Showing posts with label Outfest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Outfest. Show all posts

Saturday, November 1, 2025

2025 OUTFESTNEXT


After being sidelined for the last couple of years, Outfest, the non-profit organization that celebrates LGBTQ+ storytelling through film, education, and community, is beginning it's return with OutfestNEXT presented by HBO MAX. This film festival will be held for four days, November 6th through 9th, that will feature independent queer feature films, shorts and engaging conversations. The venues for the screening events will be held at the LGBT Center Renberg Theatre in Hollywood and the Look Dine-In Cinemas in Glendale.

Some highlights include "All That We Love", from director, Yen Tan, a heartfelt and poignant depiction of grief and what it means to start anew. Margaret Cho stars as a woman whose life begins to unravel after the death of her beloved dog. More complications begin with her estranged ex-husband (Kenneth Choi) coming back into her life, their free-spirited daughter (Alice Lee) plans on moving to another country and her best friend (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) who has recently lost his husband. From filmmaker, Lucio Castro is "Drunken Noodles", which tells the story of a young art student who has a series of unexpected intimate encounters. "Dust Bunny", the feature directorial debut from Bryan Fuller, a horror-thriller that involves an eight-year-old girl (Sophie Sloan) who hires her hitman neighbor (Mads Mikkelsen) to kill the vicious monster under her bed. Sigourney Weaver also stars. And Sydney Sweeney stars in "Christy", a sports drama about the life of former professional boxer Christy Martin from director, David Michôd.







The Legacy Spotlight is Greg Berlanti’s beloved classic "The Broken Hearts Club: A Romantic Comedy" with a 25th anniversary screening. The film tells the story of a close-knit group of gay friends who support each other as they search for love, deal with loss, and discover themselves. Dean Cain, Zach Braff, Timothy Olyphant, Justin Theroux and Billy Porter star.



Please click below for the complete list of films, events and to purchase tickets:

2025 OutfestNEXT

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

PASSAGES (2023)

Written by Mauricio Zacharias and Ira Sachs



Directed by Ira Sachs



Where & When: Outfest LA, Directors Guild of America, Los Angeles, CA. July 20, 2023 7:15 PM



"Passages", the latest feature film from writer/director Ira Sachs, is a European based, love triangle involving two men and a woman. Yet what makes this drama far more intriguing and very modern is that the men are the long-term couple, and the young woman is the one who comes between them. With an audacious narrative and thrillingly sensual, "Passages" takes us on an emotional journey filled with several unexpected twists and turns.

Living in Paris, Tomas (Franz Rogowski), a German filmmaker working on his new film and Martin (Ben Whishaw), a British print maker have been together for fifteen years, still caring for each other yet fallen into comfortable, routine relationship. During a wrap party for Tomas' film, Martin wants to call it a night after spending the evening supporting his partner. But Tomas is not ready to go home, deciding to stay at the party. He begins to pay attention to Agathe (Adèle Exarchopoulos) a young French school teacher who was invited by friends working on the film. Just ending a relationship with a clingy boyfriend that evening, she is open and ready for some fun. And later in an apartment at an after party, Tomas and Agathe lock eyes, sneak off into a bedroom and become intimate.

Buzzing with excitement, Tomas goes home the next morning and can't wait to tell Martin what happened. Yet he's not nearly as thrilled or amused by this revelation from his partner. Later while in the editing bay, Tomas comes across Agathe once again, paying a visit to a friend. They attempt some small talk before going off to a private room where they tear each other's clothes off. Tomas is soon sneaking off to be with Agathe any chance he can get, falling surprisingly into a romantic relationship. And this comes to a head with Martin as Tomas announces to him that he is leaving to take a chance in this new love affair. A devastated Martin tries to move on, starting a causal relationship with a writer (Erwan Kepoa Falé). But Tomas refuses to let go of him completely, missing the familiar intimacy with a man while struggling to understand Agathe's emotional needs and dealing with her concerned parents.

Whishaw (seen in the last three Bond movies as "Q", appeared in the Oscar-nominated, "Women Talking" and voiced the beloved, British bear in the "Paddington" films) reliably delivers a solid performance of a man trying to find a way to be supportive of the man he loves while refusing to allow him to trample over his heart and their long relationship. Exarchopoulos, who first attracted international attention in the controversial 2013 drama, "Blue Is the Warmest Colour", brings a warmth and steely reserve to her role as Agathe. But the real standout is Rogowski, commanding the screen with a rakish swagger that is extremely appealing. The unconventionally handsome actor, who previously made a great impact in Christian Petzold's films, "Transit" and "Undine" and recently in the acclaimed prison drama, "Great Freedom", brings to mind a European version of Joaquin Phoenix, matching in physicality and sharing the same intensity burning through their eyes. Yet Rogowski is a little less edgy, having a softer, more vulnerable quality than Phoenix.

As an artist and filmmaker, Tomas has always been largely focused on satisfying his needs, motivations and desires. And his narcissistic nature was not going to be any different in his personal life. His behavior becomes appalling as we watch Tomas deviously exploit Martin and Agathe's affection for him to best serve his selfish needs. The film doesn't make any effort in trying to define Tomas' sexuality, but it seems clear that his initiating an affair with Agathe was more about doing something new and exciting than an innate attraction.

"Passages" boldly explores sexual identity, touching on how that has recently evolved into something less rigidly defined and fluid. This film is an erotic drama that features several scenes of sexuality with the most extended and detailed involving Tomas and Martin (which earned "Passages" an unwarranted NC-17 rating but the film's distributor, MUBI chose to release unrated instead of forcing Sachs to make any cuts). This genre used to be a staple in theaters but has virtually disappeared from US cinemas and I applaud Sachs for bravely offering something for adults. I'm sure the European setting was a necessity as Americans now tend to be far more cautious and nervous over sexual intimacy, particularly when two men are involved. Gloriously uninhibited and fiercely provocative, "Passages" is a welcome return of a dramatic narrative that features messy and complicated characters that actually reveal themselves emotionally and physically.

Thursday, July 27, 2023

WINNERS OF THE 2023 OUTFEST FILM FESTIVAL


"Something You Said Last Night", the debut feature by writer/director, Luis De Filippis, received the Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Narrative Feature at the conclusion of the 41st Annual Outfest LA Film Festival. The film tells the story of a young transgender woman who goes on a family trip that forces her to deal with the complicated relationship with them. "Anhell69" won the Grand Jury Award for Documentary Feature. This hybrid of non-fiction and fiction from filmmaker, Theo Montoya explores queer life in Medellín, Colombia that is filled with trauma and violence. And "Le Favolose (The Fabulous Ones)" from Italy by Roberta Torre was awarded the Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding International Narrative Feature. This film also merges documentary and narrative in a story about a group of trans women who discover a note from a friend who died years ago expressing her final wish, with them coming together to try and make it a reality.

Here is a partial list of winners of the 2023 Outfest LA Film Festival:

Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding North American Narrative Feature: "Something You Said Last Night"



Grand Jury Prize for Screenwriting of North American Narrative Feature
: Sebastián Silva, "Rotting in the Sun"
North American Narrative Feature Special Mentions: "Fancy Dance" and "The People’s Joker"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Performance, North American Narrative Feature: Isaac Krasner, "Big Boys"

Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding U.S. Narrative Short: "Dilating for Maximum Results"
The Paul D. Lerner and Stephen Reis Grand Jury Award for Documentary Feature: "Anhell69"



Documentary Feature Special Mention: "Queendom"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Documentary Short Film: "Love, Jamie"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding International Narrative Feature: "Le Favolose (The Fabulous Ones)"



Grand Jury Prize for Screenwriting, International Narrative Feature: Seán Devlin, Jaya and Arnel Pablo, "Asog"



Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Performance, International Narrative Feature: Choi Hae-jun, "Peafowl"



Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding International Narrative Short Film: "An Avocado Pit"

Special Programming Awards (presented by the senior Outfest programming team):

Emerging Talent: Alice Maio Mackay, "T Blockers"
Artistic Achievement: Ethan Fuirst, "Rumpelstiltskin"
Social Impact: Nneka Onuorah, "Truth Be Told"

This was a very strong year at Outfest and I saw many good movies. One of my favorites was the latest from Chilean filmmaker, Sebastián Silva with “Rotting in the Sun”. Another solid example of auto-fiction with Silva playing Sebastián Silva, a morose filmmaker living in Mexico City consumed by drugs and thoughts of suicide. After going on a beach vacation to try and clear his head, Sebastián runs into the outrageous gay influencer, Jordan Firstman (played by social media personality and comedian, Jordan Firstman) who demands that they work on something together. They plan to meet back in the city, with Jordan staying with Sebastián, but this is where the film abruptly shifts from a breezy, dark comedy (with unexpected moments of hardcore, gay sex) to a hilarious yet disturbing mystery-thriller. Jordan arrives but Sebastián is nowhere to be found. Sebastián's housekeeper, Vero (Catalina Saavedra who starred in Silva's award-winning 2009 film, "The Maid") knows exactly where he is and because of a fatal accident, has to go through some extraordinary lengths to make sure he's not located. “Rotting in the Sun” certainly deserved the Outfest award for Best Screenplay as Silva fearlessly uses elements of himself, along with Firstman as deranged characters and inventively takes us on a wild, meta romp that is filled with fanciful thoughts on class, gay life and the shallowness of fame in social media.



The documentary from Sam Shadid, "Hidden Master: The Legacy of George Platt Lynes" brings long overdue attention to this gifted photographer who first found fame in fashion during the 1930s and 1940s before putting much of his focus on taking erotically-charged photos of the male nude. Born in New Jersey, Lynes had an early interest in photographing the male body, first taking pictures of his younger brother, Russell. An early trip to Paris would change his outlook on life, befriending many of the queer creatives that were living there like Jean Couteau and Gertrude Stein, deciding to live openly gay which was very brave act at the time. Returning to the US and settling in New York City, Lynes considered a career as a writer before moving on to the idea of becoming a professional photographer. He photographed models, friends and lovers in various stages of dress which included publisher, Monroe Wheeler and writer, Glenway Wescott which Lynes had engaged in a three-way relationship with for about a decade. The work of Lynes, who died in 1955 at the age of forty-eight, had largely fallen into obsurity with the fascinating "Hidden Master" helping to place a well deserved spotlight back on his bold, influencial photography. Lynes had met noted Sexologist, Dr. Alfred Kinsey, with the men forming a bond and friendship, and the Kinsey Institute would later take a large collection of Lynes' photographs to archive including a very small number that still has never been publicly viewed, even by staff, per Lynes' request.

And finally, "Kokomo City", D. Smith's riveting documentary on four Black transgender sex workers; Daniella Carter and Dominque Silver from NYC and Koko Da Doll and Liyah Mitchell, both hailing from Atlanta, who recount their intense expereinces and reveal some tragic, brutally honest worldviews. Shot in vivid black & white and features inventively reinacted moments of their personal anecdotes, "Kokomo City" is a moving yet decidely fun document into the lives of these women who refuse to be seen as victims. Smith was a successful music producer with a couple of Grammy nominations but once they transitioned, the business left them behind with Smith ending up briefly homeless. But Smith persevered and was inspired to make this film for those less fortunate and had fewer options. Sadly, Koko Da Doll was murdered in April and Smith has stated that this film will help keep her spirit alive so that she will never be forgotten.

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

2023 OUTFEST FILM FESTIVAL


The 2023 Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival
is set to begin on July 13th and running through July 23rd. This annual event, now in it's forty-first year, celebrates queer cinema with a festival designed to increase diversity and visibility for storytellers and audiences alike with works from across the globe. Outfest LA will once again this year offer in-person and virtual screenings. The filmmaker, Andrew Ahn ("Fire Island") will be honored with the Outfest Achievement Award. Melissa McCarthy and her husband, Ben Falcone with receive the James Schamus Ally Award for their support to promote our communities’ stories to a broader audience.

The Opening Night Gala will be held at The Orpheum Theatre in DTLA with the film being "Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe" by writer/director, Aitch Alberto. Based on the YA novel by Benjamin Alire Sáenz, this coming-of-age romance, set in the mid-1980's, focuses on two Mexican-American teens; Aristotle (Max Pelayo) and Dante (Reese Gonzales) who live in El Paso, Texas. They meet one summer, becoming fast, close friends, and we watch as they struggle with identity, sexuality and family relationships. Eugenio Derbez and Eva Longoria co-star.



Some highlights from this year's fest will include "Commitment to Life", the latest documentary by Jeffrey Schwarz, which explores the city of Los Angeles and how it would play a critical role in the battle against HIV/AIDS with doctors, movie stars and activists that came together to change the path of the epidemic. Another non-fiction film, "Hidden Master: The Legacy of George Platt Lynes" looks at the legendary photographer who began his career photographing celebrities before shifting to work with the male nude, creating pictures that were decidedly sensuous and radically explicit for their time. "Chocolate Babies", this 1996 feature film by Stephen Winter in a new restoration by the UCLA Film & Television Archive, is a hilarious yet poignant comedy about a Black, queer activist group planning to kidnap a closeted councilman.



A special centerpiece screening of "Passages", the new feature by Ira Sachs is a romantic-drama set in France about a long married gay couple (Ben Whishaw and Franz Rogowski) whose relationship is shaken when one has an affair with a woman (Adèle Exarchopoulos). "Problemista", the directorial film debut by Julio Torres, features the comedian/artist as an aspiring toy designer from El Salvador struggling to make something happen in New York. When his work visa is about to expire, he gets a job assisting an eccentric art-world denizen (Tilda Swinton). And Outfest teams up with the American Cinematheque for a special screening of the Oscar-winning musical, "Chicago" with a Sing-a-Long on Tuesday, July 18 at the Los Feliz 3. Theatre.





And the Closing Night Gala at The Montalbán Theatre in Hollywood will be the documentary, "Chasing Chasing Amy". This film explores the impact of the 1997 indie comedy film by Kevin Smith and how it affected the director, Sav Rodgers' own queer journey as a trans man. Writer/director, Smith and stars, Joey Lauren Adams, Jason Lee, and Guinevere Turner share their insights in this film about this now cult classic.



For the complete list of films, events and to purchase tickets for all screenings, please click below:

2023 Outfest LA Film Festival

Monday, March 20, 2023

2023 OUTFEST FUSION


The Outfest Fusion Film Festival
has been focused on highlighting the cinematic work of QTBIPOC storytellers since 2004. This year, the Los Angeles based annual event begins on March 24th and running through April 1st. In addition to films, the fest will offer free community workshops, masterclasses, the One Minute Movie Contest, live music and the debut of Family Day which will feature a short film program for children age 10 and up and their families at DTLA Lupe Ontiveros Cinema Center on April 1st.

