Filmed In Montauk, 'Only The Wind Is Listening' Will Debut At The Hamptons International Film Festival - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1329814

Filmed In Montauk, 'Only The Wind Is Listening' Will Debut At The Hamptons International Film Festival

icon 1 Photo

author on Oct 2, 2018

Emily Anderson knows the Montauk winter well.

“It’s too cold to be outside, too lonely to be inside,” she said during a recent interview.

An experienced director of commercials and branded content for Ogilvy Entertainment, Ms. Anderson has now tried her hand at writing and directing a narrative short film with “Only the Wind Is Listening,” which was filmed in Montauk and will debut at the Hamptons International Film Festival with two screenings over the course of Columbus Day weekend.

“I just wanted to make something totally different for my first narrative film,” Ms. Anderson said during an interview last month.

The story centers on how the lives of a fisherman and a writer intertwine during a lonely, brutal winter.

Ms. Anderson is from England and is now based in New York City, but when she is not traveling the world to direct, she spends as much time as she can at her 1950s beach bungalow in Montauk. (“When life and work allows, I’m in Montauk.”) She is also the co-founder of The Usual, a Montauk-based interview magazine.

She said that what she loves about Montauk is that it is home to both a fishing community and a creative community of writers and artists.

“If you have the means to leave, you do,” she said of winter. “So I’m just kind of interested in investigating the people that stay. … Sometimes when I’m out there in the winters by myself, I get so lonely I’ll, like, get in my car and drive around and around town until I see people to wave to, because I’m so desperate for human interaction. And that’s kind of what the film’s about—how your mental state is such a product of your environment, really.”

In fact, she says that the environment, itself, becomes a third character in the film.

In the lead roles, Ms. Anderson cast Jennifer Ferrin of Springs—an actress whose television credits include “Rise,” “Sneaky Pete,” “Time After Time” and “The Knick,” among many others—and Thomas Marmorowski, a real-life Montauk fisherman “who’s never been in front of a camera in his whole life.”

“I spent a lot of time with him talking about life—his experience of life in Montauk in the winters,” Ms. Anderson said of Mr. Marmorowski. He inspired the name of the film when he told her, “It got to the point that you find yourself talking to the wind.”

The short was filmed this February over five days—four with the actors and one to take “windy shots” around Montauk.

Ms. Anderson said the crew was half local and half New Yorkers, and she tried to explain to the city people who have never been there just how cold it would be in Montauk in February. Hot food and drinks were served the whole time they filmed, to stave off the chill.

Though filmed in Montauk, the identity of the town is never explicitly mentioned or made clear.

“I never show the Montauk sites,” Ms. Anderson said. “When I think of Montauk, I think of the classic—it’s a shot when you come over the hill and dive down and see the ocean for the first time. That’s still my favorite view. I think of the lighthouse, I think of Ditch Plains. None of that makes it into the film, because I wasn’t really interested in making a film about Montauk. I was really interested in making a film about a super-remote extreme environment, so everyone can kind of relate to it.”

In fact, during the credits—rather than stating that it was filmed in Montauk—the location is only given by the GPS coordinates: 41.0359° N, 71.9545° W.

“I didn’t want to make it about Montauk, the place,” Ms. Anderson explained. “I wanted to make it about a place.”

Directing her own work—self-funded with her colleague, producer Jon Gaynes—was a new experience.

“It was really satisfying because I got to control everything,” she said. “I got to write the story, choose my crew, shoot where I wanted, when I wanted, with the actors that I wanted. So, obviously, everybody understands that there is something so satisfying about being on control.”

But her feelings were more complicated than that.

“I felt very vulnerable. I felt more vulnerable than I felt satisfied, because Montauk is, like, my favorite place on the planet. And I had never shot a film in my hometown. I felt very conscious of being respectful of the place. And I used a lot of local folks that really live in Montauk and they are doing their jobs in the film that they’re doing in real life.”

Ms. Anderson’s ambition now is to direct television and feature films, though she did not start out as a film student. She graduated from Glasgow School of Art in Scotland, where she studied sculpture, and later attended the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan. She worked her way through the art world and into the commercial space. “I kind of came up as a storyteller and then I ended up being a director,” she said.

She said she hopes that those who spend their winters in Montauk will recognize the essence of what she was hoping to capture, and those who have not will see what they have been missing.

“Only the Wind Is Listening” will screen before “The Last Race” on Saturday, October 6, at 3 p.m. at East Hampton United Artists cinema and on Sunday, October 7, at 3:45 p.m. at the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center.

You May Also Like:

Review: Rue Matthiessen’s 'Woman With Eyes Closed'

Rue Matthiessen’s “Woman With Eyes Closed” may attract for several reasons: The Matthiessen name — ... 20 Feb 2025 by Joan Baum

Obscure Find Caps a Rare Collection of Race Records | 27Speaks Podcast

Sag Harbor's Joe Lauro, whose interests tend toward jazz, blues, jug and country, is a ... by 27Speaks

Bay Street Plans Mardi Gras Celebration on March 1

Mardi Gras, the celebration that takes place every calendar year on the eve of Ash Wednesday, invites observers to overfill themselves with intoxicating libation and rich food in advance of the decidedly less exciting season of Lent, which follows immediately after. Bay Street Theater will throw a Mardi Gras celebration on the night of Saturday, March 1. The night kicks off in the lobby of the theater with live singers starting at 7 p.m. The bar will be open, and King Cake and beignets will be served, and masks and beads will be provided. At 8 p.m., the Paumanok Stompers, ... 17 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

How a Cold Murder Case Spawned a Veteran Journalist’s Debut Novel

Steve Wick’s debut novel, a gripping tale of murder, espionage and Nazis on Long Island, ... by Denise Civiletti

Travel the High Seas With Sons of Town Hall

Join the transatlantic folk duo Sons of Town Hall comprising American songwriter/author David Berkeley and ... 16 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

‘Tony and the Lady’ Sing at The Suffolk

The Suffolk presents “Tony and the Lady,” celebrating the friendship and music of Tony Bennett ... 15 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

After Hours With Sheri Pasquarella and 'Some Odes'

On Saturday, March 1, at 6 p.m., take an “After Hours” deep dive into The ... by Staff Writer

Pianofest alum Jack Gao Performs at SCC

Southampton Cultural Center’s Liliane Questel Recital Series presents Pianofest alum Jack Gao performing on Saturday, ... 14 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

How to Sleep Eco-Chic

In the book “Sustainable Travel,” author Holly Tuppen asks, “Is it morally acceptable to travel ... 13 Feb 2025 by Jenny Noble

Preservation as a Creative Act

“If we are to preserve culture, we must continue to create it.” — Johan Huizinga From rehabilitation to restoration to public acquisition, the act of preservation requires inspiration and vision. It communicates the values of a culture it looks to preserve, as well as creating standards of culture in the process. It is itself a creative act. On Sunday, February 23, at 2 p.m., The Church in Sag Harbor will explore architecture and design from this perspective with Jess Frost, executive director and co-founder of the Arts Center at Duck Creek in Springs, Matilde Guidelli, curator and curatorial department head ... 12 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer