The Morning Call (Sunday)

Netflix betting on tomorrow’s directors today

3 short films from initiative land on streaming service

- By Jen Yamato

Chicago visual artist Hebru Brantley had already made a name for himself with in-demand works around original characters including Flyboy and Lil Mama when last year he jumped at the chance to expand his comics-, anime- and pop culture-inspired storytelli­ng into film.

Impressed by the success of Stefon Bristol’s Independen­t Spirit Award-winning debut sci-fi feature “See You Yesterday,” Netflix was quietly combing its networks to build a first-of-its-kind genre accelerato­r film program with directors similarly ready to make their first move into studio filmmaking.

So Brantley pitched three ideas, the last of which he’d originally intended to make on his own with his daughter using puppets. Soon he was working with Jim Henson’s Creature Shop directing an original fantasy adventure inspired by a spooky encounter he’d had in his backyard.

Bursting with action, thrills and new creatures brought to life from Brantley’s expansive imaginatio­n with VFX and practical effects, “Erax” stars Jasmine Cephas Jones and Genesis White in a larger-thanlife modern fable (co-written by Henry G.M. Jones) about a clever young girl, her flighty aunt and a mysterious and magical book.

It’s one of three short films that premiered globally in February as part of Netflix’s inaugural Emerging Filmmaker Initiative, spotlighti­ng marquee genre directors in the making. The others are World War II period drama-thriller “Forgive Us Our Trespasses” from Ashley Eakin and the kinetic action tale “Heart Shot” from Marielle Woods.

“I jokingly say it’s like film school but (multiplied by 1,000), because the process was

pretty fast,” said Brantley.

To him, “Erax,” shot over five days last summer in Altadena, California, was valuable prep for directing his eventual first feature. “It gives you a sense of what that real film world is going to be like and prepares you in that way. You don’t feel like they just threw you into the deep end and said, ‘You figure it out.’ ”

Lending support to Brantley as a mentor in the postproduc­tion process was “Men in Black” director Barry Sonnenfeld, who was the showrunner for three seasons of Netflix’s “A Series of Unfortunat­e Events.”

“To give emerging filmmakers the ability and budget to actually make a film with a real crew, with a real sound mix, etc., is a great concept,”

said Sonnenfeld. He offered feedback on balancing tone and tension in what he considers the most difficult genre — action-adventure-comedy — which he says Brantley pulled off “quite nicely. … I think he could direct any big-budget film he wanted to.”

To most early career filmmakers, jumping into the director’s chair with a full arsenal of studio resources and support from developmen­t through casting, production, postproduc­tion and marketing is a rare and coveted opportunit­y. While Netflix declined to comment on budget size, all three filmmakers had previous experience helming their own independen­t short films and described being given ample resources, guidance and creative control on

their EFI projects.

After working in the industry for more than a decade, Eakin had seen the studio process up close. As assistant to director Jon M. Chu on “Crazy Rich Asians,” she’d also witnessed the impact that film had on audiences who felt otherwise unrepresen­ted on screen.

“I never see people on screen with different bodies, and that was a huge issue for me growing up and dealing with internaliz­ed ableism,” said Eakin, a writer-director with a physical disability whose short films and upcoming projects are focused on stories about the disabled community.

Matched by Netflix with an industry mentor, Eakin requested Oscar winner Ron Howard, who made 2020’s “Hillbilly Elegy” for the streamer. He gave notes in areas such as script drafts and directing young actors. But, as Howard said, “Ashley Eakin didn’t really need my, or any, mentoring.

“From the first conversati­on, I felt like she had command of this subject. When I began seeing some dailies, I felt like she was already a seasoned filmmaker,” said Howard. “She staged it beautifull­y but kept reaching for nuances, and also in a very concise, demanding format, because the short film format is like short story writing: Every second matters, just as every word choice or sentence matters in a short story.”

“Forgive Us Our Trespasses,” which blends quiet drama with harrowing physical sequences carried by a lead turn by young Australian actor Knox, helped Eakin land subsequent directing jobs for Disney+ and Apple. “Filmmakers, when you’re starting out, we’re clawing our way to make our name and to even get a short done,” said Eakin. “Being able to have someone give you the resources and access is huge — you can really show what you’re capable of.”

The annual program is intended to identify and support artists “who are going to be making big, exciting commercial movies of all shapes and sizes over the years to come,” said Ian Bricke, VP of independen­t film at Netflix. The focus will remain on shorts in the action, sci-fi, horror and thriller genres to maximize audience potential on a global scale; the films also can easily serve as proof of concept for expansion.

“And if we can infuse those genres with fresh voices and perspectiv­es, that’s really exciting,” said Bricke.

“Heart Shot,” from director Woods, hits an undeniable sweet spot of surprise, suspense and tender romance, with newcomers Elena Heuze and Nia Sondaya grounding the film as high school seniors in love. But it’s how their star-crossed relationsh­ip saga introduces an exciting new queer action hero that makes the film feel particular­ly ready-made for the feature treatment.

“I have a mission to create stories around diverse action protagonis­ts that we’ve seen far fewer of,” said Woods.

Coming off her crowdfunde­d short “Spin,” Woods brought on co-writer Lauren Ludwig to pen “Heart Shot” for Netflix, inspired by the life-and-death stakes of young love.

“What this movie for me, I often joke, is: Imagine Terrence Malick and Andrea Arnold had a baby, and that baby wanted to direct a queer teen action romance,” said Woods, who credited the Netflix program with freeing her to focus solely on the creative vision of the film. “It was just an exceptiona­lly rewarding process.”

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Jasmine Cephas Jones, left, and Genesis White star in Hebru Brantley’s modern fable “Erax.”
NETFLIX Jasmine Cephas Jones, left, and Genesis White star in Hebru Brantley’s modern fable “Erax.”

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