucer in the ‘70s and they actually get abducted. The movie picks back up in modern day and we see what has become of them.

“That movie stars Joe Adler, who is from Grey’s Anatomy, the new season of Twin Peaks, and Maze Runner.

He plans to release Echoes, which also stars Daisy Davis and Keith Johnson, around Halloween. “It’s kind of spooky and it’s got some pretty cool sci-fi elements to it.”

Daisy Davis and Joe Adler in Nathan Ross Murphy’s upcoming ‘Echoes.’

Murphy also has been keeping busy working on the script of his feature film, Die Kreatur. “It’s German for ‘The Creature.’ That’s a creature feature that’s actually first in a series I hope to make one day.”

He’s been “focusing on editing and writing,” Murphy says. “I’m holed up in my room in my house doing this stuff. I’ve been pretty productive through all this. I wrote Die Kreatur and I’m almost done with my second script for Carriers. Hopefully, that will be my first feature film I direct. I want to start production on Carriers next year.”

Making short films has “always been a struggle,” Murphy says. “The stories that come to me naturally are very hard to tell in short film format. So, one of the biggest problems I’ve faced is trying to condense the stories into a film size that’s affordable. Which is a bummer because I end up having to sacrifice a lot of my story to fit into this one mold.”

And, he says, “I think any one of the movies I’ve made should have been a feature, but I work with what I have.”

He continues to act. His most recent project was playing “Paul Carlson” in Bluff City Law, which was filmed in Memphis. “I played a paramedic who hides some evidence. American Pandemic. Episode 7. That was just kind of a nervous guy. He threw some evidence under the rug.”

Murphy enjoys acting, but it’s not his main priority.  “I love acting and I love the art form, but I don’t have to act in my stuff. It’s not as important to me as telling the story. But I think the acting that I’ve learned and the acting that I’ve done helped me big time in the directing. Being able to understand the actors and help them get the best version of the character. That’s come in handy. I feel like because I know I have a lot of experience acting I feel I can better help them navigate through the characters.”

As to whether he wants to stay in Memphis, Murphy says, “I would like to make my first feature here. I’d like to make Carriers here. But I’m not against going any place. I’m pretty wide open. The future is open.

“I’m really one of the go-with-the-flow, easy-type of people. I want to make movies. I want to make features. I have these stories in my head. Now they’re in scripts. I just want to be able to tell them.”

To watch The Indignation of Michael Busby, click here

Nathan Ross Murphy

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Short Films Compete for $15,000 Prize at Oxford Virtual Film Festival

‘In The Pink’ by Katherine Stocker is in competition for the $15,000 Artist Vodka prize in the Oxford Virtual Film Festival.

The Hoka is the name of the trophy given to winners of the Oxford Film Festival. But this week, the Oxford Virtual Film Festival unveils its biggest prize of the season. The Artist Vodka Short Film Prize is determined by votes from the audience. The winning director will receive $15,000. “Artist Vodka continues to be such an important part of our film festival by lending a big financial hand to one of our filmmakers as they have in years past,” says Oxford Film Festival Executive Director Melanie Addington. “And now our audience members can take a real active part in deciding whose name will go on that big check. It adds a rooting interest to the entertainment each one of these three programs delivers in a major way. I can’t wait to see who is going to win that prize.”

Twenty short films are in competition for prize money, including two films by Memphis directors. “The Indignation of Michael Busby” by Nathan Ross Murphy and “Life After Death” by Noah Glenn were both part of the historically great Indie Memphis short film competition in 2019. “Life After Death” was most recently seen on WKNO’s Indie TV compilation show.

Allen Gardner in Nathan Ross Murphy’s short film ‘The Indignation of Michael Busby’

You can sign up to watch the films and vote for your favorite on the Eventive site: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3. For the price of admission, you can also take part in the virtual discussions with the filmmakers. The competition bloc will be available from the Oxford Virtual Film Festival May 29-June 5. 

