Deep in My Heart is a Song

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As a lover of storytelling, it is sometimes valuable to be reminded of the enduring power of a well-told yarn. For director Jonathan Pickett (Chicken Stories), that reminder came when he met (then) 75-year-old cowboy singer Johnny Bencomo – a man with an 18-string guitar named Gracie, a movie-star quality and the story of a highly unusual gig – the inspiration for his short film, Deep in My Heart is a Song.Given that Pickett’s two previous short films were documentaries, it was a natural inclination for him to consider capturing Bencomo on screen with a similar approach. However, after hearing the singer recount the story of this unique and memorable performance, Pickett instead proposed adapting it into a scripted work, with Bencomo playing himself.“After we finished reading it together, I looked up and saw tears in his big eyes”“He’d never acted before,” Pickett notes of his lead actor and co-writer, adding that he had “never [even] been on a film set.” Nevertheless, after receiving the script by mail, Bencomo – by Pickett’s account – “took a leap,” prompting the filmmaker to travel to Tombstone, Arizona, where the singer resides, just a few days later. “After we finished reading it together, I looked up and saw tears in his big eyes. He said, ‘My friend, what a tear-jerker we’ve got on our hands,’” Pickett recalls.With his recent short films rooted in nonfiction, Pickett admits he was “excited by the challenge of bringing that skillset to scripted filmmaking,” ultimately finding that the differences in process were not as pronounced as one might expect. His guiding principle? “Working to create conditions under which magic might be able to unfold: train your camera on fascinating people, frame them in beautiful places, and work with talented and committed collaborators.”Lindsay Burdge stars as a daughter trying to give her dying mother one last taste of Country musicThere is a timeless quality to Deep in My Heart is a Song, enhanced by the textured aesthetic of shooting on Super 16mm, which lends the film a dreamlike, almost ethereal atmosphere. Yet, despite this slightly fantastical feel, the short remains grounded in its performances and emotional core. Its central trio – Bencomo, Lindsay Burdge (star of S/W favourite Fill Your Heart with French Fries) and Annalee Jefferies – bringing a warmth and sincerity that anchor the film.It is ultimately this human element that proves most compelling. The film could easily veer into something sombre or even morbid, yet instead it feels life-affirming – marked by generosity and compassion. At its core, it is a film about people, a point Pickett himself underscores when reflecting on his intentions:“Having a professional creative career seems to have all these formalized definitions and metrics of success, but the true value and fulfillment come from the moments of ineffable connection that the art facilitates. That’s what makes filmmaking worth it to me, and I’m so thankful to Johnny for teaching me that.”