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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Our Dance Of Revolution: Outflix 2019 Brings LGBTQ Films to Memphis Audiences

Film lovers have a full plate in the coming week. The Outflix Film Festival is back for its 22nd year of presenting LGBTQ cinema to the Mid-South. What began as a weekend of University of Memphis students commandeering an auditorium to show gay-themed films has, against all odds, lasted for more than two decades and expanded into one of the city’s premiere film events.

This year the festival, which is put on by OUTMemphis, moves to Studio on the Square in Midtown for the first time. Fifty shorts, features, documentaries, dramas, and comedies will screen over the course of the weeklong festival. A grant from the Tennessee Arts Commission means two of the screenings are free. The first gratis movie is opening night film Our Dance of Revolution. Beginning at 6:30 p.m., the acclaimed documentary by director Phillip Pike examines the history and impact of pioneering black LGBTQ groups in Toronto, Canada.

Our Dance Of Revolution: Outflix 2019 Brings LGBTQ Films to Memphis Audiences

The second opening night film is The Shiny Shrimps. The French comedy by directors Maxime Govare and Cédric Le Gallo concerns an Olympic swimming champion named Matthias Le Goff who lets homophobic remarks slip during a TV interview. Soon, he finds himself coaching a hopeless amateur water polo team composed of gay men who are desperate to qualify for the Gay Games in Croatia. Hijinx ensue.

Our Dance Of Revolution: Outflix 2019 Brings LGBTQ Films to Memphis Audiences (2)

The second free screening comes on Saturday with Changing the Game, a documentary about three transgender athletes trying to break through in their respective sports.

Our Dance Of Revolution: Outflix 2019 Brings LGBTQ Films to Memphis Audiences (3)

Saturday night at 7:30 is Mom + Mom, an Italian narrative drama based on director Karole Di Tommaso’s experiences trying to have a child with her partner.

Our Dance Of Revolution: Outflix 2019 Brings LGBTQ Films to Memphis Audiences (4)

The highlight of the packed Sunday schedule looks to be Gay Chorus Deep South. Founded in 1978, the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus was the first of its kind in the world. In the wake of the 2016 elections, the chorus set out on an epic tour of the South to promote understanding and confront hate. Director David Charles Rodrigues’ stirring film documents the music and the emotion as the men made their way through hostile territory, making connections and changing minds.

Our Dance Of Revolution: Outflix 2019 Brings LGBTQ Films to Memphis Audiences (5)

You can find more information about the Outflix Film Festival on the website. Stay tuned to this space for continuing coverage of the weeklong festivities. 

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Outflix Celebrates A Wild Weekend Of Queer Cinema

This weekend the queers were out in full force for the first days of the 21st Annual Outflix Film Festival, the local LGBTQ film fest organized by OUT Memphis. As a gigging queer myself, I sadly wasn’t able to attend the whole festival, but I managed to swing by Ridgeway Cinema for a few hours of queer cinematic experience.
Alanna Stewart

Malco Ridgeway Cinema Grill lit up with the LBGTQ rainbow for the Outflix Film Festival.

Opening weekend at Outflix included outsider narratives, including stories about artists, performers, and yes, filmmakers. Many of the films explored the intersection of art and sexuality, where either the queer person or the artist finds themselves set adrift from mainstream society and struggles to make a place for themselves. In the two biopics I saw this weekend, Wild Nights with Emily, directed by Madeleine Olnek, and Mapplethorpe, directed by Ondi Timoner, the narratives center around an eccentric queer artist (poet Emily Dickinson and photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, respectively) who, finding themselves ostracized by their communities, devote their lives entirely to their craft and into living as authentically as they can in a world stacked against them, even though doing that means sometimes having to hide their true identities.

Molly Shannon (left) as Emily Dickinson in Wild Nights With Emily

In these films, some well-meaning little voice always chimes in, “You’re ahead of your time. Nothing like this has ever been done before. The world isn’t ready for your work. You’ll be loved when you’re dead.” But Dickinson (Molly Shannon) and Mapplethorpe (Matt Smith) didn’t have time to listen to that obnoxious little voice, and pressed on with their work. They couldn’t wait for the world to change; rather they took a role in changing it.

Matt Smith in Mapplethorpe

Like these two artists, many queer filmmakers today are making movies specifically because they haven’t seen their stories told before. Director Laura Madalinski spoke at a Q & A after Saturday’s screening of her first feature film, Two In The Bush, saying that she made a romantic comedy about queer polyamory and sex work largely because there had never been one before. Madalinski and her partner/co-writer Kelly Haas wanted a movie that they could see themselves reflected in. Madalinski remembers deciding, “We’re gonna make it ourselves! And we did!”

