Development wrote, directed, and produced
Middle of Nowhere. DuVernay explained that when she began to examine what life is like in
Compton and "the texture of the lives of women who live there", the subject of incarceration kept coming up. The director spent months conducting research for the film, including interviewing the wives of felons, before writing a screenplay. Describing her viewpoint, DuVernay told Allison Samuels of
The Daily Beast, "This is a story I know very well. I'm from Los Angeles and I know countless women who live this kind of life every day, year after year. You see women struggling to keep it all together while a loved one is in jail. But we don't hear about them or their struggles in a way that resonates with others. Their stories are so compelling. It's as if they are in their own little world and no one else sees them. I also wanted to talk about the love between two people in a setting that isn't the norm and how they survive."
Filming Middle of Nowhere had a budget of $200,000 and was shot in June 2011 over nineteen days, half of the studio average of forty days. DuVernay told
IndieWire's Claire Easton that it was difficult filming over a short period of time and thought that she could have used a couple more days. She continued "It really would just allow us to have more takes, and explore things more. But ultimately, you know, my first film was shot in 15 days, so I gained 4 days. So, one day maybe I'll get out of the teens!" DuVernay and her crew spent a week filming in a
South Los Angeles neighborhood. A "well-maintained Spanish mission-style duplex" on East 91st Street doubled as Ruby's house in the film. DuVernay said "When people think South-Central or Compton, it's all
Boyz n the Hood. It's never a house like this. It becomes an assumption that people who live in these communities don't care about their home, don't work as hard for them and don't own their homes. That's one of the reasons why I chose this area. It reminded me of the house I grew up in." Other shooting locations included
Inglewood, a federal correction facility in
Victorville,
Leimert Park, and East Los Angeles. DuVernay wanted to film the movie in places that were authentic to her characters. She also made sure that the locations were used in such a way that they would not detract from the story. ==Release==