Just 9 years old, London Houghton making ideas come to life on film

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McGaugh 5th grader London Houghton, center, shooting a scene for her movie "Breaking Plans" as her filmmaker father Paul looks on. Photo by Sarah Arnana.

When most 6-year-olds are starting school, this young girl was looking over her filmmaker father’s shoulder, into a lens, watching him make things in a camera.

It’s been that kind of life for Seal Beach resident London Houghton, now a fifth-grader at J.M. McGaugh Elementary School. A good student yet she is already seeing stars in her young eyes.

London is the eldest daughter of Paul James Houghton, the founder of Dreamotion Studios in Seal Beach, who grew up watching her dad make movies.

“I was on one of his sets in England with him,” said London, “and I think I was, like six, at the time when he was shooting From Under the Bridge. And I just thought, it was really inspiring and cool how you could make this story on a piece of paper come to life,” said the aspiring young filmmaker.

“When she was on set with us in London. She just hung out there all day,” said James. London was literally there by the monitor all day when we did we did a police station scene in England. She was just like, hanging out with the script supervisors, the crew, always asking questions,” he said.

This English native made a name for himself in scriptwriting, grabbing Hollywood’s attention when he sold his first screenplay in 2006 and is today a Creative Producer at Warner Bros. and he is the owner of Dreamotion Studios. His stage name is Paul James.
James has since worked with several major studios on projects, completing the award-winning short film “From Under the Bridge” in 2021. His oldest daughter London has literally walked in her father’s footsteps and she is already preparing to step into her own.
According to James, “she (London) came to me with a stack of papers one day with a story on it. She said it had a story on it and she wanted to make a movie,” he shrugs as he remembers the moment.

“You know, of course, I was both incredibly surprised and proud of course. I mean it’s perfect. It’s just, it’s her. It’s in her already. It’s like, you know, there’s a chip off the old block as they say,” said James.

James said he showed his daughter how to use a scriptwriting software program on the computer and told her, “If you finish it, we will make the movie.” She did.

London said her story deals with the emotions of children affected by divorce.

“Well, my parents got divorced and I wanted to show how I felt about that, but I didn’t want to write it in a journal and so I thought that maybe writing a story would be fun,” said London.

“And then it is also based on like, friendships that I’ve had and my family. When I was writing the story, I thought that it would be fun to make it into a movie and create that story on a screen,” she said.

Although London’s screenplay is based on how she and her sister Hayley, 5, dealt with the divorce of their parents, she changed the character to an older brother for the film. It just works better, said London, who envisioned and wrote the entire 15-minute film.

Without giving the plot completely away, London’s film points out how she and her friends got suspicious of a family member when a school assignment goes awry, thus the title “Breaking Plans,” but in the end we find out that the character had missed the assignment to counsel her fictious brother about their parents’ divorce.

“I don’t really have a brother,” she sheepishly acknowledges.

“It ends with me apologizing to my friend for mistaking her and I like misread her actions, and I thought one thing was another,” said London. “I’ve told people what I did wrong, and it ends with a lot of people saying I’m sorry and hugging each other,” she adds.

“I want to let people know that, just like friendships. divorce can be hard but everyone kind of goes through it together and like we’re all in it together and they’re not alone,” the young filmmaker said in the interview.

To make the film, money would have to come from somewhere to tell her story about family amd divorce, “and the importance of friends.”
Her dad introduced her to the Seed & Spark website, a place where serious filmmakers raise funding for films.

London made her own YouTube appeal for the site, filled out an application and created such a compelling offering for support that even Emily Best, the founder of Seed & Spark, contributed to her fund drive. . She raised her entire budget.

For London, making the film is just another of life’s lessons.

“I learned that it takes a lot more work than I thought it would, and there’s a lot more responsibility and it’s fun. A lot of great things can happen because the interviews and the campaign made a lot of money which is really cool,” said London.

“And like, everyone’s like supporting me, and it makes me feel really good how they’re all supporting me,” the young filmmaker said.

Baylee Corona, who started at Dreamotion as a Chapman University intern, is one of the producers of London’s film, along with Ella Greenwood and Maya Bartley O’Dea. Greenwood and O’Dea have formed a “Broken Flames” production company.

Working with her producers, London said she finalized the script, began casting the other parts and began scouting shooting locations around Seal Beach.

For instance, McKenna’s Tea Cottage on Main Street became an ice cream shop and producers say by working with cooperative school officials, they managed to work things out so London could shoot