The film, shot in 10 days with a budget of $45k, follows in the tradition of DIY queer filmmaking, in which the process itself is centered around community and mutual support. Folks help each other out because they are passionate about their stories, and because they recognize that the project is not simply a movie, but a contribution to the greater cause of queer liberation.

In the documentary Dykes, Camera, Action! pioneering lesbian filmmakers cite their activism as the source of their artistic endeavors. They realized that in order to change the world, they had to create a new one, and film was their tool. If their voices didn’t exist in media, mainstream cis-heteronormative culture could continue to pretend that they didn’t exist. Making films explicitly about their queer identities and bodies meant that they refused to be erased; they insisted on not only being seen, but being reckoned with.

These early lesbian films broke away from traditional narrative structure because, as Su Friedrich points out, queer lives do not follow the same trajectory as heterosexual lives, and conventional formats would not do justice to their stories. Queer filmmakers experimented with new techniques as they pursued ways to share their perspective with wider audiences. That idea affected my experience of watching Wild Nights With Emily, in which queer director Madeleine Olnek repositions Emily Dickinson in a queer context, compared to Mapplethorpe, with a well-known gay artist as its subject, but a formulaic biopic structure that feels distanced and stale. Despite its subject matter being over 100 years old, Wild Nights feels incredibly personal, emotional, and surprisingly modern. The film moves non-linearly, with flashbacks and flash-forwards, lyrical vignettes of Dickinson’s poetry, and moments in which Dickinson (Molly Shannon) breaks the fourth wall by addressing the audience, letting us know that the film is aware of its function.

Whether or not the straight normie world recognizes it, queer folks have always been here. We’re everywhere. And this week we’re at Outflix.

Outflix runs through Thursday, September 13. For a full schedule and more information, visit their website.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview

Wild Nights With Emily, starring Molly Shannon (left) and Amy Seimetz, plays opening night at Outflix.

Outflix 2018 is in full swing this weekend. You can read about this year’s festival in this week’s film column. Here are some trailers and previews for movies playing at this weekend’s festival at the Malco Ridgeway Cinema Grill.

First up is Alaska Is A Drag, a fish out of water drama by Shaz Bennet about a transexual in the hyper macho world of the New Frontier, screening Saturday at 5:15 p.m.

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview

Kill The Monsters, showing Saturday at 8 p.m., is director Ryan Lonergan’s polyamorous road trip epic. Shot in luscious black and white, this one looks like a winner.

Kill the Monsters – Trailer from Ryan Lonergan on Vimeo.

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview (2)

At 10:30 p.m., former Doctor Who Matt Smith (who recently crossed the streams by landing a “key role” in the next Star Wars movie) stars as legendary photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. Director Ondi Timor’s biopic immerses the audience in the squalid glamour of 1970’s New York. Newcomer Marianna Redón co-stars as punk rock goddess Patti Smith, Mapplethorpe’s longtime partner in the 1970s.

Matt Smith as Robert Mapplethorpe in Ondi Timor’s biopic.

Sunday kicks off at 1 p.m. with an import whose title says it all: My Big Gay Italian Wedding.

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview (3)

Then at 3:15 p.m., feel the squeeze of the gig economy while simultaneously navigating a lesbian marriage comedy with Freelancer’s Anonymous by Sonia Sebastian.

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview (4)

At 5 p.m., Hollywood royalty Piper Laurie stars in Snapshots, a generational drama about love and loss.

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview (5)

The final film of the evening is a documentary by director Caroline Berler about lesbian filmmakers, Dykes Camera, Action!, at 7:15 p.m.

Dykes, Camera, Action! 1 min Trailer from Caroline Berler on Vimeo.

Outflix 2018 Weekend Preview (6)

Watch this space for more coverage of Outflix 2018. 

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

This Week At The Cinema: Outflix, Rural Route, and Rodents of Unusual Size

It’s a busy week at Memphis theaters as summer gets into full swing. 

Rodents of Unusual Size

On Tuesday, June 5th, at Malco Ridgeway, Indie Memphis presents a documentary about Louisiana’s love/hate relationship with the nutria. Rodents of Unusual Size‘s focus is on Delacroix Island, where the giant invasive species threatens to overrun the tenuous fishing community. You can get tickets to this fascinating film on the Indie Memphis website. Here’s the trailer:

"RODENTS OF UNUSUAL SIZE" – Teaser from Tilapia Film on Vimeo.

This Week At The Cinema: Outflix, Rural Route, and Rodents of Unusual Size

On June 6 at Crosstown Arts, the Rural Route Film Festival brings the best short films from its latest iteration to Memphis. This touring program has played from Australia to New Hampshire, and its free to Indie Memphis members.

This Week At The Cinema: Outflix, Rural Route, and Rodents of Unusual Size (2)

Meanwhile, at Studio on the Square on June 6th, Outflix Film Festival is hosting a series of winning films from the festival’s 20-year history. This week is Blackbird, which won the audience award for Best Domestic Feature in 2014. These screenings are at 7 PM, and are $10 for general admission, $9 for Outflix members, and $8 for students.