The Opening Night Gala, held at the Aratani Theater in the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center, will feature a series of shorts that will showcase a wide spectrum of fascinating stories involving queer people of color. Elegance Bratton, the filmmaker who made a great impression last year with his directorial feature film debut, "The Inspection" which was loosely based on his experiences and Bird Runningwater, who heads the Native American and Indigenous Program at the Sundance Institute, will also both be honored this evening.

Two films that made a splash earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival will be screened at Outfest Fusion: The documentary, "The Stroll" examines a stretch of area in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District where trans women of color had survived by doing sex work and supporting each other amidst the constant threats of violence. "Little Richard: I Am Everything" is the long overdue historical exploration on the life of the true "king of rock & roll" from director Lisa Cortés. This riveting documentary follows Richard Wayne Penniman, a musician from Macon, Georgia, who helped give birth to an exciting new form of music. On stage, Richard may have been wild, flamboyant and unapologetically queer yet privately he struggled with this, at one point leaving the world of rock & roll behind to only serve God.



For the complete list of films, events and to purchase tickets, please click below:

2023 Outfest Fusion

Monday, August 1, 2022

WINNERS OF THE 2022 OUTFEST FILM FESTIVAL


The 40th edition of Outfest L.A. has come to an end and there were prizes that were handed out. "Please Baby Please", Amanda Kramer's avant-garde, queer journey that explores gender, obsession and lust, received the top prize from the Grand Jury for Outstanding Narrative Feature.
 
Here is a partial list of winners from the 2022 OutFest L.A. Film Festival:

Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding North American Narrative Feature: "Please Baby Please"
Honorable Mention for North American Narrative Feature: "Youtopia"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Screenplay in a North American Narrative Feature: Juan Pablo González, Ana Isabel Fernández and Ilana Coleman, "Dos Estaciones"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Performance in a North American Narrative Feature: Matthew Jeffers, "Unidentified Objects"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding International Narrative Feature: "Mars One"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Screenplay in a International Narrative Feature: Mariano Biasin, "Sublime"



Honorable Mention for Screenplay in a International Narrative Feature: Gabriel Bier Gislason, "Attachment"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Performance in a International Narrative Feature: Aamu Milonoff, "Girl Picture"



Honorable Mention for Performance in a International Narrative Feature: Raphaëlle Perez, "My Emptiness and I"
Paul D. Lerner and Stephen Reis Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Documentary Feature: "Sirens"



Honorable Mention for Documentary Feature: "Jeannette"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding U.S. Narrative Short: "Work"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding International Narrative Short: "Warsha"
Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Documentary Short: "Love, Barbara D"
Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature: "Unidentified Objects"
Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature: "Stay on Board: The Leo Baker Story"
Audience Award for Best Narrative Short: "Troy"
Audience Award for Best Documentary Short: "CANS Can’t Stand"

SPECIAL PROGRAMMING AWARDS:

Emerging Talent: Yusuf Shadeed Nasir, "Regret To Inform You"
Freedom: "UÝRA: The Rising Forest"
Artistic Achievement: Mohammad Shawky Hassan, "Shall I Compare You To A Summer's Day?"

Now for some movies I saw at the fest. "Crissy Judy" is a fierce dark comedy from Todd Flaherty who wrote, directed, edited and stars in his debut feature film. Judy (Flaherty) is part of NYC drag act with his best friend, Crissy (Wyatt Fenner). Referring to themselves by their performer names, even out of drag, they do everything together but one day, Crissy announces that the man he has been dating has gotten serious and plans on moving to Philadelphia to live with him. Lost and devastated, Judy tries to carry on with the act and life on his own, struggling every step of the way. With stunning, crisp black & white photography by Flaherty's brother, Brendan, "Chrissy Judy" brings to mind the mid-career era of Woody Allen's comedy-dramas with Flaherty's Crissy even feeling like a variation of Holly (played by Dianne Wiest) in Allen's "Hannah and her Sisters", a person struggling to make a creative career happen but whose life is a mess, abusing alcohol and making bad choices, particularly regarding men. But Flaherty has made a delightfully charming film that displays his own distinctive style and rhythm with well-developed characters, deeply felt drama and hilarious comedy.



