Posts Tagged ‘film’

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Pinch of Gay at Chicago’s Latino Film Festival

April 11, 2008

We latinos aren’t known for our wide acceptance of the homosexualisms, and unless you are both brown and same sex inclined, I never assume the most open mind. This year, a documentary by Judith McCray explores lives of some G’s, L’s and T’s (no B’s listed in the film description, sorry, wait, there is snibbet of a B in the trailer) in Chicago, D.C. and San Francisco. “The annual Latino Film Festival promotes Latino culture in the United States by presenting the best and most recent films from Spain, Portugal, Latin America and the United States.” Thankfully, amidst all the movies about dancing and familia, there’s at least one talking about us. Well, actually, a doc about queer latinos? Nevermind, this one will be about dancing and familia too. “Tal como somos / Just as we are” screens tonight at 8:30 PM and on the 15th at 6:00 PM, both at Instituto Cervantes, 31 W Ohio.

–Stinky Pinky

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This Just In ~ Actor Slash Model Film Project Fundraiser !!

March 10, 2008

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You already know about Actor Slash Model’s Bi-monthly queer film screening, Threat Level. This Thursday, Simon and Madsen are raising money for their film project with a uber mega super blitz. The Empty Bottle will be inundated with all the queers you can shake a silicon stick at, a slew of queer bands and performers hosted by the effervescent Jessica Halem.

Thursday March 13, 2008
The Empty Bottle ~ 1035 N. Western Ave., Chicago, IL
8pm, 21+, $10 – no one turned away
with The Pussy Pirates, The Joans, Condenada, Brother Truck, Justin Petertil, Plaid on Plaid, and Actor Slash Model. Hosted by Jessica Halem. Poor taste and bad behavior provided by Ravenous Gorge, Backdoor Aly, Spanky Bottoms and Co. Plus raffles, a sneak peak screening, drink specials, etc.

–Stinky Pinky

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Threat Level: An Evening of Queer Shorts

February 12, 2008

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MamSir Productions, Moving Train Media, and Actor Slash Model Present….

Threat Level: An Evening of Queer Shorts
February 20th, 7:30 PM
Elegant Mr. Gallery
1355 N. Milwaukee Ave, 3rd Floor

ANNOUNCING!
*****Chicago’s new, bi-monthly, queer film and video screening series.******

Line up as follows:
Black and White, Kirsty Macdonald
Crush Project, Kelley Meister
Bienvenida/Welcome, Yaya Raiz
To Have, To Hold, and To Violate: Wedding Reception, Roller Rink,
Tailgate
, Amber Hawk Swanson
Fuck Macho Bull Shit, Maple Rabbit
Banana Boy, Samuel Chow
Doin’ the Grizzly, Amy Von Harrington
Jean Genet in Chicago, Frédéric Moffet

//// Local filmmakers in Attendance! //////

$5-$10 sliding scale donation. All proceeds go towards the production of Chicago-based queer/trans film and video work.

**First ten people that dare to wear shorts (no pants/tights,thermals) get to sit in the VIP section**
www.myspace.com/threatlevelqueershorts

–K ROCK

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Lesbians! On Film!

January 12, 2008


*Trailer for Kansas City Bomber

The fifth iteration of “Dyke Delicious,” a lesbian-interest film and social series hosted at Chicago Filmmakers, kicks off this weekend with I, Doll: The Unauthorized Biography of America’s 11 1/2″ Sweetheart , an intelligent and witty documentary about the history and legacy of Barbie. On February 9th, Dyke Delicious will present their Romantic Shorts program, and on the 8th of March show up for Kansas City Bomber, the 1972 roller derby drama starring Raquel Welch (and also featuring Jodie Foster).

Social hour begins at 7pm; come early for refreshments and chatting. All movies begin at 8pm.

–Treefort

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Year in Pink: Out at The Movies Edition

December 29, 2007

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This year, gay men and women moved me with their terrific work in front of and behind the camera, even if that work was simply telling their own stories. If anything, this top ten list is a celebration of the incredible diversity of talents, tastes and lives in our community.

1. Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (dir. Tim Burton): Stephen Sondheim’s gorgeous music and lyrics unite with Burton’s beautiful imagery to tell a terrifying, bloody and emotionally wrenching tale.

