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Jackson Elementary students walk the red carpet at premiere of their film in Cedar Rapids
Club members wrote, acted, directed and edited film in after-school program

May. 16, 2022 6:00 am, Updated: May. 16, 2022 9:01 am
Ryan Patterson, adviser for the Jackson Elementary Film Club, helps students with final edits last Monday before the Saturday premiere of the student’s 25-minute film at Marcus Theatres in Cedar Rapids. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)
Ryan Patterson (center), adviser for the Jackson Elementary Film Club, works with two film editors, Taft sixth-grader Ainsley Nydle (left) and fifth-grader Ethan Klosak, last Monday at Jackson Elementary School in Cedar Rapids. Ainsley was one of the students who didn’t get to make a film last year at Jackson because of the pandemic and came back to help with this year’s production. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)
Fifth-grader Alex Carpenter focuses on a final film edit on Monday at Jackson Elementary in Cedar Rapids. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)
A copy of the Jackson Elementary Film Club’s script is used during final film edits last Monday at the Cedar Rapids school. The film premiered Saturday before 200 guests at a Marcus Theatre in Cedar Rapids. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)
Students walk through their film’s set last Monday, at Jackson Elementary in Cedar Rapids. (Geoff Stellfox/The Gazette)
CEDAR RAPIDS — Jackson Elementary School students walked the red carpet over the weekend at Marcus Theatres for the premiere of a movie they made in an after-school club.
About 200 people watched the 25-minute courtroom drama on Saturday. The plot involves a chef accused of poisoning an actress to keep her from getting a big role in a movie.
The film was produced by students in Jackson Elementary’s Film Club, where students write a screenplay, build sets and props, act, direct and edit a short film.
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“There’s a spot for everyone,” said Ryan Patterson, a fifth-grade teacher at Jackson and the Film Club adviser. “If they want to act, we guarantee at least one line of dialogue.”
Some students had to memorize “hundreds of words of dialogue,” said Patterson, who said he enjoys helping students “bring their vision to life.”
Students, he said, learn to be vulnerable when acting, with some using accents, others dressing up in outlandish costumes.
The club used Patterson’s phone to film the video. The majority of the scenes were filmed in Jackson’s library, where the courtroom set still stands.
This is the third movie created by the club.
The last time the club completed a film was in 2019. The film being produced during the 2019-20 school year had to be canceled when schools closed in March 2020 to slow the spread of COVID-19.
“We lost two years,” Patterson said. “A few grades missed out on the project entirely.”
Three sixth-graders at Taft Middle School — who were among those who missed out on doing a film at Jackson — returned this year to help write the screenplay and direct the film.
Taft sixth-grader Mary Corizzo, 11, helped write the screenplay, and said her inspiration came from the TV show “Blue Bloods,” a drama about a multigenerational family of cops in New York City.
The two other scriptwriters, Kaitlyn Miller, 12, and Ainsley Nydle, 12, also Taft sixth-graders, contributed real-life experiences from having parents who are lawyers.
Ainsley also is on Taft’s mock trial team, where she learned how to write questions, cross-examine a witness and write opening statements and closing arguments.
Kaitlyn, who helped direct the film, said she enjoyed helping students memorize their lines and bring expression to the words. The students, she said, worked hard to develop their film character’s personality.
Tenley Hamer, 11, a Jackson fifth-grader, played the prosecutor, Nicole Jones, who is trying to prove the actress was poisoned.
Tenley is a “really good actor,” Kaitlyn said.
Tenley said she liked playing her character, who is outgoing and has important dialogue.
The cameras, lights and set made it feel like a real movie, she added.
Patterson said the Film Club is unique to Jackson Elementary, 1300 38th St. NW, and he hopes it will continue next year when Jackson students move into the new Maple Grove Elementary, built next to their current school.
Film Club members each received a copy of their film, which is not available for public viewing.
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