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2019: The Year in Film

The year 2019 will go down in history as a watershed. Avengers: Endgame made $357 million on its opening weekend, which was not only the biggest take for any film in history, but also the most profitable three days in the history of the American theater industry. It was the year that the industry consolidation entered its endgame, with Disney buying 20th Century Fox and cornering more than 40 percent of the market. Beyond the extruded superhero film-type product, it turned out to be a fantastic year for smaller films with something to say. Here’s my list of the best of a year for the history books.

Worst Picture: Echo in the Canyon Confession: I decided life is too short to watch The Angry Birds Movie 2, so Echo in the Canyon is probably not the worst film released in 2019 — just the worst one I saw. Laurel Canyon was brimming over with creativity in the 1960s and 1970s, with everyone from Frank Zappa to the Eagles living in close, creative quarters. How did this happen? What does it say about the creative process? Jakob Dylan’s excruciatingly dull vanity documentary answers none of those questions. The best/worst moment is when Dylan The Lesser argues with Brian Wilson about the key of a song Wilson wrote.

‘Soul Man’

Best Memphis Film(s): Hometowner Shorts I’ve been competing in and covering the Indie Memphis Hometowner Shorts competition for the better part of two decades, and this year was the strongest field ever. Kyle Taubken’s “Soul Man” won the jury prize in a stacked field that included career-best work by directors Morgan Jon Fox, Kevin Brooks, Abby Myers, Christian Walker, Alexandra Ashley, Joshua Cannon, Daniel Farrell, Nathan Ross Murphy, and Jamey Hatley. The future of Memphis filmmaking is bright.

Apollo 11

Best Documentary: Apollo 11 There was no better use of an IMAX screen this year than Todd Douglas Miller’s direct cinema take on the first moon landing. Pieced together from NASA’s peerless archival collection and contemporary news broadcasts, Apollo 11 is a unique, visceral adventure.

Amazing Grace LLC

Amazing Grace

Best Music: Amazing Grace The year’s other direct cinema triumph is this long-awaited reconstruction of Aretha Franklin’s finest hour. The recording of her 1972 gospel album was filmed (badly) by director Sydney Pollack, but the reconstruction by producer Alan Elliott made a virtue of the technical flaws to highlight one of the greatest performances in the history of American music.

King Ghidorah, Godzilla: King of the Monsters

Best Performance by a Nonhuman: King Ghidorah, Godzilla: King of the Monsters Godzilla: King of the Monsters was a tasty treat for megafauna fetishists. Godzilla, the Cary Grant of kaiju, looked dashing, but he was upstaged by his three-headed arch enemy. King Ghidorah, aka Monster Zero, whose pronoun preference is presumably “they,” is magnificently menacing, but versatile enough do a little comedy schtick while pulverizing Boston.

Eddie Murphy as Rudy Ray Moore

Slickest Picture: Dolemite Is My Name Eddie Murphy’s comeback picture is also Memphis director Craig Brewer’s best film since The Poor & Hungry. Murphy pours himself into the role of Rudy Ray Moore, the comedian who transformed himself into a blaxploitation hero. The excellent script by Ed Wood scribes Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski hums along to music by Memphian Scott Bomar. Don’t miss the cameo by Bobby Rush!

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

MVP: Brad Pitt Every performance in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is great, but Brad Pitt pulls the movie together as aging stuntman Cliff Booth. It was a performance made even more remarkable by the fact that he single-handedly saved Ad Astra from being a drudge. In 2019, Pitt proved he’s a character actor stuck in a movie star’s body.

Beanie Felstien as Molly and Kaitlyn Dever as Amy in Booksmart

Miss Congeniality: Booksmart I unabashedly loved every minute of Olivia Wilde’s teenage comedy tour de force. Kaitlyn Dever and Beanie Feldstein are a comedy team of your dreams, and Billie Lourd’s Spicoli impression deserves a Best Supporting Actress nomination. Booksmart is a cult classic in the making.

Chris Evans in Knives Out.