2. I’m Not There (dir. Todd Haynes): The director of Far From Heaven, Velvet Goldmine and Poison twists the biopic genre inside out with his tribute to the chameleon-like Bob Dylan, played by six different actors. Cate Blanchett is the most memorable.

3. The Bible Tells Me So (dir. Daniel G. Karslake): Gay men and women share their stories about how Christianity and coming out impacted their relationships with family members. Some stories are heart-warming, others are painful, but all are authentic.

4. The Bubble (dir. Eytan Fox): An uncompromising look at complications that arise when an Israeli man and a Palestinian man fall in love in Tel Aviv. The film-maker behind Yossi & Jagger (2002) and Walk on Water (2004), Fox just gets better and better.

5. Small Town Gay Bar (dir. Malcolm Ingram): Ingram brings his camera home to visit gay bars in the Deep South. Living in places that are notoriously hostile towards homosexuality, these men and women share a sense of community lacking in big cities.

6. The Life of Reilly (dir. Frank L. Anderson, Barry Poltermann): Charles Nelson Reilly, veteran actor and fixture on game and talk shows in the 1970s and 80s, tells his life story with generous humor and undeniable sorrow. There is more to him than Match Game.

7. ShowBusiness: The Road to Broadway (dir. Dori Berinstein): Four musicals (Avenue Q, Caroline or Change, Taboo, and Wicked ) vie for the Tony Award in the 2003-2004 Broadway season. If you didn’t know, many gays are involved in the theater world.

8. Hairspray (dir. Adam Shankman): John Waters is a friendly flasher in a film adapted from the musical adapted from his own 1988 film. Ostensibly about racial integration of television shows in the 1960s, the film is pure fun, notwithstanding John Travolta.

9. Wrestling with Angels: Playwright Tony Kushner (dir. Freida Lee Mock): A profile of the scribe behind Angels In America. It covers such milestones as his 2001 play, Homebody/Kabul, his marriage to Mark Harris, and his work for John Kerry’s campaign.

10. Gray Matters (dir. Sue Kramer): Flawed romantic comedy that is perhaps the antithesis of Go Fish (1994), but sweet and funny. Gray (Heather Graham) likes women but is a dork about finding love. Alan Cumming and Molly Shannon try to help her.

–R. Esquivel

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Stephen Sondheim’s Slasher Story

December 21, 2007

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*Stephen Sondheim

Is momentum building for a renaissance of movie musicals? Chicago [2002] won Best Picture and five other Academy Awards, but it was the film’s $170 million domestic box office that likely convinced studios to give singing and dancing another shot. In the last few years, we have seen screen adaptations of hit Broadway musicals The Phantom of the Opera [2004], Rent [2005], The Producers [2005], Dreamgirls [2006], and Hairspray [2007]. Furthermore, films like Across the Universe [2007] and I’m Not There [2007] incorporate songs by the Beatles and Bob Dylan into their narratives. Unsurprisingly, gay men and women are spearheading this trend as directors, actors, producers and composers. This weekend, composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim, makes his contribution.

This writer is a gay man that absolutely loves musicals, stereotype be damned. He has memorized Sondheim’s masterpiece, Sweeney Todd : The Demon Barber of Fleet Street . This Friday, Tim Burton’s film adaptation of Sweeney Todd opens. Superstar Johnny Depp is the reason the film was greenlit with a budget of $50 million, and certainly the reason why it is playing in suburban multiplexes. After all, it ain’t Oklahoma! The brilliance of Sweeney Todd is in the way it undermines the traditional musical model. Yes, it has gorgeous music and clever lyrics, but it is a dark, bitterly hilarious tale of revenge. And there is BLOOD. Critics have praised the film, especially Mr. Depp’s performance (yes, he can sing!), the new orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick, and the stunning art direction inspired by Hammer horror films. Sondheim himself was involved in making controversial casting and cutting decisions, and by all reports the composer is proud of the finished product. He has hosted private screenings for his friends, including the original Mrs. Lovett, Angela Lansbury.

Please help Sweeney Todd be a commercial success. It may usher in a new Golden Age of Movie Musicals. Oh, wouldn’t it be loverly?

- R. Esquivel

Trailer!