This Week At The Cinema: Outflix, Rural Route, and Rodents of Unusual Size (3)

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Outflix Gala Kicks Off Twentieth Year Of LBGT Films

Outflix, Memphis’ film festival devoted to LBGT programming, is celebrating its twentieth edition tonight with a party at Evergreen Theatre.

The opening gala will feature highlights from past festivals and a preview of this year’s fest, which promises to be bigger and better than ever. The party will also feature a screening of The Untold Tales of Amisted Maupin, a new film tracing the life of the beloved novelist and storyteller from his conservative Southern roots to his status as an LBGT literary icon.

Outflix Gala Kicks Off Twentieth Year Of LBGT Films

The Outflix Film Festival will run from Sept. 8 to 14 at the Malco Ridgeway Cinema. The Memphis Flyer will have full coverage of the festival in print and online.

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Film Features Film/TV

Kidnapped for Christ

When director Kate Logan was a film school freshman, she set out to make a documentary about the Christian youth camp Escuela Caribe. The young Evangelical thought she was making a feel-good movie about the camp, which brought troubled teens to the mountains of the Dominican Republic. But what the 20-year-old film student found during her seven weeks at the camp would shock her to her core and begin a seven-year saga that would culminate with Kidnapped For Christ, the 2014 Outflix Film Festival’s opening film.

Escuela Caribe is part of a chain of similar camps that promise parents that they can change their teenagers’ behavior for the better — for a hefty fee. But the reality is much uglier than advertised. The film opens with kids’ stories of being kidnapped from their beds in the middle of the night by unknown thugs and taken, sometimes in chains, to the airport against their will, often while their parents looked on. Once out of the country, they are subjected to a program of brainwashing that will be familiar to anyone who has ever read about the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Escuela Caribe had been in existence for 35 years by the time Logan spent her fateful six weeks there, and at some point in the past, the place had gone from Bible study camp to Stanford Prison Experiment. Committing your child to a work camp is a pretty extreme measure for a parent to take, but none of the kids Logan interviews seem messed up enough to warrant it. There’s Beth, who claims she is there to cure panic attacks; Tai, whose offenses seem like nothing more than run-of-the-mill teenage hellraising; and David, a 17-year-old honor student who was shipped off after coming out to his parents as gay.

Kidnapped for Christ

Kidnapped for Christ is like a more paranoid version of Morgan Jon Fox’s landmark documentary This Is What Love In Action Looks Like. As stories of brutal abuse at the camp proliferated, Logan’s vision of her project changes until she makes a fateful decision to become involved in the story by attempting to rescue David from the camp. The story’s unexpected twists and turns make it one of the more satisfying, and harrowing, documentaries of the year.

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Film Features Film/TV

Outflix Film Festival

The Outflix Film Festival enters its 17th year on a strong note, coming off its most successful edition ever with more and better films portraying the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender perspective. This year’s entries topped 300 films, up more than 50 percent from last year, reflecting the festival’s growing profile. “It’s great for me, because I love to watch films,” says festival director Will Batts.

The annual festival is a fund-raiser for the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center where Batts is executive director. “We have to have a really diverse lineup, because we serve a really diverse community,” he says. “We want to make sure we have women’s films, transgender films, and films with people of color who are leads. We want to make sure that the whole community can see themselves on the screen.”

Outflix was started in 1997 by Brian Pera, an acclaimed Memphis filmmaker. “He started it as a kind of experimental theater project,” Batts says.

Early in its existence, the festival was held on the campus at the University of Memphis before moving briefly to commercial theaters and then lying fallow for a few years. “We started it back up in 2005, which is actually how I got involved in the center,” says Batts.

After one year at the former Memphis Media Co-Op and another at the now-defunct Downtown Muvico theater, the festival found its permanent home at the recently remodeled Malco Ridgeway cinema. “We’ve been there through the transition and the remodel. It’s great. The only bad thing is that there are fewer seats now in the theaters, so we’re seeing more movies sell out.”

Out in the Night

Batts says that during his decade at the festival he has had a front-row seat for the technological transition that has affected every level of the movie industry. “The first couple of years, everything came in on VHS, so we had cases of VHS tapes. But this year, probably 95 percent of the films were digitally submitted. That means that a lot more filmmakers are getting their films in front of us. So we get a lot more variety.”

The weeklong festival begins on Friday,September 5th and runs for one week, screening 19 narrative features and documentaries. This year’s opening night film is Kidnapped For Christ, directed by Kate S. Logan.

