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Music Video Monday: Light Beam Rider

This Music Video Monday invites you to an exclusive party. 

When Oxford/Nashville band Light Beam Rider wanted to film a video for their song “A Place To Sleep Among The Creeps”, they turned to their old friend Nathan Ross Murphy.

“I’ve actually known [singer/guitarist] Thomas [Swift] since we were kids, fresh on the high school scene in Collierville. So I guess you could say this collaboration was just a matter of time.” says Murphy. “When Thomas sent me the song the band wanted to put visuals to, I was ecstatic—not just because it’s a great song but because it took me on a journey. It’s exactly what I love about LBR. Their music is the kind you daydream to.”

Murphy, who can be seen in the upcoming Old School Pictures comedy Bad, Bad Men, says he based the video on a short film concept he had been developing. “I immediately began to see this story unfolding where this haunted, centuries-old party collects victims through temptations of grandeur. I imagined these poor souls whose selfish desires outweigh the thinness of the facade around them. It’s a trap. Inevitably, they become doomed to an eternity of fake smiles—condemned to welcome the next unsuspecting victim with a martini in hand, and all at the doing of one questionably villainous Doorman deity played by my friend and fellow actor Donald Meyers. The visual goal was to create a ghostly, Victorian atmosphere that appears to have swallowed a collection of guests spanning various decades. This was achieved by the superb talents and crew contributions of Ryan Earl Parker, Jordan Danelz, Mona Kaiserseder, Blake Heimbach, Lauren Cavanaugh, Stephanie Marie Green, and Trevor Finney as well as an amazing mixture of friends and strangers-turned-friends who lent their time and cooperation so that we could make some cool art.” Here’s the video, featuring actors Leah Beth Bolton-Wingfield, Jacob Wingfield, and Jesse Davis. 

Music Video Monday: Light Beam Rider

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Vending Machine

This week’s Music Video Monday is a hot mess. 

For the latest record by Vending Machine, Robby Grant commissioned several Memphis directors to make videos, several of which have been featured on Music Video Monday. The latest one, which makes its world premiere today, is for the album’s title track “Let The Little Things Go”. Director G.B. Shannon makes ingenious use of splitscreen and multiple images to tell a harrowing, and surprisingly complex, story of love gone wrong. Brandi Gist, Nathan Ross Murphy, Jamie Harmon, Leah Keys, and Drew Fleming star in one of the best music videos we’ve seen this year.  

Music Video Monday: Vending Machine

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

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Old School Pictures Reveals Bad, Bad Men Trailer

Brad Ellis and Allen C. Gardner have been making movies together since they were in high school. Their features The Path Of Fear (2002), Act One (2005), Being Awesome (2013) have all won multiple awards at the Indie Memphis Film Festival and elsewhere, and their vampire movie Daylight Fades (2010) received international distribution.

(left to right) Drew Smith, Allen C. Gardner, Matt Mercer, Matthew Gilliam, and Nathan Ross Murphy in Bad, Bad Men

Now they have released the first trailer for their new comedy, Bad Bad Men, which stars Gardner as a schlubby real estate agent who is bullied at a coffee shop. But his scheme to get revenge on his petty tormentors backfires, and leads to an After Hours-style adventure in the Memphis underworld. The film, which was shot in Memphis last August by cinematographer Ryan Parker, also stars local actors Drew Smith, Dennis Phillppi, Nathan Ross Murphy, Donald Myers, Markus Seaberry, and singer Alexis Grace. The film is currently in post production with Laura Jean Hocking as the editor, and we should expect to see it hit the festival circuit in the fall. 

Old School Pictures Reveals Bad, Bad Men Trailer

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Pharaohs Rule Indie Memphis Audience Awards

Dance documentary Pharaohs Of Memphis completed a sweep of the 2014 Indie Memphis Hometowner Awards by taking home the Audience Award for Best Feature, a remarkable achievement for first-time director Phoebe Driscoll, a 22-year-old senior at Rhodes College. The just-announced awards were determined by audience members who gave the films they saw over the four-day festival grades from A to F.

Taking home the Best Narrative Feature award was The Imitation Game. Directed by Morton Tyldum, the film stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Alan Turing, who helped develop the modern computer while breaking German codes during World War II. 

The Documentary Feature Audience Award went to Art & Craft, the story of art forger Mark Landis, which was directed by the team of Sam Cullman, Jennifer Graussman, and Mark Becker. 

The Bravest, the Boldest – Teaser Trailer from Moon Molson on Vimeo.

Pharaohs Rule Indie Memphis Audience Awards

Among the short films, the audience chose Moon Molson’s “The Bravest, The Boldest” as Best Narrative; “Leadway” by Robbie Fisher and Dudley Percy Olsson as Best Documentary, while “Space Licorice” by Nathan Ross Murphy took home the Hometowner Short award.