Cody Clark » 01.13.08 »
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Mission accomplished. (Pun intended.) Mitch Davis, 27, a publicist at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colo., served his own LDS mission to New Mexico. The first place he served was the tiny desert town of Polacca, on the Hopi Indian Reservation.
"I loved my own mission and I think about it often," Davis said.
One day he ended up discussing missions with a friend and the two of them wondered how the actions and responsibilities of missionaries would change in the event of a natural disaster, an earthquake, or maybe a tsunami. The idea stayed in his brain until suddenly the words "natural disaster" became "zombie attack."
"I love horror movies," he said, "and I'd never seen a Mormon horror movie."
Davis turned the idea into a 7-page script for the LDS Film Festival's annual script-writing competition almost overnight -- he'd meant to enter the competition but forgot about its deadline until the week before scripts were due.
He submitted his script for "Through the Valley" (of the shadow of death?) with no expectation that it would be selected for production by the festival. Which just goes to show that you never know what's going to hit a nerve.
Davis said that, though listed by the festival as a "horror" film, "Through the Valley," directed by Joshua Ligairi, has its share of humor. And it's not an out-and-out zombie movie, either. "This won't be missionaries running around with shotguns blowing zombies' heads off," he said. "My missionaries will follow all of the mission rules and try to help the people around them."
Though he hasn't yet seen the film of his own script -- weather-permitting, he'll catch it at the festival -- Davis is thrilled to be a filmmaker. And he's going to stick with it. "I honestly don't know what this will bring," he said. "Regardless of what happens, I'll continue to write.
Direct link to the article at The Daily Herald.
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