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Arts Alive - April 2017

4/1/2017

 

Short Films Alive! 

Bay High’s Digital Media program has young directors putting their work into the public eye.
– Karen Fineran
More Shoofly Stories
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The scene opens to the bouncy strains of a ragtime piano player. A group of cowboys play poker in the Yukon Territory, northwest Canada, during the Yukon Gold Rush of the 1890s. A white-aproned barkeep cleans beer glasses.

Whiskey-guzzling cardplayers slap down their card hands with good-natured jests. In the corner of the saloon, we see a young woman (“the lady that’s known as Lou”) with her lover, a roughneck prospector slumped with a hat over his face.
​
Deep-voiced narration begins: “A bunch of the boys were whooping it up in the Malamute saloon; the kid that handles the music box was hitting a jag-time tune.” The audience follows the narration and watches the screen with anticipation. 

The Arts Alive column 
​is sponsored by 

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On Hwy 90, near the bridge!

​Click here and scroll down to read archived Arts Alive columns  ​
​On screen, the saloon door suddenly slams open, and a mysterious miner dressed in black shambles in from the cold. After shooting back a drink and buying a round for the crowd, the stranger ambles to the piano and begins playing a curiously plaintive tune.

Lady Lou and her lover (who we learn from the narration is Dangerous Dan McGrew) are scrutinizing the newcomer. The curiosity of the audience grows as Dan’s face freezes. The stranger stops playing, pronouncing loudly that “one of you is a hound of hell . . . and that one is Dan McGrew.”

The lights blink out; gunshots erupt.

The setting for this film was not a local movie theater, but the familiar Mockingbird Café in downtown Bay St. Louis. The event was the first short film showcase to be featured as part of Hancock County’s Arts Alive Festival, held this year on March 18. The film was The Shooting of Dan McGrew, an interpretation of the famous 1907 narrative poem of the same name by Canadian poet Robert Service.

​Dan McGrew was just one of 11 short films that were submitted by students from area schools, including Bay High’s Digital Media program, and screened at the Mockingbird as part of this year’s Arts Alive. Dan McGrew was a big hit with the audience, who particularly enjoyed the twist ending that startled them after the closing credits.
​The Shooting of Dan McGrew is the “baby” of Bay High sophomore Cameron Adams, who edited, acted, and directed with co-director Quinn Radler.

Cameron explains the genesis of Dan McGrew:  “In my English class, we were given the assignment to create a visual interpretation of one of the poems in our textbook. It was easy to see, after flipping through the poems that we had to choose from, that Dan McGrew would be fun to make, and easy to visualize on film.

"We shot it in about five hours at my parents’ empty house that we had just moved from.”

Cameron has been making movies since elementary school. He plans to apply to colleges with film schools and possibly to attend film summer camp this summer.

Other short films screened that night, all under eight minutes, including several intimate looks at grief, loss, and learning experienced by teens, as well as some lighthearted comedies, including a horror parody stop-motion animated Legos short by Landon Brady and Aidan Pohl, depicting a “Horrorible Love.” 

​Other Bay High students who contributed films to Arts Alive this year included Grace Powell, Corey Jennings, Alyssa Juge, and Seth Denison.
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Cameron Adams in his role as piano player
​Short films make up a unique medium that lends itself neatly to artistic experimentation by emerging filmmakers who don’t have to spend the small fortune it would take to make a full-length feature film.

Audiences appreciate short-form films; it’s much easier to ask people to watch a five-minute short film than a feature-length one — especially if it comes across your Facebook feed, and then you end up watching it on your iPhone.

“This year, the short film showcase for Arts Alive was really all just pulled together at the last minute, but then we had such an amazing response to it!” says Martha Whitney Butler, President of the Arts, Hancock County.

“First, I came across Dan McGrew and other Bay High short films, and at the last minute, there was even a student from the University from Pennsylvania in the audience who asked me if we could add his film to the lineup, and we were able to do it!  The audience was blown away!” 

​Butler is thrilled that the Beacon Theater in Waveland is now in discussions with Hancock Arts to show student films before their feature movies, and perhaps to hold a Student Film Screening Night. 
​ Butler hopes to hold a short film contest next year in addition to a film showcase, and to find local sponsors to give awards. In addition to asking schools to find talented young filmmakers, she also hopes to find more established emerging filmmakers who wish to participate in the showcase and the contest.

“I believe that this might have been our most successful Arts Alive event ever, and we definitely plan to hold it next year!” she enthused.

Bay High Digital Media Technologies teacher Tarah Herbert loves working with the budding student filmmakers. She is especially enthusiastic that, this month, Bay High is submitting several short films, including Dan McGrew, to the Mississippi High School Film Competition, part of the Tupelo Film Festival, established in 2004.
 
Bay High Digital Media Technologies teacher Tarah Herbert loves working with the budding student filmmakers.  She is thrilled that, earlier this month, after Bay High submitted several of its short films to the Mississippi High School Film Competition, which is part of the Tupelo Film Festival, her Bay High students cleanly swept the top awards at the competition! 

Bay High senior Landon Brady took the top prize, winning a partial scholarship to an esteemed arts school in Nashville, Tennessee, as well as $650 cash.  His film “Mismo” (the Spanish word for “the same”) is the story of a young man who awakens in the woods after a bout of drinking, confused about how he got there.  A woman in white leads him through a dreamlike journey of his memories until he reaches the realization of why he is there.

Landon, who is starting at Mississippi State University this fall, explained that although his video started off as a school project, now that he has completed several short videos, digital media has become a true passion.  Though MSU does not have a film program, Landon feels that he learned the basics from Bay High’s Digital Media program, so that he can continue pursuing this interest on his own.

Cameron Adam’s “Shooting of Dan McGrew” won second place and “Audience Favorite,” winning $600 that Cameron hopes to be able to use toward a film camp or program.  And Bay High junior Grace Powell took the third place trophy, and a $150 prize, with her film “Perceive,” her luminous observation of the surrealistic experience of “lucid dreaming.”  Both “Mismo” and “Percieve” were shot in familiar settings in Bay St. Louis, though they are altered by the student’s ethereal visions.

“It’s such amazing luck that we won all three top prizes given by the film festival!” Hebert enthused.  “The kids deserved it – they worked so hard.  These kids are amazing.  They are so excited right now!”

The Tupelo Film Festival competition this year was held on April 22.  This is the third year that the Tupelo Film Festival, established in 2004, has featured a high school short film competition, to promote the art of filmmaking and to encourage student amateur filmmakers to hone their skills. 

​It is the first year that Bay High has participated in the competition, but it will surely not be the last.  This is the first year that the awards included scholarships to the Watkins College for Art, Design and Film in Nashville, Tennessee. 


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