"U
of M students involved in Film Fest"
By
Liz Daggett
Staff Reporter
October 02, 2002
The
Indie Film Festival “Soul of Southern Film,”
to be held at the Peabody Muvico downtown Oct
3-6, will feature several independent films, including
some directed and produced by University of Memphis
students.
U of M film senior Brad Ellis and U of M graduate
student Joey Watson co-directed a 79-minute digital
film, The Pass of Fear, starring U of M students
Marie-Claire Hardy, Natalie Jones, and Julianne
Dowler, will show Oct. 3 at 9:30 p.m. at the Peabody
Muvico.
The
film follows a group of high school friends that
meet in an abandoned theater and awaken a ghost.
The friends are brought back together a year later,
because of a series of strange events. Despite
the ghost, Ellis said that the film is “not
a typical teen slasher movie.”
“The
plot is very character driven,” Ellis said.
In
their 5th year of filmmaking, the film is Ellis
and Watson’s 7th, but their first to be
part of a festival.
The
film was shot from January to May, on a budget
of $1,000, all funded by Belz Enterprises.
According
to Ellis, Belz had seen some of their previous
work and decided to fund the project.
“It
was really great, that nothing came out of our
own pocket. We were really fortunate,” Ellis
said.
Ellis
said that he was glad to see the film festival
gaining popularity in Memphis, because it shows
an overall growth of film opportunities in the
area.
“It’s
very important for Memphis to come out and support
independent theater,” Ellis said.
“People
are starting to scout the city for future film
opportunities, and that means a lot to both the
film makers and the city.”
More
information about their films can be found at
www.oldschoolpictures.net.
U
of M communication alumna Shannon Gregory directed
a 9-minute documentary short entitled Blended
Lives, as a senior thesis project about the effects
their parents divorcing had on five twenty-somethings.
“The
film looks at what life was like before divorce,
during divorce, and after divorce, specifically
how their parents’ divorce has affected
their relationships,” Gregory said.
The
five subjects were three women and two men; of
the five, two of them have parents who divorced
when they were 5 or 6, and the other three have
parents who were divorced in their teens and 20s.
“I
wanted to see if it changed your life based on
how old you were when your parents divorced,”
Gregory said.
According
to Gregory, the film utilizes fast cuts so that
the interviewees finish each other’s sentences.
“They
all seem to have the same fears,” Gregory
said. “They were very positive, though,
that they did not want to end up in the same place.
One woman during the filming was married and talked
of the struggle to make it work and is now actually
going through a divorce.”
However,
Gregory added, another was engaged during the
filming and is now married.
The
film was shot and edited in March and April, according
to Gregory, who said that after coming up with
the idea, she sought approval and instruction
of U of M film professors Roxie Gee, Steven Ross,
and David Appleby.
Aubrey
Mobley was director of photography.
The
short is up for the festival’s “hometowner’s
award,” and shows on Oct. 4 at 9 p.m.
“It’s
great that there is a venue for independent film
in Memphis, and I encourage everyone to participate,”
Gregory said.