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Jon Matthews

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jon Matthews, (born September 1, 1977) is an American film director, writer, producer, and actor. He is best known for his documentary, Surviving Cliffside, which premiered at the 2014 South by Southwest Film Festival,[1] and for "Black Dog, Red Dog" a film he co-directed with James Franco.[citation needed]

Early life

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Matthews was born in Alum Creek, West Virginia,[2] and was raised in a Christian household.[citation needed] As a child he wrote and illustrated comic books, creating his own characters and stories.[citation needed]

Matthews attended West Virginia University,[citation needed] and there was exposed to a wide variety of film styles.[citation needed] He studied Sociology and took classes on feminist theory, and race and gender stratification in society.[citation needed] He was active in civil rights groups on campus.[citation needed]

Matthews enrolled in West Virginia University's College of Law in 1999. [citation needed] There he started an American Civil Liberties chapter[citation needed] and re-formed the National Lawyers Guild chapter at the law school.[citation needed] He graduated in 2002.[citation needed]

Career in law

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Matthews started a private law practice in West Virginia, focusing on civil rights and consumer law. After a year he was hired as Assistant Attorney General, he worked in the Civil Rights Division, representing victims of housing and employment discrimination.[citation needed]

Four years later Matthews was hired at a private firm, where he continued to do civil rights cases.[citation needed] Also during this time, Matthews became Legal Chair of the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia, coordinating their legal docket and litigating cases himself,[citation needed] including a religious discrimination case, where a Mormon student was denied a state-funded scholarship.[3]

Matthews became the Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Connecticut and went to live in Hartford. He represented the free speech rights of a hunger striker,[citation needed] the religious freedoms of death row inmates,[citation needed] and advocated for same sex marriage and LGBTQ rights.[failed verification][4]

During this time Matthews also played steel guitar in a country band.[citation needed]

Film career

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In 2009 Matthews left his law practice and moved to New York City, where he attended New York University's graduate film program as a Dean's Fellow.[5][6] In his third year at NYU, Matthews was hired as Spike Lee's assistant.[citation needed] Lee watched the footage for Matthews' thesis documentary and later awarded him a grant to finish the film, Surviving Cliffside.[7] The film premiered at the SXSW Film Festival.[8][9] It later screened at the West Virginia International Film Festival.[10]

After graduation, Matthews moved to Los Angeles, where he has written several feature films, television pilots, and commercials.[citation needed] In 2013, he and actress Abby Wathen started a kickstarter campaign to raise funds for one of their projects.[11]

During the summer of 2014, Matthews made a commercial for Castrol GTX Motor Oil.[citation needed] He also made a commercial for Chevrolet 4G LTE, which won second place in an international contest sponsored by MoFilm.[citation needed]

In the fall of 2014, Matthews programmed the inaugural Appalachian Queer Film Festival in Lewisburg, West Virginia. The festival, which he co-founded with activist Tim Ward, featured two films from Sundance and the Grand Jury winner from South by Southwest.[12]

In 2015, Matthews began filming a feature film, Khali the Killer.[13]

References

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  1. ^ "When Industries Collide: SXSW 2014 Courtney Sheehan". Sense of Cinema. June 2014
  2. ^ "WV native visualized his way from NYU to Hollywood". State Journal, By Jennifer Young May 14, 2015 9
  3. ^ "Mormon regains Promise Scholarship". West Virginia Public Broadcasting, December 7, 2007.
  4. ^ "The Pick List: This Week's Recommended Events". Seattle Weekly, Oct 28 2014
  5. ^ "SXSW ’14 Interview: Jon Matthews on the Wild Ride of “Surviving Cliffside” Archived 2016-09-19 at the Wayback Machine. Movable Feast, March 24, 2014. Stephen Saito
  6. ^ "Inaugural Appalachian Queer Film Festival planned for October". Tri-State Update, 13 News, Sep 19, 2014
  7. ^ "Guns, Meth and Kiddie Pageants Intersect in Dark Doc 'Surviving Cliffside' (SXSW Exclusive)". Hollywood Reporter, by Seth Abramovitch 2/28/2014
  8. ^ "Surviving Cliffside: SXSW Review". The Hollywood Reporter, 3/9/2014 by John DeFore
  9. ^ "SXSW Film Review – Surviving Cliffside". The MacGuffin, June 3, 2014 | Allen Almachar
  10. ^ "Surviving Cliffside: ‘It’s weird to have your life out there’". Charleston Gazette-Mail
  11. ^ "Local actress, director hope 'Unlovable' finds love". Gazette Mail, Bill Lynch, May 10, 2013.
  12. ^ Lies, Erica (November 25, 2014). "Looking Back At The Screen: The First Annual Appalachian Queer Film Festival". The Hairpin. Archived from the original on December 14, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ "Heeeeeere’s Jon Matthews!". Huffington Post, Kay Smythe 11 September 2015
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