Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

On Location: Memphis Brings 15 Films to Clayborn Temple

In this month’s Memphis Magazine, I wrote about the rebirth of the Clayborn Temple. As part of the program to breathe new life into the Downtown landmark, the On Location: Memphis Film Festival is sponsoring a 15 week film series.

Sebastian Banks of Black Rock Revival in Verge

The series kicked off last Thursday with the acclaimed Fruitvale Station, and most of the works screening in the storied sanctuary share some element of social awareness in their theme. This week’s offering is Verge, a music documentary by Lakethon Mason that made its debut at last year’s Indie Memphis Film Festival. Verge tells the story of several independent Memphis musicians struggling to get ahead in the modern music industry, including Black Rock Revival, Faith Evans Ruch, Nick Black, and Marco Pave.

VERGE:MEMPHIS trailer from oddly buoyant productions on Vimeo.

On Location: Memphis Brings 15 Films to Clayborn Temple

The screening is free to the public, and kicks off at 6:00 PM at Clayborn Temple, 294 Hernando Street.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

On Location: Memphis Reaches Out

The cultural role of the film festival has changed quite a bit since the Memphis International Film Festival first screened in 1999. The festival has already reinvented itself once when it was renamed On Location: Memphis, and festival director Angela D. Green says adapting to the changing filmic landscape is never far from her mind. “It’s a question I’ve been grappling with ever since I’ve taken over the position. With my being an entertainment attorney by trade, the business side of the industry has pretty much been my forte. When looking at the film and music community landscape here, opportunities and ways of creating pathways toward monetizing the work, the content that is created by the filmmakers here and the musicians here, that’s where we can always use additional help in our direction … We’re always looking at creating programming that has that in mind. They both can be economic drivers and make a direct economic impact on the lives of the filmmakers and artists who are here. That’s good for the whole community.”

Green is in her second year as director. “It’s a volunteer position,” she says. “I enjoy just working with the artists and filmmakers and seeing what we can do for the film and music community. We’re trying to make an impact by bringing the international world to Memphis and showcasing them here.”

After kicking off with a party the night of Thursday, August 11th at the Hard Rock Cafe, screenings start at Malco Studio on the Square on Friday at noon with a block of documentary shorts. At 6 p.m., the Bollywood hit Nil Battey Sannata (The New Classmate) will make its American debut. Green says the festival board made a decision to reach out to Memphis’ sizable Indian community. “Our international liaison Ruth Talaiver actually traveled over to India to make connections for us in Bollywood,” Green says.

Local flavor on Friday night is provided by The Wizard of Beale Street. Director David Goudge created this documentary about the life of the Beale Street Flippers’ Rod Bonds, tracing his story from the triumphs of his halftime-shattering street acrobatic troupe to the tragedy of the shooting that forced his retirement from performance at age 24.

The night concludes with another documentary, Accidental Courtesy: Daryl Davis, Race & America by director Matthew Ornstein. Davis is an African-American, professional pianist with an odd hobby: He seeks out and befriends Klu Klux Klan members. “We think it’s a timely film that will spark some serious conversations,” Green says.

Also on Friday night is the second year of an event unique to On Location: Memphis. Reel Art picks a pair of Memphis artists to collaborate on a film-themed piece. This year’s artists Sir Walt and Marino Joyner-Wilson will unveil their work at South Main’s Art Village Gallery, and the winners of July’s On Location: Memphis shorts competition will screen their work. “We’re bringing together visual art, music, and film in one event,” Green says.

The Five Heartbeats director Robert Townsend will be on hand to celebrate the 25th anniversary of his beloved soul musical.

Screenings at Studio on the Square continue on Saturday, culminating with the 25th anniversary screening of The Five Heartbeats. The musical was a sleeper hit in 1991, and it has accumulated a sizable cult following over the intervening years. Writer, director, and star Robert Townsend and co-star Leon Robinson will be feted with a red-carpet reception and screening at 7 p.m. “It’s become classic soul cinema,” Green says. “People are really excited, so when the opportunity presented itself, we thought that was something the community would really enjoy.”

For a complete schedule of the weekend’s events, visit onlocationmemphis.org, where festival passes from basic to VIP level are available.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Memphis Film Prize Launch Party Tonight

Since its inception in 2012, the Louisiana Film Prize has become a sought-after accolade for up-and-coming directors, and its generous purse is one reason why. Now director Gregory Kellnberg has teamed up with Fuel Film’s David Merrill to bring a version of the short film competition to the Bluff City. 

“We are incredibly excited to bring the Film Prize to one of my favorite cities in the country,” says Gregory Kallenberg,founder and Executive Director of the Film Prize Foundation. “Memphis has an amazing vibe and has a rich history inindependent filmmaking. We can’t wait to see the amazing work that will come out of the Memphis FIlm Prize.”

Tonight, a party at Local on the Square, Memphis Film Prize will celebrate the inaugural call for entries announcement. Filmmakers have until June 14 to submit a rough cut of their short film, which will vie on  for a $10,000 prize and a chance to go to Shreveport for the Louisiana Film Prize competition, which carries a grand prize of $50,000. The Memphis competition will be held on August 12-14, in conjunction with the On Location: Memphis film festival.

“The Memphis Film Prize presents a great opportunity for filmmakers and for the city of Memphis, to foster emerging talent and incentivize filmmaking while continuing to expand a network of film industry connections started by the Louisiana Film Prize.” says David Merrill of FuelFilm.

The kickoff party is tonight at Local on the Square at 6 PM. 

