Thats all any of us want to do. Thats all Ive wanted to do since
I was 6 years old.
Sean Plemmons is talking about filmmaking, and when he speaks
you can see his 6-year old self, shrinking in his seat while watching
Jaws, a film that works, his colleague Daniel Quinton points out,
precisely because the shark is rarely shown.
Memphis filmmaking reputation is based mostly on the work of
outsiders, on the films that have been shot here rather than the
work of homegrown talent. With their first feature film project,
Strange Cargo, nearing completion, Plemmons, Quinton, and the
three other members of their filmmaking collective, Jeff Hassen,
Jimmy Ross, and Jeff Bryant, are hoping to change that.
Strange Cargo, which wrapped up primary shooting just before Christmas,
is a 16-millimeter, feature-length mystery/thriller about a young
filmmaker (played by J.W. Williams) who, desperate for a break,
joins the crew of underground filmmaker Johnny Cargo (Brent Shrewsbury),
and finds himself drawn into a world that, in Plemmons words,
is not quite what it seems.
[Cargo and his crew] are willing to do whatever it takes to get
a film made, Quinton cryptically adds.
The film starts out as a mystery, Plemmons explains, and when
you finally find out what Johnny Cargos film is about, then the
film takes a turn
turns into a whole new type of story. Its
definitely off-beat and strange, but we think its a pretty commercial
story.
The film was shot with a 100 percent local cast and crew and the
films near-six-figure budget was financed through a mix of private
investment and out of the groups own pockets. Though all five
members of the collective are interested in most aspects of filmmaking,
they played to their respective strengths for Strange Cargo, according
to Quinton. Plemmons co-directed the film with Ross, who shares
a screenwriting credit with Hassen, who also served as the films
director of photography. Quinton and Bryant co-produced, with
Quinton also playing a small role as a character called Argento,
named after Italian horror master Dario Argento. All five of the
twentysomethings are involved in editing the film.
In many ways, Strange Cargo has been 10 years in the making. The
group first formed in 1988 when, during the transition period
between high school and college, they were all working at Malcos
Ridgeway Four. They formed a tight bond through shared cinephilia
and the desire to make movies as well as talk about them. In the
decade since, theyve taken different routes toward pursuing their
filmmaking dreams, but the notion of working together has been
ever-present. Plemmons and Hassen are both graduates of the University
of Memphis filmmaking program, where Ross wrote and Quinton produced
Plemmons student film. Bryant, who currently works as a projectionist
at Malcos Wolfchase Galleria cinema, is currently studying film
at the university. In addition, Hassen and Quinton have done seminar
work in New York and Los Angeles, respectively.
Strange Cargo isnt the first project the group has worked on.
After deciding five years ago to try and make a film together,
the group developed a screenplay for a four-part horror anthology
called Dark Corners, in which each segment would be directed by
a different member of the group. They also optioned the rights
to a short story by horror writer Robert R. McCammon. But both
projects proved too unwieldy and expensive for a first film, and
Strange Cargo was developed out of the need for a more manageable
project. To make work on the film easier, everyone in the group
moved within a couple of blocks of each other.
Some would say thats a little too obsessive, Bryant says, but
when youre doing something like this, and its low-budget, you
have to make it easy on yourself, and by us moving close together,
that made things a lot easier.
Theyre shooting for having the final edit on Strange Cargo completed
this summer and then taking it on the festival circuit to get
it sold. A production notice in The Hollywood Reporter has drawn
some preliminary interest from several distributers, including
Fine Line, says Plemmons, but the film festivals are crucial to
getting distribution. The group says that Malco has shown interest
in having a local premiere for the film.
The filmmakers hope to find an audience for Strange Cargo, but
to also use the film as a calling card for securing future work.
Obviously wed like to get some kind of limited theatrical release
if we can, five, 10 major cities, and of course a video release,
says Plemmons.
Our ultimate goal, says Bryant, is for somebody to say Heres
some money to do another film [at a bigger budget].
Strange Cargo was shot over an eight-week period of weekend shooting
16 grueling 18-to-20 hour days. After the first day we shot,
I didnt feel real good about our chances of finishing. We toughed
it out, though, says Plemmons.
Strange Cargo sounds like a visually ambitious project for a low-budget
first film, with a mixture of color and black-and-white, and a
mix of visual styles and flourishes, including the use of hand-held
camera, crane shots, and a film within the film. The works the
group cite as having direct influence on Strange Cargo offer an
intriguing and promising indication of what form the film may
take. The work of Brian De Palma, in particular, seems to be a
guiding force.
De Palma goes into pretty much everything Jimmy [Ross] and I
have written together, because his is such a visual style and
we try to write as visually as we can, Hassen acknowledges.
Hassen also mentions independent auteur John Cassavetes and Haskell
Wexlers 1969 classic Medium Cool (a fiction film shot in the
middle of the 1968 Chicago riots) as influences on Strange Cargos
cinema-verite style. And Plemmons offers Chris Markers landmark
1964 experimental film La Jetee as a direct influence on Strange
Cargos use of still frames.
Talking cinema with these guys, the depth of their movie lust
and knowledge is impressive. Casual conversation draws enthusiastic
commentary on likely subjects such as Coppola and Spielberg (Wed
be lying if we didnt say Spielberg was obviously an influence
on all of us, Bryant admits), reveals a mildly surprising fixation
on spaghetti western master Sergio Leone, and provokes references
to more obscure masterworks like the 1927 documentary Berlin:
Symphony of a City. But despite or perhaps due to their film
obsessions, the collective behind Strange Cargo are reluctant
to come up with a solid answer when asked the enduring desert
island question. Except for Plemmons, who answers quickly:
Probably Jaws for me, though if I were on a desert island I dont
know if Id want that for my movie.