• newsletters • best of austin • find a paper • submit an event • advertise with us • contact • jobs •
HOME: MARCH 9, 2007: SCREENS
text size

Road Movies

Lisa McWilliams' Mobile Film School

BY C. AMBER PEARCE



The Austin-based Mobile Film School, founded by Lisa McWilliams, launched its pilot program in partnership with the Manor Independent School District during late February. While others took the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills test, seven Manor students participated in the weeklong, total-immersion filmmaking workshop breakfasting together at 7am and finishing up at 9pm each night.

The Mobile Film School is in the process of refurbishing an Airstream trailer to stock with film equipment and take to the Texas roads. Each small-town stop will provide 15 participants – students and/or community members – with a week of hands-on experience making films, the only requirement being that the film must involve a story about the community.

"I like to disabuse people of the notion that this is an inaccessible industry," McWilliams says. Not only will the workshop allow opportunity to those who might not receive it otherwise, but it also allows for more rural stories to be told in an industry monopolized with city stories.

The pilot headquarters was a Manor classroom where students grouped around computers piecing together a documentary. They wrote, directed, and edited the short film "A Place Like This," about an old pioneer farmhouse on 80 acres in their community called Quicksand Farm. Jim Lutz purchased the fixer-upper in 1977 as a place to raise his family. It has since been the site for many events, notably as a set during shooting for What's Eating Gilbert Grape. Plans for a sewage plant and a school stadium built next door are in the works. "The news people don't like to talk about how Manor is being destroyed, but we all know," says 17-year-old Kayla. "It's a Manor icon. The point of this documentary is to let people know this house is still there. Don't let this legend die."

The student documentary can be seen at www.mobilefilmschool.org/node/310, where program updates can also be found. The Mobile Film School hosts an event for SXSW Film 07 attendees at the Speakeasy on Saturday, March 10, 6-8pm to celebrate the completion of its first workshop.

MORE SXSW FILM

  • March 9-17
  • Recognizing the pictures, but also the kinds of spirits who appreciate them: the Texas Film Hall of Fame Awards
  • From turtles to "The Next Tim Day"
  • The legend of Alejandro Gomez Monteverde
  • In the struggle between local environmentalists and developers, Laura Dunn's documentary reminds us, Barton Springs was only the beginning
  • Andrew Garrison on how Houston artists and inner-city neighbors rebuilt a community
  • Marcy Garriott on the intricate dance between documentarian and subject
  • Bob Ray and Werner Campbell's five-year rock & Roller Derby adventure
  • To find themselves, the subjects of this year's rock docs found that they had to follow their own sound
  • Film on the Web, part II: the movies
  • On directors examining structure, storytelling, and how pictures can move us
  • The divergent paths of one disease, in life and on film
  • Canadian filmmakers Debbie Melnyk and Rick Caine set out to celebrate a lion of the left. They ended up with something a little different.
  • A former Marine's unfiltered photography leads an American documentary crew into Darfur
  • Michael Tucker hears the voices calling him back to the war in Iraq
  • New Zealander Taika Waititi doesn't mind if you compare his charmed comedy to Napoleon Dynamite
  • Sarah Lipstate's songs – and shorts – of innocence and experiments

Share Digg Twitter Facebook Del.icio.us LinkedLn Email Print article


POST A COMMENT

(optional):
:

Permission to Print. Letter to the editor.
 
RELATED STORIES


SXSW Film 07
March 9-17

State Fair
Recognizing the pictures, but also the kinds of spirits who appreciate them: the Texas Film Hall of Fame Awards

This Month Only
From turtles to "The Next Tim Day"

Like Out of a Movie
The legend of Alejandro Gomez Monteverde

Before the Flood
In the struggle between local environmentalists and developers, Laura Dunn's documentary reminds us, Barton Springs was only the beginning

Property Value
Andrew Garrison on how Houston artists and inner-city neighbors rebuilt a community

Call-and-Response
Marcy Garriott on the intricate dance between documentarian and subject

Battle of the Jam Bands
Bob Ray and Werner Campbell's five-year rock & Roller Derby adventure

Perfect Liberty
To find themselves, the subjects of this year's rock docs found that they had to follow their own sound

We Have Met the Future, and It Is Us
Film on the Web, part II: the movies

Looking More Closely When Others Look Away
On directors examining structure, storytelling, and how pictures can move us

Different Stages
The divergent paths of one disease, in life and on film

Michael & Us
Canadian filmmakers Debbie Melnyk and Rick Caine set out to celebrate a lion of the left. They ended up with something a little different.

The Few
A former Marine's unfiltered photography leads an American documentary crew into Darfur

Taking the 'Us' out of It
Michael Tucker hears the voices calling him back to the war in Iraq

... Vs Liger?
New Zealander Taika Waititi doesn't mind if you compare his charmed comedy to Napoleon Dynamite

In Stereoscope
Sarah Lipstate's songs – and shorts – of innocence and experiments

FURTHER READING
Keywords
for this story
Lisa McWilliams
Mobile Film School
Quicksand Farm
Laura Sobel

Until the Light Takes Us

BLOGS
Doing 25 to Life
BPP Recommends Life
Car2Go Arrives

Don't Bank On It
The Gay Glass Ceiling
Pride and Prejudice

ARCHIVES
More from
March 9, 2007
News
Arts
Books
Food
Screens
Music
Columns
Sports

Browse the
Archives by
Issue
Author
Column
Review
Section


Short Story Contest
Online Contests
Chrontourage
Chronicle Merch

 
Arts & Entertainment (108)
Services (108)
Civic (20)
Retail (48)
Food & Drink (67)
Coupons (8)
Jobs (9)

Ads of the Day