“It tells the story of something we deal with at the community center all the time,” Batts Says, “which is this belief that gay and lesbian people are somehow damaged in some way and need to be fixed; parents immersed in this culture that tells them that their kids are bad or wrong or sinful or whatever, and they need to be sent off to some camp in the middle of nowhere to beat the gay out of them. We want to get the message out that this is really harmful, and it continues to this day.”

Among the feature-length movies will be shorts, screening both before the features and as part of a shorts program on Sunday evening. “I especially love short films,” Batts says. “There’s something really powerful about telling an entire story in five minutes. “You can watch some of them on YouTube, but that’s just not the same experience as sitting in a theater full of people watching a really powerful short film.”

Much has changed about film and television’s vision of homosexuality in the 17 years since Outflix started, but there’s still a long way to go. “I think there are more accurate portrayals of LGBT people, but it still hasn’t permeated the mainstream,” Batts says. “We’re moving closer to reality, but we’re not quite there yet. The films we show at Outflix are more real, because they’re made by LGBT filmmakers and they’re about and starring LBGT actors who know the experience. They’re not going to tone it down for an audience who won’t understand them. Some of the films are more open about sexuality, some of them are open about what it means to be transgender or intersexed, so they’re educational in a way. Some of the films are about injustice and intolerance. It’s a much more real portrayal of LGBT people. We don’t get to see ourselves portrayed on the big screen as real people, warts and all. And that’s why Outflix exists.”

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Outflix Weekend Picks

A scene from Any Day Now.

  • A scene from Any Day Now.

The Outflix Film Festival starts tonight at Malco’s Ridgeway theater and runs through next Thursday. I previewed the opening night features — documentary Bridegroom and the high school comedy G.B.F. — in this week’s paper. Here are a few potential highlights from the Saturday and Sunday slates:

Saturday:

Out in the Dark (3 p.m.): A Palestinian student who falls for an Israeli lawyer and finds himself caught between worlds in multiple ways — ostracized in Palestinian society because of his sexuality and in Israeli society because of his nationality. Has won awards at GLBT film festivals in cities such as Toronto, Philadelphia, and Miami.

Sunday:

Any Day Now (1:30 p.m.): This strong feature from writer-director Travis Fine is based on a true story and set in West Hollywood circa 1979, where a gay couple (Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt) take in a teenager with Down syndrome who’s been abandoned by his mother and fight a biased legal system to keep their new family together. An audience-award winner at festivals around the country, including Tribeca, Chicago, and Outfest. Cumming and Dillahunt’s odd couple pairing isn’t always the most convincing, but the film is moving without straining too hard for effect, and Cumming’s performance as a big-hearted drag queen walks a tightrope, but mostly stays balanced. Well worth a wider theatrical run than it got.

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The New Black (5:30 p.m.): A documentary about gay-rights issues within the African-American community. One activist asserts early on that her quest for equal rights for homosexuals is part of “the unfinished business of black people being free,” but the film explores such hurdles as the prevalence of homophobia in the black church and the use of gay rights as a black community wedge issue by political conservatives. Also a multiple audience-award winner on the fest circuit.

The Rugby Player (7:30 p.m.): A documentary about the relationship between Mark Bingham, one of the passengers on United 93 on 9/11 and his former flight attendant mother, Alice Hoagland.

For a full schedule and ticketing info see outflixfestival.org.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Outflix Film Festival Announces Lineup

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Who knew this would be the late summer and early fall of Divine in Memphis? A few weeks after the late cult legend drag queen appears at the Brooks Museum in John Waters’ Pink Flamingos, she’ll be featured in the documentary portrait I Am Divine, screening as part of the annual Outflix International LGBTQ Film Festival at Malco’s Ridgeway Cinema Grill.

The lineup for this year’s Outflix Festival, which runs September 6th through 12th, was released today.

In addition to I Am Divine, a few other potential standouts:

Bridegroom: A doc about a California man barred from his partner’s funeral.

Any Day Now: Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt play a gay couple in the 1970s fighting a biased legal system for custody of an abandoned teenager who’s come to live with them.

Continental: A documentary about a New York City bathhouse in the early ’70s.

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Valentine Road: A documentary that looks into a 2008 murder at a California middle school.

Hot Guys with Guns: A re-imagining of the buddy cop formula that makes the standard odd couple ex-boyfriends.

A preview party for the festival, at Evergreen Theatre on Thursday, August 29th, will feature the screening of Interior. Leather Bar., a 60-minute feature co-directed by and co-starring James Franco that speculates about missing material from the landmark ’70s gay-themed film Cruising.

We’ll have an expanded preview of the festival closer to its opening.

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Memphis Gaydar News

Outflix Planning Meeting

The first planning meeting for the 16th annual Outflix Film Festival, which usually takes place in September, is scheduled for Tuesday, December 11th at 7 p.m. at the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center (892 S. Cooper).

No experience is needed, but a love of film is preferred.

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