Out-of-this-world adventure: Oklahoma filmmakers' critically acclaimed movie 'Vast of Night' lands on Amazon

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Sierra McCormick appears in "The Vast of Night," the feature film directorial debut for Oklahoma filmmaker Andrew Patterson. [Amazon photo]

Imagine, if you will, a small town seemingly lost in time, just waiting for some curious souls to harness its cooperative spirit.

That's what the largely Oklahoma crew of "The Vast of Night" found in Whitney, Texas, where they made their critically acclaimed independent feature.

"It was kind of already frozen in time, in a way, all ready for us," said Executive Producer Marcus Ross, a Minco native now based in Birmingham, Alabama. "The only way we were able to pull off what we did was just people cooperating and volunteering their houses and their time."

The debut feature film from Edmond director Andrew Patterson "The Vast of Night" premieres Friday on Amazon Prime Video.

Penned by Oklahoma-based writers Craig W. Sanger and James Montague, the sci-fi mystery is set in 1957 in tiny Cayuga, New Mexico, where smart and curious switchboard operator Fay (Sierra McCormick) and hip yet brainy radio DJ Everett (Jake Horowitz) pinpoint a bizarre audio frequency interfering with both their jobs. The teenagers embark on a life-changing quest to uncover the cause of the strange sounds.

"It's super cool, especially because Andrew and I had been working together doing commercial stuff for so long with our goal to make a movie. We'd tried a couple of times over the years, and then we finally got one done," Ross said.

Longtime goal

Over the past decade, Patterson has taken on an array of commercial video work across Oklahoma, with Ross often helping out on his projects.

Since the film is set on the night of the first high school basketball game of the season, the first priority for Patterson, Ross and Executive Producer Caleb Henry was finding a small town with a vintage gymnasium. After scouting locations all over Oklahoma, Henry eventually found the perfect spot in Texas.

"The gym was perfect. I don't know when it was built, but it hadn't been touched. ... They had built a new high school and gym and everything in town, and it wasn't really being used," said Ross, who also worked as gimbal and camera operator on the film.

"I'd never been to Whitney — which Whitney is right by Hillsboro, Texas — and there were many days when Caleb and I ... would drive around and scout old houses that we thought would look good. Then, we'd just knock on people's doors and ask if we could come by at another time and tour the house and if they'd be interested in us shooting the film inside their house. ... People were happy and excited for us to be there."

The school superintendent agreed to let the filmmakers repaint the basketball court to remove the three-point line — which wasn't introduced at the high school level until the 1980s — and the police department was happy to help out with the production.

"Then, we had an amazing art department that went through and painted signs and stuff to hang in front of the old store buildings and on the walls and hung lights up. Then, we just asked people that had old cars to bring them for the nights we needed them," Ross said.

"I think my sister went to every Goodwill store in the state of Texas trying to find wardrobe for everybody."

Period details

Costume designer and supervisor Jamie Reed, Ross' sister, said she certainly hit all the Goodwills in Dallas, Fort Worth and Oklahoma City.

"My mom and I ... would just fill up the car with men's sport coats and dress pants. For women, we did a lot of the pencil skirts and cardigan sweaters, things like that," said Reed, who is based in Minco.

Although she researched '50s fashions for the film, Reed said she didn't watch classic films or television shows for inspiration.

"I went to yearbooks. I'm from a small town, and I knew this was set in a small town. So, my idea was to try to find 'what would people in a small town in New Mexico be wearing at this time?' They weren't going to be the latest trends and things like that," she said. "I didn't want a single poodle skirt or jacket in the film, and there isn't."

Critical acclaim

Despite its small budget, "The Vast of Night" has earned out-of-this-world acclaim, starting with winning the Audience Award for best narrative feature at last year's Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Amazon Studios announced at the Toronto Film Festival in September that it had acquired worldwide rights to the film. Montague and Sanger also earned an Independent Spirit Award nomination for best first screenplay for penning the period thriller.

"It's just been really cool seeing people really dig it. It's been fun doing all the different festivals and just seeing the response from the crowd," Ross said.

With most movie theaters closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, Amazon made the inventive decision to preview "The Vast of Night" at drive-in theaters around the country earlier this month ahead of the film's streaming debut. Ross said he drove two hours to take advantage of the unique opportunity to see his movie at a packed drive-in.

"It's a throwback film, and you kind of got a little taste of that era," he said. "It's cool seeing that such a small, small group of people were able to pull off what we did. ... It's been a big, fun and fulfilling experience."

Related Photos

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Sierra McCormick appears in "The Vast of Night," the feature film directorial debut for Oklahoma filmmaker Andrew Patterson. [Amazon photo]
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Jake Horowitz stars in "The Vast of Night," the feature film directorial debut for Oklahoma filmmaker Andrew Patterson. [Amazon photo]
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Sierra McCormick appears in "The Vast of Night," the feature film directorial debut for Oklahoma filmmaker Andrew Patterson. [Amazon photo]
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From left, Brandon Stewart and Jake Horowitz appear in "The Vast of Night," the feature film directorial debut for Oklahoma filmmaker Andrew Patterson. [Amazon photo]