For young gay men growing up in the '80's and '90's, the International Male mail-order catalogue, with it's pages filled with impossibly handsome men modeling fashion-forward clothing (and much less), helped open the door to explore and fantasize privately at home at a time when there were not many outlets for them to do this. And the fascinating documentary, "All Male: The International Male Story" from directors, Bryan Darling and Jesse Finlay Reed does a deep-dive into the history of the company started by Gene Burkard in 1974. After leaving the military, a closeted Burkard from the Midwest headed to San Diego where he found a chance to live openly and an opportunity to start a business. Creating a variation of the jock strap and calling it "jock sock", Burkard put an ad in adult magazines to purchase by mail and the product exploded almost immediately, evolving into mail order business with fashions for men with the catalogue created to evoke a worldly, lifestyle magazine. With narration by Matt Boner, the film interviews Burkard (who passed away in 2020), several former employees, celebrity fans and some of the models who describe their struggles with trying to look comfortable in the more extreme looks they were given to wear. My only minor issue with the film is that even at eighty-three minutes, "All Male" feels padded, with a hour probably being plenty of time to effectively tell the International Male story. What I found really interesting was Burkard's insistence that gay men were not the target audience for International Male. I still find this hard to believe yet he did prove that there was an awareness for his clothing outside of the community, successfully luring women into selecting items for their men to wear, many who certainly would never have purchased on their own. This catalogue came to a sad demise in 2007 but International Male will always be remembered for helping to redefine masculinity and open up how men could creatively express themselves through their clothing.



And while "Please Baby Please" was selected the Outstanding Narrative Feature, I was not a fan of this convoluted drama. Set in 1950's New York (but looking more like the 1980's), British actors Andrea Riseborough and Harry Melling play a newly married American couple, Suze and Arthur who witness a street gang brutalizing an innocent victim. Although they are both terrified, this act of violence also opens up for each a desire to explore their gender identities. Demi Moore and Karl Glusman make appearances as an odd neighbor and the gang's sexy leader who Arthur is obsessed with. It is clear that the director Kramer had found inspiration from David Lynch and other offbeat filmmakers yet unlike Lynch's mysterious, erotically-charged journeys into highly stylized otherworlds, Kramer's film feels tedious and incomprehensible, with a sense of trying too hard to just be weird. The script does not help with the characters having a lot to say but their ramblings are all meaningless, devoid of actual sentiment. "Please Baby Please" is an empty exercise into the avant-garde, never succeeding in creating a compelling, dreamlike adventure.

Friday, July 8, 2022

2022 OUTFEST FILM FESTIVAL


This year marks the 40th anniversary of Outfest, the Los Angeles based film festival that has been screening, promoting and preserving cinema about the LGBTQ+ communities from across the globe. Beginning as the "Gay and Lesbian Media Festival and Conference" at UCLA, Outfest has evolved into one of the biggest events that has continuously been dedicated in mentoring future filmmakers, encouraging diversity in the community and protecting LGBTQ films for future generations. Outfest LA 2022 will begin on July 14th, running through July 24th and will be an in-person and virtual screening event.

The Opening Night Gala at The Orpheum Theatre will be "Anything's Possible", the directorial debut of the Grammy, Emmy, and Tony Award-winning performer, Billy Porter. Eva Reign plays Kelsa, a trans high-school senior who has a good life; popular in school, a supportive parent and a potential new love, Khal (Abubakr Ali). But Kelsa's best friend also has eyes on Khal, leading to messy and complicated problems for her.



The Legacy Centerpiece with be the 20th anniversary screening of "Far From Heaven", Todd Haynes's exquisitely rendered melodrama dealing with the homophobia and racial tension during the era of the 1950's. Julianne Moore stars as a housewife who discovers her husband (Dennis Quaid) romantically involved with another man, leading her to fall into a close friendship with her African-American gardener (Dennis Haysbert). Haynes, Moore and producer, Christine Vachon, will be on hand in person following the screening.



There will also be an anniversary screening of "Punks", Patrik-Ian Polk’s groundbreaking debut romantic comedy from 2000 about four queer, African-American friends in West Hollywood dealing with sex, dating and friendship. After the screening on July 16th will be a Q&A moderated by "Dear White People" creator, Justin Simien, along with Polk and cast members, Jazzmun, Vanessa Williams, and Rodney Chester.

The Closing Night Gala will be "They/Them" at The Theatre at Ace Hotel. John Logan, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter, makes his directorial feature film debut with this story about a group of queer and trans teens taken deep into the woods to Whistler Camp, a place that turns out to be a conversion therapy center. Not only do they have to band together to resist this abuse but also deal a with knife-wielding intruder lurking around the camp.



Other events at Outfest include "I Have to Laugh: Comedy Night at the Ford", a lineup of live stand-up comedy featuring Margaret Cho; the Trans, Nonbinary, & Intersex Summit, now in it's 6th year, that feature programs that will showcase a multitude of experiences as a vision for the future; live readings of selected scripts from the Screenwriting Lab; and the Platinum Alchemy Party, a sexy and outrageous event held in two rooms of the historical, Catch One that will feature the Queen of Bounce, Big Freedia.