Best Screenplay: Knives Out In a bizarre twist worthy of Rian Johnson’s sidewinder of a screenplay, Knives Out may end up being remembered for memes of Chris Evans looking snuggly in a cable knit sweater. The writer/director of Star Wars: The Last Jedi dives into Agatha Christie mysteries and takes an all-star cast with him. They don’t make ’em like Knives Out anymore, but they should.

Lupita Nyong’o in Us

Best Performance: Lupita Nyong’o, Us If Jordan Peele is our new Hitchcock, Get Out is his Rear Window, an intensely focused and controlled genre piece. Us is his Vertigo, a more complex work where the artist is discovering along with the audience. Lupita Nyong’o’s dueling performances as both the PTSD-plagued soccer mom Adelaide and her sinister doppleganger Red is one for the ages.

Parasite

Best Picture: Parasite Bong Joon-ho’s Palme d’Or winner absolutely refuses to go the way you think it’s going to go. There was no better expression of the paranoid schizophrenic mood of 2019 than this black comedy from Korea about a family of grifters who infiltrate a wealthy family, only to find they’re not the only ones with secrets. It was a stiff competition, but Parasite emerges as the best of the year.

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Indie Memphis Day 1: Hometowner Shorts Will Rock Your World

C.W. Robertson, Rheannan Watson, and Syderek Wilson in ‘Always Open: The Eureka Hotel’.

My advice to people who are first-time film festival goers is always the same: Go to a short-film program. The movies you will see at a film festival are different from what you normally see in a theater or on your favorite streaming service. That’s the point. For the audience, film festivals are communal events dedicated to discovery. But not every film is for everyone. That is also the point. For filmmakers, film festivals are about finding your audience. It’s a two-way street. The big advantage of a shorts program is that, if you see something you don’t like, it will be over soon, and you’ll get to see something different that you might like better.

That probably won’t be the case with Indie Memphis’ opening night at Crosstown Theater. After the opener, Harriet, is the first of two blocs of the Hometowner Narrative Shorts competition, which has the strongest field in years. The screenplay for the first film “Always Open: The Eureka Hotel” secured writer/director Jamey Hatley the first ever Indie Memphis Black Filmmaker Fellowship for Screenwriting. The Eureka Hotel has five stars on Trip Advisor, but it’s invisible from the outside — unless you have a reservation. The proprietor, Mrs. Landlady (Rosalyn R. Ross) seems to exist out of time, always there to help folks in distress, such as a young woman in trouble (Rheannan Watson) who is being forced to head north by her father (Syderek Watson) and brother (C.W. Robertson).

Darian Conly, aka A Weirdo From Memphis, and Ron Gephart in ‘Life After Death’

You think your worries are over once you’ve passed on? Sorry, no. Noah Glenn’s “Life After Death” slayed at this year’s Memphis Film Prize. Written by Glenn and Julia McCloy, shot by Andrew Trent Fleming, the film stars Sean Harrison Jones as a man attending a support group for the legally deceased. The comedy also features rapper A Weirdo From Memphis in his acting debut.

‘Now The Sun Asks To Rise’

“Now The Sun Asks To Rise” is the latest beautiful and tragic short from writer/director Joshua Cannon. John Sneed and Joy Murphy star as a parents overcome by grief for their daughter. Their sadness touches everything, even the musician father’s love of music. Beautifully shot by Nate Packer and Sam Leathers and deftly edited by Laura Jean Hocking, this one is a real heartstring tugger.

Shi Smith in ‘Tagged’

“Tagged” by director Daniel Ferrell was the winner of one of last year’s Indie Grants for narrative shorts. Shi Smith stars as a brash graffiti artist who never saw a blank wall she didn’t want to decorate. On the run from the law and the local gangs patrolling their turf, she just won’t quit until the art is finished. The film features some ace photography from Ryan Earl Parker.

