Living in Missouri

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Living In Missouri

A film poster for the DVD Special Edition of Living In Missouri.
Directed by Shaun Peterson
Produced by Shaun Peterson
Connor Ratliff
Written by Connor Ratliff
Starring Ian McConnel
Connor Ratliff
Christina Puzzo
Holmes Osborne
Distributed by Film Threat DVD
Release date(s) October 12, 2001 (Austin Film Festival)
Running time 90 min.
Language English
Budget $7,500
IMDb profile

Living In Missouri (2001) is an award-winning indie film comedy about an emotionally maladjusted love triangle.

The film, directed by Shaun Peterson, made its world premiere at the Austin Film Festival in 2001, and has spent several years playing festivals and special engagements. The cast includes Ian McConnel, screenwriter Connor Ratliff, and veteran character actor Holmes Osborne (Donnie Darko, Affliction, That Thing You Do!).

Contents

[edit] Plot synopsis

Living In Missouri is a Comedy Of Manners which tells the story of Ryan, Amy, and Todd, whose humdrum Midwestern lives are starting to come apart at the seams. Personal betrayals abound when childhood friendships, broken-down marriages, and long-repressed desires come into conflict over the course of one tumultuous Missouri autumn.

Ryan and Todd have been best friends since the 7th grade, and time has not been kind to either of them. Ryan is now married to Amy, with two young children and a 9-to-5 job he hates. The sexually frustrated Todd still lives in the basement of his parents' house, works in a video store, and secretly envies Ryan's married life. Meanwhile, Amy is stuck in the middle, balancing career and family with almost no help from Ryan, whose selfish behavior is quickly destroying what's left of their marriage.

When Amy secretly turns to Todd for a shoulder to cry on, the two of them begin meeting regularly to discuss her marital woes. Todd misinterprets Amy's attention for love, and believes that they are actually "having an affair," which leads to a series of painful misunderstandings, ending in disaster.

Living In Missouri is a challenging, darkly comic film, shot on location in Missouri and Kansas. Boasting a colorful cast of supporting characters, the film veers from dark humor to intense drama, at each turn authentically capturing the bizarre spirit of the Suburban Midwest.

[edit] Production

[edit] Writing The Film

Living In Missouri was written while Connor Ratliff was actually living in Great Britain, where he was an acting student at the prestigious Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts.

The screenplay was developed using some unorthodox strategies: during the writing process, the main characters of Ryan, Todd, and Amy actually had “real” identities on the Internet. In early 1998, Ratliff created a website, Ryan Johnson's Star Wars Prequel Rumors, which featured journal entries from the fictional Ryan, who described his day-to-day activities and often wrote at length about his wife and best friend. The site also contained often-erroneous predictions and rumors relating to the world of science fiction movies.

The site attracted thousands of curious and often irate sci-fi fans who often took issue with “Ryan” and his renegade brand of web journalism. In a bizarre turn of events, several media outlets were fooled by the site, and many of Ryan’s rumors began to appear in print, most prominently in SPIN magazine.

Ratliff used the website as a kind of “character workshop” to help develop the characters while fleshing out the screenplay, and several key events in the film first appeared as entries in Ryan’s web journal. When the first draft of the screenplay was completed, he contacted director Shaun Peterson, whom he had been friends with since high school. Peterson put his own self-penned project, Climax, Kansas, on hold to helm Living In Missouri.

[edit] Filming In Missouri

In October 1999, Peterson and Ratliff left their respective homes in L.A. and London, and met in the American Midwest to prepare for the imminent shoot. The last feature film made in Jefferson City, Missouri, was 1961’s Hoodlum Priest (directed by a young Irvin Kershner), so the creative team was dealing with a community that was not accustomed to dealing with the rigors of independent movie-making.

For five weeks, the crew, including a terriffic Travis Page as the sound man and the Art Department, was crammed into one small, furnished house that served as living quarters, production office, and a primary location for the movie. There were the usual problems associated with low-budget cinema—a frenzied shooting schedule, unforeseen technical glitches, sheer physical exhaustion—and a few cases of extremely bad luck.

With several key scenes to be filmed in “Ryan and Amy’s house,” the crew returned one day to find all of the dining room furniture had suddenly disappeared. It turns out that while the filmmakers were out on location, the landlords had entered the premises to remove some of their belongings, leaving a huge empty space in the middle of Ryan and Amy’s living room area. Panic ensued, and the remaining scenes had to be cleverly re-imagined in order to avoid massive continuity errors.

On the whole, however, local businesses and townspeople were curious and helpful, if somewhat bewildered by the scope of the enterprise. Aside from the occasional visit from a starry-eyed local hoping to land a speaking role, most people kept a respectful distance and allowed filming to go on without interference.

Throughout the shoot, the weather was kind enough to remain consistent, if unexpectedly sunny for the middle of November. Filming wrapped in early December, just days before an enormous storm front moved in and changed the face of Mid-Missouri into a winter snowscape.

[edit] Editing In L.A.

When Ratliff returned to England shortly after filming, Peterson was left with the Herculean task of finishing the film with minimal resources and almost no money.

Arriving in L.A. with 40 hours of footage, Peterson began the painstaking process of assembling the film using a home computer system. While new technology allowed the feature to be completed without the pressure of a high-priced editing suite, Peterson and editor Ford were faced with countless technical challenges dealing with bugs in the system. Simple tasks often ate up days of labor as they dealt with malfunctioning software, making an already difficult process even more monotonous.

After months of tedious problem solving, the film finally began to take shape, developing into a different kind of drama, mixing dark comedy with scenes of gut-wrenching sadness. Working with new technology allowed the filmmakers the freedom to create a bold, uncompromising film.

[edit] Film Festivals

Living In Missouri was an Official Selection at the 2001 Austin Film Festival, where it was one of only 11 films in competition and was also chosen to be the subject of a panel discussion with cast & crew.

The AFF is the first festival to focus on the contribution of the screenwriter, and 2001's honorees were Lawrence Kasdan (writer/director of Grand Canyon, Mumford, The Big Chill; writer of Raiders of the Lost Ark and The Empire Strikes Back) and Gary David Goldberg Family Ties, Brooklyn Bridge).

The panel discussion drew a curious and appreciative crowd that was particularly interested in learning more about the process of making a low-budget feature film in the era of digital video. Cast and crew members shared anecdotes about the shooting process, and gave provided a little bit of technical advice for any prospective filmmakers thinking about how to get started.

The Q&A was followed by a blitz of publicity stunts-- travelling concession stands offering FREE SNOWCONES served by the "real" characters from the film, FREE DONUTS in the morning, and free Living In Missouri trading cards were given to everyone who attended the screenings. The stunts caught people's attention, and sparked a range of reactions-- one Hollywood producer called the campaign "ingenious," while the security officers at the Omni hotel dubbed it "a public disturbance" and ordered the unauthorized snow cone stand removed from the lobby immediately.

Following the two successful Austin screenings, the film played at two other festivals in the same month: the Seattle Underground Film Festival, where it won BEST FEATURE FILM, and the Ashland Independent Film Festival, where it won the award for BEST ACTING ENSEMBLE. It went on to win a total of 10 awards at festivals in San Francisco, New York, L.A., Rhode Island, and Kansas City.

[edit] External links