May 11, 1909: Wheeling Filmmaker Ellis Dungan Born in Ohio

Wheeling filmmaker Ellis Dungan was born on May 11, 1909, in nearby Barton, Ohio. He eventually hitchhiked across the United States several times, studied photography in Paris, and attended the University of Southern California’s film school. Dungan got his first job as a studio director in India, where he spent 15 years as a cameraman, editor, director, and production person. He returned to Hollywood in 1950 and then traveled back and forth to India to film action scenes for several mainstream movies. Ellis Dungan moved to Wheeling in 1958. Over the next 30 years, his company shot documentary films and produced movies for the state and region, including Wheels to Progress as well as For Liberty and Union about the West Virginia statehood movement. His last film was Josiah Fox—Architect of the United States’ First Navy, a tribute to his great-great-grandfather, who helped design the USS Constitution, known as “Old Ironsides.”

Ellis Dungan was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award by the West Virginia International Film Festival and inducted into the Wheeling Hall of Fame. He died in neighboring Bellaire, Ohio, in 2002, at age 92.

Filmmaker Michael Moore Makes Surprise Visit to W.Va. Film Festival

Filmmaker Michael Moore made a surprise visit to West Virginia this weekend for a screening at an international film festival. Moore was in the Kanawha Valley on Saturday and Sunday and spoke to crowds at the West Virginia International Film Festival, which was showing his latest film Where To Invade Next at the LaBelle Theater in South Charleston.

Moore’s visit happened mostly by chance, as he was scheduled to be out of the country for his 62nd birthday to appear at the screening of the film in Italy. However, his trip to Italy was canceled last minute.

“Everybody had already took off work and we had flights scheduled to New York for my family,” Moore said to the crowd at the LaBelle before the Sunday showing.

“We were going to make this a big birthday trip to Rome and we said well let’s go someplace else already here. Like what would be the equivalent of Rome? And I said ‘how about a city built on a lot of hills,’” he joked.

Known for being a staunch liberal and highly progressive, Moore’s films Roger & Me, Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11 have focused on his criticisms of American politics and culture. Where To Invade Next takes a satirical look at American policies on issues such as education, women’s and workers’ rights–as he travels the world “invading” other countries with hopes to bring idealism back home. 

Moore said his family and friends stared looking around for things to do in the Charleston area when they arrived over the weekend. That’s when they pulled a birthday surprise on him by getting tickets to the showing of Where To Invade Next at the West Virginia International Film Festival.

“I got here, and I’ll tell you–[Saturday] was the birthday–and to keep me from either seeing any posters or whatever they took me out to the New River Gorge, which was awesome. And then we came here and there was a Red Carpet and everything. Just like Rome!” Moore panned to the crowd, referencing the East End bar.

Moore, a native of Flint, Michigan, also fielded a few questions from the audience after Sunday’s screening.

When asked how the public should respond to water contaminations like the ongoing situation in Flint and the January 2014 chemical spill in Charleston, Moore called for “mass, non-violent, civil disobedience.”

At Sunday’s screening, Moore was presented with a variety of gifts, including a birthday cake and pepperoni rolls. Upon receiving them he said, “I could live here, you know? I look normal here.” 

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