Michael Plaster

Prepared for Ucross

Film, anime, jiu-jitsu, and community practice for Ucross.

I make work about memory under pressure: how people carry fear, discipline, identity, repetition, violence, care, and belonging in the body. My current practice brings together film, Japanese anime development, martial arts community, and the daily discipline needed to finish ambitious creative work.

UcrossProtected time, story development, and visual discipline.

One practice, three connected bodies of work.

Film and Anime Development

I am developing Memory For Sale as a film and anime project about memory, identity, pressure, and the hidden forces that shape what people remember, repeat, protect, and trade away.

Jiu-Jitsu and Self-Defense

My work comes from years inside jiu-jitsu and self-defense communities. The training room is where people rehearse fear, trust, hesitation, discipline, recovery, and belonging in real time.

Studio Practice and Production

I build a practical studio practice around research, field notes, collaborators, drafts, and production decisions so the work can move from lived experience into a finished public form.

Collage-style visual reference connected to movement culture

Memory For Sale

Memory For Sale is the project spine I am developing now. It is a film and anime world about what happens when memory becomes unstable, valuable, and contested. The story lets me work with questions I keep returning to: identity, violence, loyalty, control, spiritual hunger, and the need to become someone else without losing yourself.

  • Film and anime development with Gonzo K.K. and a Japan-facing visual language.
  • Research into memory, identity, pressure, and the body.
  • A public-facing practice that can become writing, image work, talks, workshops, and finished film.

The training room is a place where people tell the truth with their bodies.

Jiu-jitsu and self-defense rooms are where people meet pressure directly. They show how fear changes posture, how trust is earned, how confidence is built, and how a community can teach someone to become less helpless.

That is why movement is not just subject matter for me. It is a way to listen. It gives the work contact with real people, real stakes, and the discipline of showing up again after discomfort.

I turn pressure, research, and lived material into finished work.

My process is practical. I gather story material, visual references, conversations, training-room observations, and production notes, then organize them into scenes, images, public writing, and clear next steps.

I care about the result being useful outside my own head. A residency should help the work become more precise, more public, and more honest.

Space, quiet, and sustained attention for a developing film and anime project.

This page frames the work as a project that benefits from uninterrupted time, honest isolation, and a strong interdisciplinary residency environment. The focus is on clarifying the project spine and building a stronger visual and written foundation.

Current work areas.

A fuller CV, reel, project packet, and direct work samples can be provided with the application materials.

Michael Plaster

Film, anime development, jiu-jitsu, self-defense community, and practical studio practice. Based in the United States and available for international residencies under program conditions.