Kharmyn Aanesah in ‘The Bee’

I haven’t seen everything screening at Indie Memphis 2019, but I would be shocked if the best performance by a child actor came from someone other than Kharmyn Aanesah in “The Bee.” Director Alexandria Ashley’s finely tuned film features Aanesah as a young woman named McKenzie who is obsessed with preparing for her school’s upcoming spelling bee. But when a jealous classmate makes a cutting remark, she finds herself suddenly self-conscious about her appearance. This incisive film, which tackles head-on the brains vs. beauty dilemma that society imposes on young woman, is supported by an equally great performance by Chontel Willis as McKinzie’s long-suffering mother.

Nathan Ross Murphy in ‘The Indignation of Michael Busby’

You can see actor Nathan Ross Murphy in the Hometowner feature Cold Feet. But he’s never been better than in the film he wrote and directed for this year’s festival, “The Indignation of Michael Busby.” He plays the title role, a Walter Mitty-type salaryman who has a secret crush on his co-worker Rose (Rosalyn R. Ross, of course) is dismissed by co-worker Nick (Jacob Wingfeld), and bullied by his boss Tom (Allen C. Gardner from Cold Feet, returning the favor). He escapes into fantasy, but soon reality itself breaks down, and a shift in perspective tells a very different story. Well shot by Eddie Hanratty, it’s a strong closer to the night’s program.

Come back to Memphis Flyer.com for continuing coverage of Indie Memphis 2019.

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Death Grip

One day in 2007, Sam Bahre was sitting in a packed movie theater waiting for the show to begin, when suddenly, the lights came on. “I’m part of the Columbine generation,” he says. “We grew up with mass shooting drills and such. When something like that happens — out of the ordinary in public — I get anxiety, thinking, ‘What if this is one of those situations?’ I start looking at the exits. Nothing happened that night, obviously. But it put the idea in my head.”

The idea became I Filmed Your Death, an ambitious work of meta-horror with a long and eventful gestation period. “Throughout 2008, I wrote the script. I shot it then, originally, but ended up scrapping that entire version of it.”

After I Filmed Your Death‘s false start, Bahre, a Connecticut native, spent the last two years of his time at the U of M film program rewriting the script. “Completely re-doing it helped me understand what I could get out of the characters and the world,” he says.

After casting the film and raising $10,000 on Kickstarter, it was time to start again. “Half of the cast and crew were from Memphis. Some of them quit their jobs and drove up to the middle of nowhere in Connecticut, where we all lived in a cabin together,” he says. “That’s where we shot it.”

Memphis actor Nathan Ross Murphy stars in writer/director Sam Bahre’s I Filmed Your Death.

In the film, Pierce Lyndale (Michael Bruce) is a struggling, small-time filmmaker in a rural town that is still reeling from a mass shooting that took place a couple of years before. Pierce discovers that the shooter, Albert Ridgeway (Alex Bahre), had an accomplice who helped him keep a video diary of the time leading up to the crime. He takes the killer’s footage and combines it with reconstructions to create his own film about the tragedy, which he intends to broadcast on the local cable access television channel. But when a local talk-show host named Andy Bones (Michael Horse) finds out about the film, he raises a ruckus condemning the director and his “heartless” production.

Bahre says he identifies with Pierce: “He was basically a version of myself if everything had gone wrong 15 years ago, if I had never left my small town and just kept making my movies with my friends. I think of him as a shadow self. And that’s what this whole process has been like for me — creating a shadow self, and then creating this whole play world and then watching what happens when he’s let loose.”

Pierce is stunned by the reaction his work produces before it’s even released, but that’s nothing compared to what happens once the film, which is also called I Filmed Your Death, is revealed. A satanic LSD murder cult inspired by Ridgeway decides to start their latest murder spree against Pierce’s cast. “I like to think of this as The Muppet Movie in reverse,” Bahre says. “It’s Kermit making a movie in the beginning and then losing all of his friends.”

I Filmed Your Death splinters into a funhouse mirror of competing realities, reflecting the feedback loop between acts of shocking violence in real life that are rehashed in the media, inspiring copycats and twisting belief systems into unrecognizable shapes. What’s the line between a drug-fueled death cult and a film crew? “It’s a very thin line in this movie,” Bahre says.

