Shades of Gray – a new WV masterpiece

September 28, 2008 by steve fesenmaier

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Bob Wilkinson and Robert Tinnell, two of West Virginia’s most creative filmmakers have combined forces to make “Shades of Gray,” a masterpiece film about one of the state’s most interesting personalities since WWII, Gray Barker (1925-84).

Wilkinson is a WVPBS filmmaker who previously had directed a great film about Harpers Ferry called “John Brown’s Body.” Tinnell is a well-known graphic novelist and filmmaker, best known for his hit graphic novel, “The Feast of Seven Fishes,” and a long previous career making films in Hollywood. The film is called “Shades of Gray,” a new 55 minute biography that is full of insight and dark humor. Congrats to both for making an accessible and intense film about a man who helped create the contemporary obsession with UFOs and local monsters.

The film includes fascinating interviews with Barker’s family and friends, revealing that Barker never really believed in all the amazing things that he wrote about including UFOs, the Flatwoods Monster, Mothman, “Men in Black” (MIB) but apparently enjoyed the invention. He was just a small town man with a very great imagination, and the intelligence and energy to invent worlds that only he could really imagine.

This biography includes clips from two of the Hollywood films that have been made based on Barker’s inventions – “The Mothman Prophecy” and “MIB.” Both films starred the biggest actors in Hollywood, and the second became such a hit that a sequel was made.

I particularly enjoyed the recreation of Barker writing at his typewriter, showing a lonely character who almost single-handedly invented the world that super-star directors like Spielberg and thousands of others were able to mine for their own creations. Could there have been a hit TV series like “The X-Files” without the work of Barker? Could Spielberg have invented E.T. and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” without “Saucerian” magazine? I doubt it.

There is an earlier film, “Whispers from Space,” by Ralph Coon that also profiles Barker. Coon came from L.A. back in the 1980s to explore the life and times of Barker, interviewing some of the same people shown in this film including Merle Moore, the Clarksburg-Harrison County library director who purchased the Barker Collection for her library. (She once called me on a Saturday, asking me to come to town to evaluate the collection. At that time I had no idea who Barker was and declined the invitation. I did work with Coon then, programming the world premiere of the film at the Spring WV International Film Festival, and put Wilkinson and Tinnell together since they both expressed great interest in Barker to me.) This film, unlike Coon’s, explores the very dark side of Barker’s life including his homosexuality and his possible death from AIDS. Barker was arrested for illegal sexual activities, and as Moore says, being gay in a small town can be dangerous.

This film is for adults, and probably will not be shown in West Virginia grade schools. However, I think that it would be great to show in West Virginia high schools and colleges, studying the vast UFO universe that came from Barker’s typewriter.

The film has been shown at the 2008 Mothman Festival in Point Pleasant, West Virginia and will be shown in Sutton, Braxton County in early October. Hopefully Barker’s family, some of whom still live in Braxton County, will attend the premiere. I hope that there is a Clarksburg showing of the film since David Houchon, the curator of the Barker Collection, is one of the main experts interviewed. Hopefully, the will be shown all over the U.S. and world. The people of West Virginia can be proud of this honest and artistic film about a man who made our universe a whole lot bigger despite having little to work with except his own intelligence and flare for the amazing.

4 Responses to “Shades of Gray – a new WV masterpiece”

  1. [...] Kevin Carpenter, president of the Sutton-based WV Filmmakers Festival, announced the 2008 winners of the festival that took place last weekend. Shawn Bennett, 2008 WV Filmmaker of the Year, flew in from L.A. to receive his award. ”Burning the Future - Coal in America” was chosen as “best film”, Bob Wilkinson’s “Shades of Gray” about WV author Gray Barker, won as “best feature documentary” and “Johnny Boy” received the audience award. See below for a complete list of winners and news about the WV Filmmakers Guild. Congrats to all the winners, and losers – this was probably the strongest year since the festival’s inception in 2001 for WV filmmakers.  [...]

  2. [...] He also worked on Bob Wilkinson’s award-winning indie film, “Shades of Gray.” Mike Lilly recently called me, and while talking about “The Express” mentioned that Schmidt was the key person during the Charleston shoot of his film, “Correct Change.” He was truly impressed with Schmidt’s can-do attitude. Congrats to Steve…now he won’t have to move to Hollywood to get enough work. He told me, “There’s a lot of stuff going on around here.” [...]

  3. [...] 4. Bob Wilkinson’s “Shades of Gray.” Luckily for all of us, I mentioned to Bob that Robert Tinnell was interested in WV’s own UFO meister, Gray Barker. Together they have teamed up to produce a world-class bio of one of WV’s own world class eccentrics. They showed that the earlier film, “Whispers from Space” by Ralph Coon did not say it all. Indeed, this film explores Barker’s homosexuality and legal problems along with the more familiar UFO and monster stuff. Bob tells me that the producers are trying to sell it to American and international markets. Maybe it will even be shown on WVPBS! In any case, it is the definitive film about Barker, and I think that everyone in WV  will enjoy seeing the film. [...]

  4. [...] Bob Wilkinson, director of the new feature-length documentary about Clarksburg-linked UFO writer Gray Barker, has posted a new preview trailer for his film. The film had its world premiere at the 2008 WV Filmmakers Festival in Sutton. ( Here is my review.) Wilkinson is shopping the film around to national and international companies for showings sometime in 2009. Hopefully the entire world will learn about the man who invented “Men in Black,” wrote a book about UFOs called “They Knew Too Much” and edited early UFO magazines that made creatures like the Braxton County Monster, Mothman, the Silver Bridge Mysterious Collapse, and more about The Mountain State. [...]

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