For the complete listing of films, events and to purchase tickets, please click below:

2022 Outfest LA Film Festival

Thursday, April 7, 2022

2022 OUTFEST FUSION


This Friday, the 2022 Outfest Fusion Film Festival will begin, ten days that celebrates LGBTQIA+ people of color through cinema. This Los Angeles-based fest will be in-person from April 8th to April 13th with screenings and events held at Regal LA Live DTLA, Baldwin Hills Cinemark, Plaza de la Raza in East LA and the California African-American Museum. Then from April 13th to April 17th, the fest will move online with many of these films available on-demand.

Outfest Fusion will kick-off at the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center with a special awards presentation which will honor actor, Stephanie Beatriz with the Fusion Achievement Award and actor, Sandra Oh will receive the James Schamus Ally Award. After this, there will be a screening of several short films in an astrology-based collection called "Leo: The Life of the Party", one of many film groupings assembled by astrological signs that will be shown throughout the fest.

Some of the feature films and episodic programing will include "Finlandia", the feature debut from Horacio Alcalà that follows three muxes (a Zapotec term for "non-binary") living in a small town in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico. "Keep the Cameras Rolling The Pedro Zamora Way" is a documentary on Pedro Zamora who found fame appearing on MTV's "The Real World: San Francisco", the third of the early reality show series. But what made Zamora and this 1994 season so groundbreaking was that he was openly gay and HIV positive with the program dealing with his romantic life and health struggles with AIDS. "Mustache Mondays", an Artbound episode directed by Marianne Amelinckx, takes a look back on the queer nightclub event in Los Angeles called "Mustache Mondays" that became a creative outlet for some of today’s contemporary artists.







The festival will include workshops, panels and the annual One-Minute Movie Contest sponsored by Hyundai with the winners receiving cash prizes and going on to be screened during the Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ Film Festival this July.

For the complete list of films, events and to purchase tickets, please click below:

2022 Outfest Fusion

Monday, January 31, 2022

MY FAVORITE FILMS OF 2021

When 2021 began, it appeared that we were on the right track of movies returning to theaters. And while audiences did return to some of the major-studio popcorn thrillers and sequels that had been delayed or current releases in large numbers, most dramas, indie fare and original movies struggled throughout the year to get people to come out to the cineplexes. Part of the reason is that the pandemic remains to be far from over (and in many ways, has gotten worse) which means that many folks were still not ready to return to going out to the movies. This meant that streaming remained the place where most viewers were watching new movies. I feel optimistic that once COVID is in a more manageable state (hopefully by summer, at the latest), people will finally feel comfortable to return to theaters. And even though they may not all have made big box-office, there were plenty of great films released throughout last year. Most of these movies I went to a theater to see (even some that were distributed and would end up shortly on a streamer) and I was thrilled to be able to watch them there.

Here are the films, in no particular order, that were some of my favorites in 2021:

"PASSING"

Based on the 1929 novel by Nella Larsen, "Passing" has been exquisitely adapted in to an extraordinary feature film by actor, Rebecca Hall, making her debut as a filmmaker. The term "passing" refers to a time when African-Americans who had skin light enough could pass as Caucasian, offering them opportunities for a better life yet sacrificing an integral part of their true identity. Irene (Tessa Thompson) lives a comfortable life in Harlem with her doctor husband (Andre Holland) and their young son. Being fair-skinned, Irene occasionally passes as white while out in the city and one day, a white woman approaches her at a hotel dining room claiming to know her. Clare (a radiant Ruth Negga) is actually a childhood friend of Irene's that has been secretly living her life as a white person. She has been so bold to have even married a wealthy man (Alexander Skarsgård) who not only has no clue about his wife's past but is also a raging racist. As these women rekindle their friendship, the charming Clare begins to infiltrate Irene's social and family life, deeply missing the connection with her people while Irene, who does care for her friend, finds herself resenting Clare's presence and life choices. Shot in black and white and using a 4:3 aspect ratio (capturing the stunning images in a square shape) by cinematographer, Eduard Grau, Hall has crafted a beautifully rendered and highly stylized drama. And it is no surprise that it's the performances that are truly impressive here with Thompson and Negga superbly playing off of each other with a mixture of admiration, envy and suspicion. "Passing" artfully examines the complicated dilemma involving race and identity, brilliantly capturing the tragedy and still unresolved issues surrounding these themes.

"KING RICHARD"

