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Former Memphians Star in Sci-Fi Thriller: “Proximity”



Former Memphians Ryan Masson and Shaw Jones tangle with aliens in a new movie, Proximity, which airs May 15th on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, and iTunes.

Neither actor knew the other when they began work on the movie.  When they met, Jones said, “Hey, it’s nice to meet you. Great working with you,” Masson says.

They exchanged contacts. “General actor tradeoff. And he was telling me his home phone number and he said, ’901.’ I said, ‘Wait.’”

Masson, son of Rick and Carla Masson of Memphis, plays “Isaac Cypress,” who he describes as “a pretty low player at NASA jet propulsion laboratory. I’m kind of doing busy work for other people’s projects. But a signal I sent out in space gets sent back to me and I don’t know where it’s coming from. We bounce frequencies off our different satellites.”

As the movie progresses, a meteorite lands and Masson gets abducted by aliens. “I happen to have a camera on me and I record the whole abduction when I was up there.”

Ryan Masson in ‘Proximity.’

He doesn’t know if people will believe him or not. “The rest of the movie is me deciding if I want to share it with the world or keep it to myself.”

Masson describes his character as “a timid, smart, earnest guy who this extraordinary thing happens to. And most people don’t believe. And this adventure ensues.”

Asked how he prepped for his character, Masson says, “I think I kind of  tried to keep it at home. Keep it me. I can understand the outsider, kind of the loner person. That’s kind of who I am. This person is already alone, a smart, nerdy guy, and then he has this incredible experience, which isolates him from the world. No one believes him and they try to take advantage of him.”

Ryan Masson in ‘Proximity.’

In Involution, which was released in 2017, Masson plays a similar character — “Hamming” — a therapist who works remotely with his new therapy app. “People could sign in and have a therapy session,” he says.

In Proximity, Shaw Jones plays “Agent Graves,” one of those people who try to take advantage of Masson’s character. “I play an agent for a government agency that is trying to get more information out of him for my own use — that you’ll find out about later on,” Jones says.

His character has been described as a good cop on the surface, but a loose cannon underneath, he says. “He has a self-fulfilled mission to quiet anyone that deals with this sort of alien conspiracy.”

Shaw Jones in ‘Proximity.’

Graves, whose mother, Patricia Walsh, lives in Olive Branch, says he “tried to bring some honesty” to the role by incorporating experiences that happened to him in the past.

He tried to understand how his character became who he was. “I brought some underlying fear and anxiety and sort of a quest to understand what happened to me when I was younger.”

Shaw Jones in ‘Proximity.’

The movie is the first full-length feature directed by Eric Demeusy, Jones says. “His background is in special effects, so they’re pretty phenomenal in the movie. He’s gotten two Emmys for his special effects work.”

Jones, who appeared in 17 network shows, including Criminal Minds, Prodigal Son, and Snowfall last year, also was in Blue, a movie released in 2019 on Amazon. He describes his role as “a man who’s dealing with a terminal illness and you sort of see the progression of it. So, that was a really difficult role to tackle. And gratifying.”

He has a short film, Proxy, which is slated to be released in June. The movie, directed by Australian director Sophia Banks, also stars Emma Booth. “I play a very odd character. He’s a grown man, but he had some issues, physically and mentally, that he’s never gotten over.”

Movie work for now is on hold for the most part for Jones and Masson because of the quarantine. “I just did some voice work for a show I have coming out on Amazon,” Jones says. “It’s called ‘Them.’”

Describing what is was like to go to work during the pandemic, Jones says, “I got very detailed  instructions that when I arrived to the studio I would text them and let them know and they would come down and open a door for me. I would, by myself, follow signs to the booth. Once in the booth I put on sanitized headphones and they would come in through the glass and talk to me. For me and my personality being raised in the South, it’s hard to deal with this type of non-mannered relationships.”

As far as actual filming of movies, Jones says, “None of that has really started back yet. I was shooting on a film called Nightingale when this happened. It kind of went for a few more days when people were trying to figure out what’s up. It eventually had to stop production. I’ve heard reports and rumors that they’re going to try and take everyone’s temperature before they enter the sets, but it hasn’t started yet.”

Jones has been spending a lot of time at home with his wife and their two sons.

Masson says he’s in a an apartment with a roommate. “No one has been making movies, I think,” he says. “TV or anything. LA’s been really good about being really strict about staying at home. So, most businesses except for essential ones have been on pause. I was already pretty much of a homebody, so it wasn’t such a change for me.”

They’re looking forward to watching Proximity, but they’ll be watching from their homes, not in a theater. The movie was supposed to have a theatrical release until the quarantine hit.

Both actors were impressed with each other. Masson describes the way Jones plays Graves as “so steely and intimidating. Shaw had to play both sides. Someone you can really trust and someone who is really a bad guy. He had to bridge both these sides and he did truly amazing.”

Of Masson, Shaw says,  “I, honestly, think he’s very unique. And he brings a lot to the character. He has a quirkiness about him that is just perfect for this character. And I think he’s able to bring forth what his character is going through.”

They both felt it was a great experience working with a fellow Memphian.

It just helps you feel comfortable, Masson says. “Kind of the same way with people from the same high school. You kind of have a camaraderie.”