The director got former Monkee Peter Tork and cult-movie icon Lloyd Kaufman to guest star in his labor of love, but he says that Twin Peaks actor Michael Horse was his biggest get. Horse came out of semi-retirement to play what Bahre describes as a “Bill O’Reilley type character. “My parents were both huge fans,” Bahre says. “It was like I was raised in a Twin Peaks cult.”

Bahre says the 11-year journey was an unforgettable experience. “I basically went through maturation into adulthood. But instead of doing all of the regular stuff, I made this movie. I’m 100 percent a different person from when I started it. … All of the advances I’ve made as a person have been because of this movie, and also hindered by this movie in some degree.”

It is the dedication of his cast and crew, some of whom he has been friends with since elementary school, that moves the director the most. “It was an extremely magical experience — all these people coming in and giving it their complete all, for no other reason than they just wanted to.”

I Filmed Your Death
screens Friday, April 20th and Saturday, April 21st at Malco Studio on the Square.

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Indie Memphis Wraps 20th Anniversary Film Festival With Record Attendance

In Thom Pain, the film which opened the 2017 Indie Memphis Film Festival last Wednesday, Rainn Wilson repeatedly teases the audience with the prospect of a raffle for valuable prizes, but never delivers. On Monday, after more than 200 film screenings at the Halloran Centre, Studio on the Square, Hattiloo Theater, Circuit Playhouse, Playhouse on the Square, and the Malco Ridgeway Cinema Grill, the closing night Memphis Grizzlies Grizz Grant screening finally delivered on the promise of a raffle.

Indie Memphis’ Executive Director Ryan Watt says that the twentieth anniversary festival set a record for attendance by attracting more than 12,000 filmgoers during the past week. A program of encore screenings, technically still part of the festival, at the Malco Collierville Towne Cinema this weekend will push that number even higher.

Good Grief directors Melissa Anderson Sweazy (left) and Laura Jean Hocking (right) pose on the red carpet with Indie Memphis Film Festival Executive Director Ryan Watt.

At the Audience Awards, presented at the closing night reception, the Memphis-made documentary Good Grief completed a rare sweep of Hometowner feature awards. The film, directed by Melissa Anderson Sweazy and Laura Jean Hocking, was previously awarded Best Hometowner Feature on Saturday night at a raucous awards ceremony at Circuit Playhouse, as well as the Audience Choice for the Poster Contest. Previous films that have won both audience and jury awards include Phoebe Driscoll’s Pharaohs Of Memphis in 2014 and G.B. Shannon’s “Fresh Skweezed” in 2011. The record for most prizes won at Indie Memphis by a single film belongs to Morgan Jon Fox’s OMG/HAHAHA, which won five trophies in 2009.

The other big winner to emerge from this year’s festival is Matteo Servente. The Memphis director won two short film prizes for two different short films: “An Accidental Drowning” won the MLK 50 prize for Civil Rights-related films, and “We Go On” won the Hometowner Short Film competition. “We Go On”, with a screenplay by Memphis writer and Burke’s Books owner Corey Mesler, had previously won top honors at the Memphis Film Prize. Servente who came to Memphis from Italy ten years ago, dedicated his wins to the cause of immigrant’s rights, saying “This is what happens when you don’t build that wall!” 

Hometowner Narrative Short Audience Award Winner Nathan Ross Murphy receives his trophy from Indie Memphis’ Ryan Watt.

The Narrative Feature award went to Cold November by Karl Jacob, and directors Landen Van Soest and Jeremy Levine took home the Documentary Feature award with For Akheem. The Hometowner Documentary Short award was won by “Blackout Day” by director Graham Uhelski.

Audience Award for Narrative Feature went to Mark Webber’s Flesh and Blood, while the audience chose Sideman by Scott Rosenbaum for Documentary Feature. The audience’s favorite Hometowner Narrative Feature was Nathan Ross Murphy’s “Muddy Water” and Lauren Squires Ready won the Documentary Short audience nod with “Bike Lee. Katori Hall’s “Arkabutla” was the audience choice among the MLK 50 films.