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Daft Punk’s Deft Marketing

December 5, 2007

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Someone talked the Scion car company into sponsoring an independent film series. Cynics will argue that Scion is just out to sell cars, but you have to hand it to the suits for choosing a surprisingly diverse line-up of intriguing films. Route kicked off in September with George Hickenloper’s chronicle of the L.A. music scene, Mayor of Sunset Strip (2003). Raquel Cepeda’s Bling: A Planet Rock (2007), a documentary of hip-hop culture in war-torn Sierra Leone, screened in October. Last month, Route brought Jennie Livington’s stunning documentary of the 1980s Harlem drag ball scene, Paris Is Burning (1990) back to big screens across America. To see these quality films at “no charge” meant, of course, that one also had to accept free beer and merchandise that event staff kept shoving in one’s face. Nothing is truly free.

The last offering of the Route film series is Daft Punk’s Electroma (2006), which screens over the next two weeks across the country. Directors Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo dabble in a whole lot of everything, not the least of which is recording and producing world-renowned House music as Daft Punk. While Daft Punk have been integrating visuals into live shows for years, Electroma is their first full-length live action film (they had that cartoon).

According to Route’s publicity, “Daft Punk’s Electroma is an odyssey of two robots who journey across a mythic American landscape of haunting, surreal beauty on a quest to become human. With its breathtaking cinematography, innovative filming techniques, and above all its underlying search for humanity within a dystopian environment, Daft Punk have delivered a film that finds a common thread with their previous work while exploring new horizons as directors of their first feature film. “

And hey, free beer.

Trailer and mp3′s below, screening schedule after the jump.

- R. Esquivel

Daft Punk Vs. Justin Timberlake–What Goes Around the World

Daft Punk–Robot Rock/Oh Yeah

Read the rest of this entry ?

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Film Schmilm

November 16, 2007

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*Candy Darling

From November 16-22, Facets Multi Media is having a retrospective of Andy Warhol’s films. Refreshingly, they are mostly showing his narratives and shying away from the often drooled on but ultimately snoozey screen tests. Lonesome Cowboys is a naked mock-cowboy w/ drag story loosely based on Romeo and Juliet, another I, A Man, has a comical but eerie scene with Valerie Solanas, and Beautiful Darling: The Life and Times of Candy Darling, Andy Warhol Superstar will show us archival and interview footage that will be included in an upcoming documentary directed by James Rasin. Check out the entire schedule at the Facets site here.

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*Arthur Russell

Arthur Russell is the subject of an upcoming documentary as well, directed my Matt Wolf. The past few years have seen his cello, compositional and disco work get reissued by Soul Jazz Records, Audika, Rough Trade and DFA. It’s almost as if the mysterious musician only needs to be featured on a Volkswagon commercial to get Nick Draked. Soon enough, I guess. I was happy to find out this movie will be ready by next year, myspace is still good for something. In any case, while not yet a household name, music geeks already know he worked with David Byrne, Philip Glass, and innovated sounds steeped in loneliness, joy and nature, sometimes all at the same time. This past summer Rough Trade also issued an EP called Four Songs featuring Arthur Russell covers by Joel Gibb, Vera November, Victoria Bergsman and Jens Lekman. See the trailer for the movie below and go visit the official website here.

 –Stinky Pinky

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26th Annual REELING Film Fest Starts Tonight!

November 8, 2007

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It’s that time of year! Reeling, Chicago’s annual GLBT film festival is happening November 8th -Sunday November 18th with screenings all over the city. There is a full schedule over at their website and a short glance reveals Reeling is looking to party. In addition to all the movies, there are late night galas happening all week with special appearances by Bruce Vilanch, Rupaul and Guinevere Turner.

Quick highlight: Itty Bitty Titty Committee Directed by Jamie Babbit

Jamie Babbit has written for many of your favorite shows, including Gossip Girl, Ugly Betty, The L Word and most notable for me, she directed But I’m a Cheerleader, a hysterical parody of a homosexual rehabilitation camp for gay teens. You know the one, don’t pretend. Itty Bitty Titty Committee screens Friday, November 16th at Film Row Cinema at 7pm.

MP3–PJ Harvey–Reeling from 4-Track Demos

–Stinky Pinky

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