While Venus and Serena Williams may be two of the greatest tennis players the world has ever seen, many people are unaware of what it took to help them achieve their outstanding success. In "King Richard", the answer lies with not only their weary yet determined father, Richard (Will Smith) who is the main focus here but also their mother, Oracene (a spectacular Aunjanue Ellis) and three sisters (played by Mikayla LaShae Bartholomew, Daniele Lawson and Layla Crawford), a family that worked and sacrificed together in order for these girls to reach their full potential in professional tennis. As their coach, Richard trains with Serena (Demi Singleton) and Venus (Saniyya Sidney) daily on the rundown courts in their Compton neighborhood but knows he needs to find them a seasoned coach to take them to the next level. He finally gets Paul Cohen (Tony Goldwyn), who works with John McEnroe and Pete Sampras, to see his girls play and he's impressed. But Cohen will only train one for free and selects Venus. She does well in the juniors tournaments (which Serena secretly signs up to play) but Richard has his own ideas on the career path of his daughters, eventually firing Cohen. Rick Macci (Jon Bernthal) steps in to coach both girls and relocates the family to his facility in Florida. After three years, Venus wants to turn pro yet the stubborn Richard remains an obstacle, feeling it's too soon for his young daughter. With his third film as a director, Reinaldo Marcus Green displays a deft hand in creating a warm family drama while examining how race and class greatly impacts professional sports. And in a film with many exceptional performances, it is Smith, muting much of his considerable charm, who truly captivates by completely embodying the outspoken yet philosophical Williams, making this one of the more impressive turns in his career.

"C'MON C'MON"

What is extraordinary about the cinema of Mike Mills is in it's simplicity; the filmmaker takes modest, uncomplicated stories and breathes fresh life into them by creating warm yet emotionally chaotic characters. Once again using his life experiences as a springboard with his latest, "C'mon C'mon", Mills explores the pleasures and complications of parenthood seen through the unexpected eyes of Johnny, a single, childless radio journalist played by Joaquin Phoenix in a solid turn as an average guy. After a year of estrangement, Johnny contacts his sister, Viv (a wonderful Gaby Hoffmann). During their conversation, she asks her brother if he could stay in Los Angeles to watch her nine year old son, Jesse (Woody Norman) for a few days so she go to off to Oakland to help her partner, Paul (Scoot McNairy) who is suffering from an emotional breakdown. The uncle and his nephew begin to bond despite their different personalities. Viv needs more time with Paul but Johnny has to get back to New York for work so she reluctantly agrees to let him take her son to the East Coast. This begins a road trip with Johnny and Jesse where things become more complicated between them, each trying to understand the other's quirks and perspectives. Another film released this year that was shot in vivid black & white, "C'mon C'mon" is an engaging, subtle drama on familial relationships made memorable with insightful dialogue and formidable performances.

"SPIDER-MAN: NO WAY HOME"

There's a reason why "Spider-Man: No Way Home" has become the biggest box-office hit of 2021 and currently the eighth-highest-grossing film of all time; this super-hero adventure combines a very clever plot with hilarious comedy, high-flying thrills and even some moving drama. This movie picks up where we last left off in "Spider-Man: Far From Home" when everyone has found out that Peter Parker is Spider-Man (Tom Holland). This creates havoc not only for Peter but for the loved ones in his life; Aunt May (Marisa Tomei), his best friend, Ned (Jacob Batalon) and girlfriend, MJ (Zendaya). Desperate for a solution, Peter goes to see Dr. Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) for help. Dr. Strange begins a spell that would make the world forget that Parker is the Web-Slinger but Peter keeps interrupting him, not wanting his close family and friends to lose their memories of him, which forces Strange to stop before there is a problem. But it's too late. With some time-shifted problems created, Spider-Man will have to try and repair the broken multiverse. All I will say is that for fans of this current franchise and the two previous Spider-Man trilogies, you will truly enjoy this wonderfully fun and inventive installment.



"SUMMER OF SOUL"

"Summer of Soul (. . .Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)", the directorial debut of musician, Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson, is not only one the most thrilling documentaries of the year but one of the greatest musical experiences ever captured on film. Set over six weeks in 1969, the Harlem Cultural Festival was intended to provide healing and bring a sense of community a year after the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. And the weekly fest did achieve that, with some of the greatest African-American musical artists performing to over 300,000 people in attendance. The appearances by Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, Sly and the Family Stone, Hugh Masekela, B.B. King, Gladys Knight & the Pips, The Staple Singers and Mahalia Jackson were filmed with excerpts airing only once on television. But then the hours of footage was placed in storage and forgotten about for almost fifty years, largely due to a shocking lack of interest. The recent discovery of this incredible treasure trove of live musical performances lead "Questlove" to want to shape this restored footage (with some never previously seen) into a film that the world could finally see to understand it's value and importance. He assembled a few of the musicians that performed and people who attended the event to share their thoughts on the experience of being there. "Summer of Soul" is an amazing historical document of an extraordinary gathering that will leave you feeling completely thrilled and elated.



"TICK, TICK. . .BOOM!"