Good Grief and the award-winning short films will be on the program this Saturday at the Malco Collierville Towne Cinema. For more information visit the Indie Memphis website.

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Memphis Filmmakers Allen Gardner and Brad Ellis Get The Band Back Together For Cold Feet

Memphis filmmakers Allen Gardner and Brad Ellis had such a good experience working on their last feature film, Bad, Bad Men, that they wanted to do it again. “I just wanted to get the old band back together for a new movie,” says Gardner.

Cold Feet

While in post production on Bad, Bad Men, Gardner had an idea for a follow up. It had been years since the long time partners made their last horror movie, and Ellis was thirsty for some onscreen blood. Gardner had been scoring with funny screenplays lately, so why not a horror comedy? Gardner was on a layover on a flight from Los Angeles, where he now lives, to Memphis when the setup came to him: A bachelor party in a haunted house.

Cold Feet takes eight actors who have worked with Old School Pictures before and locks them in a rambling, Modernist East Memphis bachelor pad, complete with hot tub, pool, and disco room. “Allen had the story in mind, but we tailored the scenes to match the layout of the house,” says Ellis.

The actors, who include Bad, Bad Men’s Nathan Ross Murphy and Adam Burns, had their parts chosen by chance. “We had a cold read before the first Memphis screening of Bad, Bad Men,” says Gardner. “It was really exciting to me, because none of the guys had read it before. So instead of putting names into a hat, we put names on the bottom of shot glasses. Whatever shot you got, that was the role you played. I was curious to find out who was going to be who. It was like Christmas.”

Cold Feet

“That was our way of putting a lot of trust in the actors,” says Ellis. “It worked out for the best. Two weeks into the production, and you couldn’t imagine any of these guys being anyone else.”

Joining the core cast is Lindsey Roberts and Kenneth Farmer as cops who crack down when the party gets a little out of hand. “Lindsey is playing the straight man, essentially, which can be a thankless role, but without that balance, you have nothing,” says Ellis.

“Hearing her do the hard-nosed cop with Kenneth, who is just so on the other side of that equation, has been hilarious,” says producer Gabe Arredondo, another Bad, Bad Men veteran.

Cold Feet was shot over the course of three weeks last month. Now the producers have started a crowdfunding campaign to help with post-production. For more information, visit the campaign page on IndieGoGO.

Cold Feet

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Memphis Comedy Bad, Bad Men Premieres on Amazon Video

Bad, Bad Men, an independent comedy made by Memphians Allen Gardner and Brad Ellis, is now available on Amazon streaming video.

Drew Smith, Allan Gardner, and Matt Mercer in Bad, Bad Men.

Gardner, who wrote and co-directed the film, stars as Josh, a schlubby, down on his luck real estate agent. After Josh is humiliated in a coffee shop by a rude stockbroker named Jerry (Adam Burns), he is persuaded by his co-workers Royce (Drew Smith) and Steven (Matt Mercer) to find the offending jerk and give him a piece of his mind. They enlist Rex (Gabe Arradondo), a comically shady ex cop, to track Jerry to his office, where they confront him and his cronies, beer reps Clive (Matthew Gilliam) and Owen (Nathan Ross Murphy). From there, things spin wildly out of control, with a Cohen Brothers-esque kidnapping of Josh’s would-be girlfriend Natalie (Maria Waslenko) and a confrontation with an omnipotent bookie (Richard Speight Jr.).

Gardner and Ellis expertly skewer the fragile male ego and the layered absurdities of their suburban Memphis setting. Gardner gives a nuanced comic performance as the terminally insecure office drone who still lives with his mom, played by his actual mother, Mae Jean Gardner. Smith has a field day as the perpetually aggrieved Royce, who is working out his own ex-wife issues as he plots petty suburban revenge. On the other hand, Mercer’s Steve is a stable family man who gets drawn into the hi jinx for a little adventure but ends up with more on the line than anyone. Memphis comedy legend Dennis Phillippi provides an indelible cameo as the unluckiest man in the bowling alley.

