Experiencing Interruptions?

Night Mommy

A happy suburban couple questions their safety and sanity when they learn the reason their newborn baby sleeps so well at night.

  • Jamison Ashley Braly
    Director
    Hit On The Head
  • Jamison Braly
    Writer
  • Dagan Beckett
    Producer
    Songbirds
  • Emily Steele
    Key Cast
    "Casey"
  • Axel Marshall
    Director of Photography
  • Project Type:
    Short
  • Genres:
    Thriller
  • Runtime:
    25 minutes 32 seconds
  • Completion Date:
    April 26, 2024
  • Production Budget:
    7,000 USD
  • Country of Origin:
    United States
  • Country of Filming:
    United States
  • Film Color:
    Color
  • First-time Filmmaker:
    No
  • Student Project:
    No
Director Biography - Jamison Ashley Braly


Growing up in the 80s, I was surrounded by the pinnacle of pop-culture cinema. I experienced the Indiana Jones, Back to the Future and *most* of the Rocky franchises films sitting in a theater.

I knew back then I wanted to "make movies".

But what was "Making a movie"? Was it holding the camera? Writing a script? Building the miniatures?

I grew up with my parent's shoulder-mounted VHS home movie camera and made silly shorts with my friends, then YouTube came out, then digital cameras with a low-quality video function; I finally had an audience and an easy way to share with them.

After posting a number of 2-3 minute short son my Youtube channel, a friend asked me to film their wedding back in 2011. With no gear and no experience, I of course said yes.

That started a career in wedding filmmaking that I have yet to find a way out of (www.jamisonashleyfilms.com). About 6 years into that industry I decided that my dream of becoming a "filmmaker" was hopeless; I knew nothing about the industry, it seemed to cost way more money than I could make, and while I had many film ideas, I didn't "know how" to write. So I committed to being the best "Wedding Videographer" in my region.

After that commitment, my bookings increased, my prices went up, and my income rose.

About 2 years ago, a local filmmaker and I had a chat. I told her all the ideas I had floating in my head and she told me I should write them. My excuses were endless; "I don't know how to format a script, what font do I use, what indentations do I use?" and on and on.

She told me "Take a pencil, take some paper, and write. The story will come".

So, I did that with my first film and it was like magic. Once it was all written out, I discovered that folks have already developed script writing software that did all the formatting for you so, my fears were all unwarranted (And lame).

Once I shared that script with two friends who work in video production, their excitement exceeded mine and the journey began.

I saved up $6,000 and got as many friends on board as possible and we made Hit on the Head which got 100,000 views on YouTube in the first 10 days.

Riding that wave, less than a year later, I wrote, directed, and produced Night Mommy, which cost twice as much, with more actors, and twice as many shooting days.

Since then I have written 6 more scripts, 2 of which are features. The only road block of course, is money.

Whether I make another movie or not for the rest of my like, at 45 years old, I finally able to fulfill a boyhood dream of "Making a movie"... or two.

Add Director Biography
Director Statement

I guess I didn't learn my lesson the first time.
After my first short, Hit On The Head, I decided that writing, directing, and producing a film, no matter how short, was not for me. (YES, there were easier and cheaper ways, but I wanted to bust into this filmmaking world with something I wouldn't cringe at.)
Despite those feelings, a few months later, I had written another short, this time twice as long as Hit on the Head.
And 6 months after shooting Hit on the Head, we began shooting Night Mommy. (Why are my friends so encouraging??? Tell me I'm crazy and that I should take up bird watching!)

I don't know if my age is an asset or a liability.
Maybe an asset in that I feel like I missed so many opportunities, and I have to "rush" my dreams while I'm still above the ground. But that "rush" is a liability also.

I tell my wife and kids often that if I could do 18 over again, I wouldn't have chosen the "safe" and "reliable" path of going to college to get a degree I could "fall back on" (Business Administration, *yawn*). I would have followed my true dream of filmmaking and hauled out to California. Who knows where I would be now with a full 30, um... "almost" 30 years of experience under my belt?
But, that's life; we have to live with our choices and make the most of them.

I'm reading a book right now called "The Mindful Body" by Ellen J. Langer. In it, she suggests that there are no right or wrong decisions. A "right decision", handled poorly, turns out to be wrong. A "wrong decision" handled well ends up being a positive.

Though I may have waited "too long" to start my filmmaking dream, I'm not going to call my college decision at 18 "wrong". I believe there's a reason it took me this long to slam the champagne bottle onto the hull of this journey.

Creativity is a blessing and a curse; A blessing because you can make your imaginations tangible. A curse because no matter the cost or how tired you may be, you can not stop creating. With that said, stay tuned; I already have another script written :-)