Morgan M. Morgansen's Date with Destiny

Morgan M. Morgansen's Date with Destiny
Directed by Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Produced by Jared Geller
Written by Sarah Daly
Starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Lexy Hulme
Lawrie Brewster
Music by Nathan Johnson
Cinematography Lawrie Brewster
Edited by Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Lawrie Brewster
Production
company
Distributed by hitRECord
Release dates
  • January 24, 2010 (2010-01-24) (Sundance Film Festival)
Running time
6 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $4,000 (estimated)

Morgan M. Morgansen's Date with Destiny is a 2010 short romantic silent film directed, edited by and starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt. It co-stars Lexy Hulme.

It is Gordon-Levitt's directing debut. A sequel entitled Morgan and Destiny's Eleventeenth Date: The Zeppelin Zoo was released the same year.

Plot

The silent film, except for narration throughout by Gordon-Levitt, follows the first date between Morgan M. Morgansen (Gordon-Levitt) and a young woman named Destiny (Hulme). Backed up by a sour-turned-sentimental waiter - or the "foodpenguin" (Brewster) - and a band of cartoon feline musicians (among others), Morgan ultimately manages to woo Destiny. After meeting with Destiny at a restaurant and ordering a cooked rabbit, Morgan discovers Destiny's vegetarianism, and decides to eat only the vegetables around the plate rather than eat the rabbit meat and appall his alarmed date. Appreciative of Morgan's sacrifice at dinner for the sake of her comfort, Destiny begins to kiss him in the street, overlooked by the approving foodpenguin. The two rush off to Morgan's abode and it is stated that Morgan, lying in bed that night, needed no longer feel alone.

Cast

Production

The short was produced by Gordon-Levitt's online production company hitRECord with contributions from artists all over the world. Gordon-Levitt directed and starred in the piece which was written and conceived by Irish writer Sarah Daly.[1] The visual effects were created by Scotland's Lawrie Brewster[2] with illustrations from Jenyffer Maria. Nathan Johnson composed the score which was then assembled from the contributions of musicians online.

With homages to influences as varied as Lewis Carroll, Sigmund Freud and Georges Méliès.

Premiere

The short film premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival.

See also

References

  1. "Sarah Daly’s Short Script Realised". Film Ireland. Retrieved 2015-09-08.
  2. "From Dysart to Sundance Film Festival ...". Fife Today. 2010-01-27. Retrieved 2015-09-08.

External links


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