Bad, Bad Men is a briskly paced, often hilarious comedy, expertly executed by Ellis and Gardner, veteran Memphis independent filmmakers with multiple Indie Memphis trophies on their shelves. The release on Amazon, available free to all Prime members, gives the film exposure to an enormous national audience. You can read an interview with the duo as part of the Flyer‘s Indie Memphis 2016 cover story.

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Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1)

2016 was a good year for music videos by Memphis artists, musicians and filmmakers alike. I resist making a ranked list of movies in my year-end wrap up, but I know the crowd demands them, so every year I indulge my nerdery by ranking the music videos that have appeared in the Flyer’s Music Video Monday blog series. Since I sometimes go back into the vault for MVM posts, this competition is limited to videos that were uploaded since my Top Ten of 2015 post. (This proved to be a source of disappointment, since Breezy Lucia’s brilliant video for Julien Baker’s “Something” was in the top five until I discovered it had been uploaded in 2014).  Last year, I did a top ten. This year, there were so many good videos, I decided to do a top 20.

Eileen Townsend in Caleb Sweazy’s ‘Bluebird Wings’

A good music video creates a synergy between the music and the action on the screen. It doesn’t have to have a story, but arresting images, fascinating motion through the frame, and meticulous editing are musts.   I watched all of the videos and assigned them scores on both quality of video and quality of song. This was brought the cream to the top, but my scoring system proved to be inadequately granular when I discovered seven videos tied for first place, five tied for second, and three tied for third, forcing me to apply a series of arbitrary and increasingly silly criteria until I had an order I could live with. So if you’re looking for objectivity, you won’t find it here. As they say, it’s an honor to just be on the list.

20. Light Beam Rider – “A Place To Sleep Among The Creeps”
Director: Nathan Ross Murphy

Leah Beth Bolton-Wingfield, Jacob Wingfield have to get past goulish doorman Donald Myers in this Halloween party nightmare. Outstanding production design breaks this video onto the list.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1)

19. Richard James – “Children Of The Dust”
Director: George Hancock

The Special Rider got trippy with this sparkling slap of psilocybin shimmer.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (2)


18. Preauxx “Humble Hustle”
Director: FaceICU

Preauxx is torn between angels and his demons in this banger.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (4)


17. Faux Killas “Give It To Me”
Director: Moe Nunley

Let’s face it. We’re all suckers for stop motion animation featuring foul mouthed toys. But it’s the high energy thrashy workout of a song that elevates this one.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (3)

16. Caleb Sweazy “Bluebird Wings”
Director: Melissa Anderson Sweazy

Actress (and former Flyer writer) Eileen Townsend steals the show as a noir femme fatale beset by second thoughts.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (5)

15. Matt Lucas “East Side Nights/Home”
Director: Rahimhotep Ishakarah

The two halves of this video couldn’t be more different, but somehow it all fits together. I liked this video a lot better when I revisited it than when I first posted a few months ago, so this one’s a grower.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (6)

14. Dead Soldiers ft. Hooten Hollers “16 Tons”
Directors: Michael Jasud & Sam Shansky

There’s nothing fancy in this video, just some stark monochrome of the two combined bands belting out the Tennessee Ernie Ford classic. But it’s just what the song needs. This is the perfect example of how simplicity is often a virtue for music videos.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (7)


13. Angry Angles “Things Are Moving”
Director: 9ris 9ris

New Orleans-based video artist 9ris 9ris created abstract colorscapes with vintage video equipment for this updated Goner re-release of Jay Reatard’s early-century collaboration with rocker/model/DJ Alix Brown and Destruction Unit’s Ryan Rousseau.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (8)

12. Chris Milam “Tell Me Something I Don’t Know”
Director:Chris Milam

Milam and Ben Siler riffed on D.A. Pennebaker and Bob Dylan’s groundbreaking promo clip for “Subterranean Homesick Blues”, and the results are alternately moving and hilarious.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (9)

11. Deering & Down “Spaced Out Like An Astronaut”
Director: Lahna Deering

In a departure for the Memphis by way of Alaska folk rockers, the golden voiced Deering lets guitarist Down take the lead while she put on the Major Tom helmet and created this otherworldly video.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (10)

Tune in on Monday for the Top Ten of 2016!

