EGG by Jayson Densman and Jeremy C. Shipp: Review

January 12, 2009
Posted by Caleb J Ross
Posted in Reviews-Misc. | 1 Comment »

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“The day I went insane wasn’t any different than any other day. First, I had to decide who to love and who to lock out.”

So begins, EGG, a thirteen minute free fall bound only by the disjointed, non-linear traditions of bizarro storytelling. Lane, the unreliable narrator/protagonist threads together the film with a mix of flashbacks and flash-forwards upon a seizing foundation in order to understand the nature of generational influence. Who deserves to raise a boy, himself or his father?

The film pivots around a physical egg, given to a young Lane shortly after running away from home. The egg represents a means of control over the momentum of his life. Think of a grade school egg care project in which students must not only prove their ability to care for something, but must understand how difficult that level of responsibility can be. For Lane, the moment he accepts the egg is the moment his life begins to spiral into confusion and apparent incoherence. Puberty, in a sense. The insanity noted in this review’s opening line may very well be a version of adulthood, and that’s the crux of EGG; an attempt to visually capture the moment of transition from childhood to adulthood.

It takes effort for the uninitiated to adopt the logic of bizarro, which by definition means the abandonment of conventional logic. Any fan of early David Lynch and the weirder Hitchcock movies will immediately connect with the strained film making rationale used to translate Jeremy C. Shipp’s screenplay. And any fan of Jeremy C. Shipp will know that no other mode would suffice.

IN THE WORDS of Jayson Densman, director:

A BIT OF HISTORY: The best part of prospecting story material for the visual medium is when something takes you by surprise. That’s what happened with Jeremy C. Shipp’s ‘EGG’. I had become friends with Jeremy on MySpace and bought his first novel, Vacation. The book was something I hadn’t experienced in a while. It was weird, freshly inventive and definitely a break from the standard and predictable formulas the world throws at us on a consistent basis. What appealed to me was the chaos and realizing that structure wasn’t all that important. The book is like a journal of loosely-related, uneasy dreams, stitched together and fashioned to give Freud himself a case of the willies. All paths led to strange new territories of philosophy and observation. Being a fan of filmmakers like Cronenberg, Lynch, early DePalma and Hitchcock, I began to seriously entertain the idea of making a short from one of the chapters of Vacation. Instead, I asked Jeremy if he had any scripts lying around he wasn’t using. He said no….but he’d be happy to write one! I informed him I had some locations we could use (a creepy, abandoned feed mill and a mansion built in the early 1900’s) and maybe something ten to twelve pages would be feasible for a no-budget project. Shortly thereafter, a script called EGG was in my email. I read and I smiled. All of the elements of Vacation’s style were there in brilliant color and the atmosphere was delicious and unnerving.

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THE MELTING POT: Well-written scripts should tell a filmmaker how to build a movie and, at best, should be a blueprint with plenty of room for actor transposition and exploration. EGG, from page one, was so rich in texture and atmospheric coloring that it became clear to me I’d need to follow this thing as closely as possible. The omission of anything in this script would be removing a piece of the puzzle. My style of shooting and editing comes from a part of me that sees the world like a child might see it. Some things that are truly frightening to most adults—like mature issues and secret motivations—are hidden from most children. Until they are exposed. Certain tensions can be created on set and in editing by not necessarily looking closer at the words, but by physically giving them a chance to breathe a bit. Jeremy left room for us to develop the characters and at the same time provide structure in chaos. The very idea that Egg has the possibility of meaning different things to different people makes the story a bit more universal in depth. I truly hate a movie that feels the need to explain itself in the narrative as it moves along, like audiences are not smart enough to figure it out. Jeremy’s style is a wrangling of madness that doesn’t feel the need to explain itself or its existence. It simply is.

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Visit:
Director: Jayson Densman
Writer: Jeremy C. Shipp

Purchase:
From Raw Dog Screaming Press (distributor)

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Who Posted This?

Caleb J Ross is an avid outsider with love and diseases to spread. He's been published widely. He hopes to peddle a published novel on Kansas City streets someday. He is the author of the fiction chapbook, Charactered Pieces, from OW Press. Homepage: www.calebjross.com

One Response to “ EGG by Jayson Densman and Jeremy C. Shipp: Review ”

  1. rachelbmary on January 20, 2009 at 4:15 pm

    An extraordinary debut by an extraordinarily talented director! BRAVO!!

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