CrewUp Youth Mentorship film Fight 4 Your Love

Indie Memphis began in 1998 when University of Memphis film student Kelly Chandler wanted to create a space where her fellow students could showcase their work. As the festival grew into a major Memphis cultural event, artist development remained a major part of the mission. In 2016, the Indie Memphis Youth Film Fest was launched to help give middle- and high-schoolers a taste of the highs and lows of filmmaking.

โ€œWeโ€™re giving these students an opportunity to really explore it before they say, โ€˜This is definitely what I wanna do,โ€™โ€ says Joseph Carr, Indie Memphisโ€™ managing director.

Students in the CrewUp program are partnered with adult mentors, experienced filmmakers who will guide them through the process of writing, planning, and producing a short film. Carr says that even those who discover filmmaking is not for them get valuable experience in creative collaboration. โ€œIt can apply to every part of your life. If you canโ€™t collaborate, youโ€™re not gonna be successful in any field you work in.โ€

One Youth Film Fest participant who did decide it was for her is Vivian Gray, who won awards at the 2017 and 2018 festival. Gray says she entered her work โ€œon a whim,โ€ but found โ€œit was truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience. It shaped so much of my future, just by being able to participate, period. I met other peers who made films, I met the folks at Indie Memphis who are so supportive, and just to show my work for the first time publicly was really special, and Iโ€™m very grateful for it.โ€

Carr acted as her mentor when she won a production grant as a prize in 2017. (The grant program is now awarded by application, separate from the main student competition.) โ€œWhen youโ€™re young, you donโ€™t have any concept of how much work itโ€™s going to be,โ€ says Carr. โ€œYou just have great ideas and you want your ideas to come to life. Vivian was just so game to jump in and just run with her idea. You could tell very early just how comfortable she was on set, and just how comfortable she was in her voice. When youโ€™re in the presence of a true artist, you can tell very quickly that they have a lot to say.โ€

Gray went on to earn a degree from the acclaimed University of Southern California film program. Her short film, โ€œTape 23,โ€ debuted at Indie Memphis โ€™22 and has spent the last year on the festival circuit with โ€œProvidence,โ€ a television pilot she directed. She will return to Youth Fest as a juror this year. โ€œI feel like itโ€™s grown even more, and continues to do what it did for me and so many other young filmmakers and artists. It is near and dear to my heart.โ€

Another artist coming full circle this year is Vivie Myrick. The actor made her screen debut at the Youth Festival and recently appeared on the Showtime TV series, George & Tammy. โ€œShe directed a film last year as her last output for her age group in the Youth Film Fest,โ€ says Carr. โ€œNow sheโ€™s now back to host an acting workshop.โ€

The festival will kick off on Saturday, August 26th, with a keynote address by screenwriter Hennah Sekander. The recent Memphis transplant has written for the Apple TV+ series Hello Tomorrow! and the Amazon Prime Video Chris Pratt vehicle The Terminal List. โ€œIโ€™m gonna talk about โ€˜The Slingshot Effect,โ€™ which is something that I coined under pressure on a phone call with Joseph Carr because he said we needed a title, and it just felt like the most potent symbol for how you marry character and plot to tell a good story.โ€

When Craig Brewer introduced Sekander to Carr, she immediately asked how to get involved with Indie Memphisโ€™ youth program. โ€œI think a big reason why this writer strike is happening right now is thereโ€™s this feeling of resistance from the studio side to invest in new talent and kind of support younger voices as they try to make their way up the ladder,โ€ Sekander says. โ€œSo I think that means itโ€™s all the more important for writers to do that work that probably wasnโ€™t done for them.โ€

The festival is free for students who sign up for passes and pay-what-you-can for adults. The short films which premiere this Saturday at the Halloran Centre will represent the culmination of a year of work by the young filmmakers. โ€œIโ€™m always just beside-myself thrilled when these students finish their movies,โ€ says Carr. โ€œSome teams will drop out, or something will come up, and they canโ€™t finish. But seeing these completed films on the big screen, all the problems we have leading up to it are just melted away.โ€

The 2023 Indie Memphis Youth Film Fest is Saturday, August 26th, at the Halloran Centre. For the schedule, visit indiememphis.org.