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Strong Local Offerings Lead Indie Memphis Lineup

Indie Memphis announced its full lineup for the 2016 festival at a bustling preview party at the Rec Room last night. 

Bad, Bad Men,

The most striking feature of the 150-film collection is the strongest presence by local filmmakers since the early-2000s heyday of DIY movies. The Hometowner Competition boasts six feature films, including Old School Pictures’ Bad, Bad Men, a wild comedy of kidnapping and petty revenge by directors Brad Ellis and Allen Gardner, who have racked up several past Indie Memphis wins. Bluff City indie film pioneer Mike McCarthy will debut his first feature-length documentary Destroy Memphis, a strikingly heartfelt film about the fight to save Libertyland and the Zippin Pippen rollercoaster. Four first-time entrants round out the Hometowner competition: Lakethen Mason’s contemporary Memphis music documentary Verge, Kathy Lofton’s healthcare documentary I Am A Caregiver, Flo Gibs look at lesbian and trangender identity Mentality: Girls Like Us, and Madsen Minax’s magical realist tale of lunch ladies and gender confusion Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vacuum. 

‘Silver Elves’


Usually, Hometowner short films comprise a single, popular, programming block; This year, there are enough qualified films to fill four blocks. Sharing the opening night of the festival with the previously announced Memphis documentary The Invaders is a collection of short films produced by recipients of the Indie Grant program, including G.B. Shannon’s family dramedy “Broke Dick Dog”, Sara Fleming’s whimsical tour of Memphis “Carbike”, Morgan Jon Fox’s impressionistic dramatization of the 1998 disappearance of Rhodes student Matthew Pendergrast “Silver Elves”; Indie Grant patron Mark Jones’ “Death$ In A Small Town”, actor/director Joseph Carr’s “Returns”, experimental wizard Ben Siler (working under the name JEBA)’ “On The Sufferings Of The World”, and “How To Skin A Cat”, a road trip comedy by Laura Jean Hocking and yours truly. 

Other standouts in the Hometowner Shorts category include three offerings from Melissa Sweazy: the fairy tale gone dark “Teeth”; “A.J”, a documentary about a teenage boy dealing with grief after a tragic accident, co-directed with Laura Jean Hocking; and “Rundown: The Fight Against Blight In Memphis. Edward Valibus’ soulful dark comedy “Calls From The Unknown”, Nathan Ross Murphy’s “Bluff”, and Kevin Brooks’ “Marcus”, all of which recently competed for the Louisiana Film Prize, will be at the festival, as will Memphis Film Prize winner McGehee Montheith’s “He Coulda Gone Pro”. 

The revived Music Video category features videos from Marco Pave, Star & Micey, Preauxx, The Bo-Keys, Vending Machine, Nots, Caleb Sweazy, Faith Evans Ruch, Marcella & Her Lovers, John Kilzer & Kirk Whalum, Alex duPonte, Alexis Grace, and Zigadoo Moneyclips. 

Internationally acclaimed films on offer include legendary director Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson, starring Adam Driver; Manchester By The Sea from Kenneth Lonergan; and Indie Memphis alum Sophia Takal’s Always Shine. Documentary cinematographer Kirsten Johnson’s spectacular, world-spanning Cameraperson, assembled over the course of her 25 year career, promises to be a big highlight.

Michelle Williams and Casey Affleck in Manchester By The Sea

The full schedule, as well as tickets to individual movies and two levels of festival passes, can be found at the Indie Memphis web site.