That same feeling goes when you’re making movies together, he says. “Something similar when you’re both from the same city and you’re working on the same project together.”

Says Jones: “I think there’s an automatic sort of ease and respect for the other person knowing that they come from where you come from.”

Watch the Proximity trailer.

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Morgan Jon Fox’s Series Feral Celebrates National Premiere With Local Screening

Thursday night sees the long-awaited national debut of Morgan Jon Fox’s streaming series Feral.

“It’s been almost exactly two years since we wrapped filming,” says Fox, the pioneering Memphis director whose films like This Is What Love In Action Looks Like and Blue Citrus Hearts have been attracting acclaim for more than a decade.

Seth Daniel in Feral

Feral is the flagship original series of a new streaming service called Dekkoo, which will bring LBGT themed films and series to a national audience. It was originally scheduled for release last summer, when I wrote this in-depth Memphis Flyer cover feature about the show. “I’m so excited for it to finally come out, but there were some moments there, when we had so many supposed release dates, that I was a little worried, to be honest. You hear nightmare stories about projects that never end up being released, for whatever complications. But as it tuns out, it’s just that it’s a brand new company that took a lot longer than they planned to get their footing.”

The Dekkoo app is available on Roku and Apple TV, or through Google Play and iTunes, and boasts “the largest streaming collection of gay-centric entertainment available boasting a larger selection than Netflix or Amazon Video.”

Here’s an exclusive clip from Feral

FERAL – Exclusive Clip – 2 from Morgan Jon Fox on Vimeo.

Morgan Jon Fox’s Series Feral Celebrates National Premiere With Local Screening (2)

“I feel great about it,” he says. “A lot of things aligned perfectly in my head. I took some time off from my career to work on other, bigger productions. I worked with Craig Brewer on his projects, and I worked as a producer and assistant director on other projects all around the country. It was truly like going to film school. Everything aligned perfectly for crew members to help make it and edit it and actors to be in it. All of those things fell into place in a way I feel lucky and fortunate for. “

In the two years since filming completed, many of the show’s stars have seen their careers take an upward trajectory, such as singer/songwriter Julian Baker. “I saw her for the first time in my back yard at a going away party for my friend Ryan Azada. She played solo acoustic, just a few songs. I knew that she was in a band with some guys playing harder stuff, but this was the first time I had seen her. It was an incredible moment that I’ll never forget…the lights in the back yard, all these people there to say goodbye to a good friend of hours. It was a golden moment. I knew this person was going to be huge star. Her music was coming from an emotional, authentic space, and that was the space I was working out of to create Feral. She hadn’t even recorded anything except on her iPhone. The songs on her Soundcloud page had from 5-30 listens. By the time it got around to actually being released, I had to work with her publicist, who had to approve the way we mentioned her in our press releases. She had a team now. Memphis has always had a hotbed for music, but people like Julian Baker don’t come around all the time. She’s a rare being.”

The series other big music stars, the Midtown punk band Nots, just opened Gonerfest last weekend before embarking on a huge east coast tour. Female lead Leah Beth Bolton is now an on-air reporter for Fox 24 in Memphis. “She’s doing traffic, which I think is so cool. It’s perfect for her personality. She brought so much light to the project. Her character is essential, because there so much depressing shit happening, and dudes taking themselves very seriously. She inserts a necessary emotional perspective. ‘Stop being so self-absorbed, dudes!’”

Breezy Lucia

Leah Beth Bolton, Chase Brother, Seth Daneil, and Jordan Nichols in Feral.

Ryan Masson and Seth Daniel are now working actors in Los Angeles, and Jordan Nichols is a stage actor and director who, Fox says, “is acting and directing every play, and winning awards every year. He’s a dedicated actor who works very hard, but he has a natural inclination.”

“There are a lot of stereotypical gay characters presented in media. They tend to be comic relief, or stuck up fashion designers. There’s also stereotypes about the South: It’s backwards, the Bible Belt, all those things. I’ve dealt with those things in my previous work, and I didn’t have a desire or energy to continue to tackle those things.”

Breezy Lucia

Seth Daniel and director Morgan Jon Fox on the set of Feral

Fox says his goal for Feral was to present a different view of life in the South “I just wanted to reflect what it was like for me growing up in this Midtown community of artists, where everyone’s kind of smushed together. You go to the Cove, which isn’t a gay bar. You go to Otherlands, which isn’t a gay coffee shop. When you’re a Midtown artist, you’re a Midtown artist, whether you’re a queer artist or a straight artist. I love that about this community. The problems that affect me and young people in their 20s in Midtown are the same problems that anyone in our position would deal with. They’re universal. I just wanted them to be people in this situation who intermingle in a very regular way. I didn’t want them to be a community of wealth. I didn’t want them only going to gay bars or going gay things. I didn’t want them to be a part of a South that is hateful or pressing them…I wanted the fact that they’re gay to be unremarkable.”

Fox and Dekkoo will host a release party at Studio on the Square on Thursday, Oct. 6, where the first five episodes of the series will be shown on the big screen. Showtime will be at 7:30 PM. 

Morgan Jon Fox’s Series Feral Celebrates National Premiere With Local Screening