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

On Location: Memphis Winners Announced

This weekend’s On Location: Memphis film festival attracted talent from all over the country. At a Sunday banquet at Overton Square’s Atrium, the festival’s winning films were announced by the judging panel, comprised of experienced directors, writers, and producers. 

Director Kathleen Davison (left) and Chris Chee (right) star in the On Location: Memphis award winning film Primrose Lane

The winner of Best Narrative Feature was Kathleen Davison’s well-balanced supernatural thriller Primrose Lane. 

The documentary award went to Jon J. Whelan’s Stink!, in which the director tries to find out what specific chemicals are in common household products. 

For the short films, the live action award went to “StarMan”, the story of a washed-up daredevil by Josima Roig. The animated award was claimed by the Turkish production “Golden Shot”, director Gokalp Gonen’s film about household appliances with dreams of freedom. Chris Gero’s “The Gift” took home the music video award. 

The Lipscomb Pitts Breakfast Cllub-sponsored Memphis Rocks prize went to Becky Wauford’s “Memphis is Rockin'”, about the Christian Brothers University Honors Program. 

On Location: Memphis is an all-volunteer-run film festival that is celebrating its 16th year of bringing new and diverse films to Memphis. 

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

On Location: Memphis 2015

For the 16th year since beginning life as the Memphis International Film Festival, On Location: Memphis will be bringing films to the Mid-South. “We’re all volunteers, from the president on down,” says Public Relations Director Dan Hodgdon, who has been working with the festival for three years. “I’ve met a lot of cool filmmakers and musicians and seen all kinds of projects that you might not ever know about otherwise, from short films to documentaries to feature films. It’s been really interesting to meet such a broad cross section of really talented and creative people.”

Introducing the filmmakers to their audiences, and vice versa, is a big part of the On Location experience. “We aren’t officially having an opening night movie this year. Instead, we’re having a mix-and-mingle preview party at the Hard Rock Cafe. There will be a lot of trailers and filmmakers there, and an opportunity for people to get to know each other,” Hodgdon says.

Music from all over the world plays a big part in this year’s festival. “Over the years, we’ve received a lot of entries for music-related films, whether features or documentaries or shorts,” Hodgdon says. “A lot of it comes from Memphis having the history and reputation as a music city. It’s across the board, from hip-hop to country, blues … a little bit of everything. We decided to embrace the music component.”

Most of the music-related films will be screening at Cooper Walker Place, the community center located at 1015 S. Cooper in the former Galloway United Methodist Church. In 1954, the church was the location of Johnny Cash’s first live performance with the Tennessee Two. On Saturday, Joanne Cash, Johnny’s youngest sister, will be on hand for the screening of her documentary I Do Believe. “It’s a narrative of her life, from growing up in Arkansas to living here in Memphis and then being involved in the Cowboy Church in Nashville,” Hodgdon says.

Next on Sunday, a different kind of music documentary will screen at Cooper Walker Place. The Record Man tells the story of independent music mogul, Henry Stone, whose TK Records was the home of some of the best disco hitmakers of the 1970s, including KC and the Sunshine Band and Memphian Anita Ward, who had a No. 1 hit on the label in 1979 with “Ring My Bell.” Ward will be on hand for the screening.

The weekend of music-related films at will kick off with the Blues Reel Review concert on Friday, which will feature Memphis artists such as Redd Velvet, Garry Burnside, and Beverly Davis, Butch Mudbone, Joyce Henderson, and Cash McCall paying tribute to a pair of legends we lost this year, Teenie Hodges and B.B. King.

Over at Studio on the Square, first-time director Morreco Coleman will spotlight a uniquely Memphis musical phenomenon with Gangsta Walking the Movie. “He’s a former firefighter,” Hodgdon says. “It’s about Memphis hip-hop and dance culture. It’s been very influential, but it doesn’t get as much attention as it deserves, compared to the Bronx or the West Coast scene.”

The film features appearances by more than 30 Memphis hip-hop artists and dancers, including Juicy J, Gangsta Boo, 8Ball, and MJG. “I have been working for years on this documentary,” Coleman says. “It’s a collaborative project about the hip-hop, rap, and dance culture in Memphis, which has been underground for over 20 years.  Now you get to witness our secrets.” 

Another Memphis production will screen on Sunday.Waffle Street is directors Ian and Eshom Nelms’ adaptation of a 2010 memoir by financier James Adams, who took a job at a popular 24-hour breakfast restaurant after being laid off from his Wall Street job. James Lafferty stars as Adams alongside Danny Glover as “the best short-order cook in town.”

Actor-turned-director Tommy Ford will bring his drama Switching Lanes to Studio on the Square. Ford’s film follows Kaneesha and Sarah, who reach across racial barriers in their small Southern town to forge an unlikely friendship.

You can find a full schedule of the weekend’s films and buy weekend passes or tickets to individual movies at the On Location: Memphis website, onlocationmemphis.org.

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

Gay Film To Screen at On Location Film Fest

Picture_1.png

The annual On Location: Memphis International Film & Music Festival kicks off this week, and there’s at least one gay-themed film on the roster.

On Saturday, April 9th at 9:30 p.m., the festival will show the film, Weekend, at Malco’s Ridgeway Four Theater. U.K. director Andrew Haigh’s latest feature centers on blossoming love between a couple of men, Russell and Glen, who meet at a gay club. What was supposed to be a one night stand develops into something deeper. The film recently garnered the Emerging Visions’ Audience Award at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival.

For a full On Location festival line-up, go here. The festival runs April 7th-10th.