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MIXed up in Philly:
All Women Are Equal |
| For A Relationship Jim Verburg, 2007, Canada, video, color, sound, 4 min. Using 2 years of still photographs, Verberg intersects life with art in this visually daring diaristic piece reflecting on a life lived so far… vacations, sexual exploits, familial ties and romantic encounters. |
| Cut & Paste Alexis McCrimmon, 2007, USA, video, color, sound, 8:30 min. An eye-catching and playful autobiographical documentary explores the historical contexts of racial stereotypes, gender identity and sexual agency i.e: what it meant for one little girl who dared to be black, queer, and kinky. |
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| Five Haikus for the New York City Subway Za Martohardjono, 2008, USA, Super8, color, silent, 1:30 min. World Premiere Five haikus are set against kaleidoscopic images of the NYC subway, a welcome contradiction to the reality of New York’s crowded and very loud underground system. |
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| My Name is Pochsy: An Industrial Film Karen Hines, 2008, Canada, Super8 transferred to video, B&W, sound, 7 min. NY Premiere Pochsy (pronouned “Poxy” as in “the pox,” also an anagram for “Psycho”), a mercury-addled waif, muses on life, death, karmic reckoning and the future of the human soul in this subversively comedic ode to a century of industrial film propaganda, and a mindful attack on mindless progress. Musical score by Tony Award-winner Greg Morrison (The Drowsy Chaperone). |
| Is What Was Jerry Tartaglia, 2008, USA/Germany, video, color, sound, 23 min. World Premiere “The initial design of this film involved the documentation of sound and image to examine formulations of queer identity, rather than to recreate the imaginary. The Holocaust and the anti-gay hatred by the Nazis is not imaginary. It is what was. That hate is still alive today in America, albeit in a state of remission.” — J. Tartaglia. This experimental document examines queer cultural amnesia and begs us to recall the adage “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” |
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| My Name Is Harvey Milk (And I’m Here to Recruit You) Leonardo Herrera, 2008, USA, video, color, sound, 5 min. NY Premiere This psychedelic short comprised of disturbing magnified landscape of the suit Harvey Milk wore the night of his assassination with spliced audio of Milk’s political will recorded shortly before his death, is a moving tribute to Milk’s legacy of activism. Harvey Milk’s suit appears courtesy of the International GLBT Historical Society. |
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| Freak Girls Tamara Vukov, 2004, Canada, video, B&W, sound, 4 min. NY Premiere Hurry, hurry step this way, the strangest sights on the island! Knife-throwers, burlesque dancers, lady boxers, trapeze performers, beauty queens, female contortionists. Remixing public-domain archival footage of Coney Island and early vaudeville performers from the Prelinger and American Memory Archives, Freak Girls is a tribute, both playful and haunting, to some of the women who pioneered the art of female spectacle. |
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| Pour Sinclair Maxime Brouillet, 2007, Canada, 16mm, color & B&W, sound, 6 min. An erotic and captivating ode to the freedom of touch and emotion. |
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| Perfect Kiss Derek Jackson, 2007, USA, video, color, sound, 6 min. “I had a one night stand three years ago that I can’t stop thinking about. I didn’t disclose my HIV status. I was so nervous about disclosing that I couldn’t get a hard on so I let him fuck me instead. He used a condom. But afterwards I wanted to get to know him. I didn’t feel I had the right to ask anything because I hadn’t disclosed. He walked out the door and I’ve never seen him since. All I know is that his name is Mike. I’ve taken thousands of self-portraits as a sort of art therapy to help take my mind off of ‘that night.’ I made a slide show out of a selection of the images and set them to my favorite song called Perfect Kiss by New Order. There’s a line in the song that goes ‘tonight I should have stayed at home playing with my pleasure zone.’ This video is my pleasure zone.” |
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| In Every Dream Home a Heartache John Caffery, 2008, Canada, video, color, sound, 3 min. Kids on TV and Johannes Zits collaborated on this music video art piece. The video takes the song’s plotline of a rich man falling in love with a rubber doll and uses it to critique queer consumerism and gay-demographic advertising resulting in the subversion of desire into fetishization of new condos and lavish furnishings. KOTV’s John Caffery portrays the green-screen-painted rubber doll wearing the gay-porn projection by Johannes, while KOTV’s Minus Smile sings the part of the protagonist whose alienation eventually drives him mad.Fem Inge Blackman, 2007, UK, color, sound, 10 min. “The femme lesbian who is into butches and transmen is the most radical of all women. By simultaneously being feminine and queer and choosing masculine women as objects of desire she goes against normalising lesbian and heterosexual cultures.” Fem is experimental, lyrical and poetic. It uses powerful images of femininity from ancient mythology and popular cinematic culture. The film subverts these dominant images with a voice over butch narration by Peggy Shaw of Split Britches. Fem creates a ‘butch gaze’ while paying homage to this type of lesbian. It also validates femmes’ role in lesbian culture which would rather she remained invisible and sidelined. Fem was filmed on 16mm, Super 8 and miniDV. It features performance artists La Bird, Maria Mojo, Killpussy, Josephine Wilson, Lois Weaver and actress Deni Francis. Tommlin & Janice: A Fragile Love Story |