"Tick, Tick. . .Boom!" was being developed by playwright, Jonathan Larson and was still a work-in-progress before his musical, "Rent" was set to premiere Off-Broadway in 1996. But on the morning of that preview, Larson tragically passed away from an aortic aneurysm at the age of thirty-five, never seeing his play, based on Puccini's 1896 opera, "La Bohème", become a phenomenal worldwide success. "Tick, Tick. . .Boom!" was originally written as a one-man show about Larson's experiences of struggling to write a musical based on Orwell's novel, "1984" and agonizing over not finding success as a playwright before he turned thirty. The show was revised by playwright, David Auburn and staged Off-Broadway in 2001. This has now been adapted into a wonderfully captivating movie musical with Lin-Manuel Miranda making his feature film debut as a director. Andrew Garfield plays Larson whose all-consuming drive to complete the show and get it into production before his big birthday creates tension with his girlfriend (Alexandra Shipp) and problems with his best friend (Robin de Jesús). Garfield is absolutely dazzling here (and surprises as a capable song-and-dance man) in his second impressive film appearance of the year (the other is playing televangelist, Jim Bakker in "The Eyes of Tammy Faye"). And a lovely highlight is the centerpiece of the film during the number of "Sunday" that features cameos by some legends of musical theater.

"THE POWER OF THE DOG"

Jane Campion, the New Zealand filmmaker probably still best known for the 1993 Oscar-winning film, "The Piano", has returned to cinema with "The Power of the Dog", a powerful, period drama set in the American west. This might seem to be an unlikely genre for the director yet she surprises by deftly crafting a languid, unsettling psychological thriller. Adapted from the novel by Thomas Savage, the story is set on a cattle ranch in 1920's Montana run by two very different brothers; George (Jesse Plemons) is affable, considerate and polished while Phil (an intense Benedict Cumberbatch), who works the land, is aggressive, intolerant and habitually muddied. There is clearly tension between the two yet they have managed to make the arrangement work. But that changes after a stop during a cattle drive at a diner run by Rose (Kirsten Dunst), a widow and her son, Peter (an amazing Kodi Smit-McPhee). Finding Peter's delicate and soft-spoken manner offensive, Phil goes on the attack of the boy, upsetting his mother. After George consoles her, this eventually leads to their marriage, upsetting his brother. Phil becomes relentlessly hostile and cruel to Rose, causing her to retreat and turn to alcohol for comfort. From here, when Peter returns home from college to visit, the story slowly builds in an unexpected and curious manner before bringing us to a shocking conclusion. It has been about twelve years since Campion's last feature film yet "The Power of the Dog" reveals that her mastery as a filmmaker has only become more acute and persuasive. Let's hope we will not have to wait another extended period of time before her next film.

"I CARE A LOT"

"I Care a Lot" is a deliriously twisted black comedy by British writer/director, J Blakeson. Marla Grayson (Rosamund Pike) appears concerned when she goes before the court system to grant her legal guardianship over elderly people who are no longer able to care for themselves. However, this is nothing more than an elaborate and devious plot where she drugs her wealthy victims, dumps them into an assisted living facility and sells off their property and assets, making a nice living for herself and her business and life partner, Fran (Eiza González). But Marla makes the mistake of going after the wrong person. After being assured by a doctor working in on the scheme that she had no family that would miss her, she targets Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest). But someone is looking for Jennifer; Roman Lunyov (Peter Dinklage) who is a brutal gangster. He's also looking for the contents in Jennifer's safety deposit box, leading to a tenacious battle between Roman and a fearless Marla. Blakeson's clever and witty script takes us on a wild ride filled with outrageous twists and creates some unexpected suspense. With her severe bob and incessant vaping, Pike plays Marla as cool, calculating and completely deranged. This versatile British actress, who has shown her incredible range from a Bond girl in "Die Another Day" to a stunning turn with her Oscar-nominated performance in the thriller, "Gone Girl", is outstanding here, making this one of her best film performances and earned Pike a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical last year.



"THE LAST DUEL"

It's unfortunate that Ridley Scott's medieval epic, "The Last Duel" did not receive more attention from viewers when it reached theaters last year. But that doesn't mean it was not one of the most powerful dramas of 2021 with solid storytelling and commanding performances. This story focuses on Jean de Carrouges (Matt Damon), a knight whose wife, Marguerite (Jodie Comer), accuses Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver), a squire and former friend, of raping her. Demanding satisfaction from what he sees as a personal insult, de Carrouges appeals to the King for a duel to the death which is granted. Told in three chapters (with the screenplay written by Damon, Nicole Holofcener and Ben Affleck who also makes an appearance in a supporting role as Count Pierre d'Alençon), with each of the three individuals involved recounting the same timeline from their perspectives. This is a meditative drama that explores the dynamics of male privilege and the long, disturbing history of misogyny. While each reveals their version of events, it becomes clear that the truth lies with the person with the least amount of control or power. Comer (who first found fame on the BBC television series, "Killing Eve") delivers an astonishingly moving performance as Marguerite who painfully discovers that despite this horrific violence that has been done to her, she is the one actually on trial.

"WEST SIDE STORY"

I have always been in the frame of mind that there is never a good reason to remake a perfectly good film. So when I heard that Steven Spielberg was going to create his own version of the stage musical, "West Side Story" which had already been adapted into a beloved movie (and won the 1961 Best Picture Oscar), I was more than little skeptical. But after seeing what Spielberg has accomplished, I'm more than willing to admit I might have been too quick to judge. Spielberg has created a magical, breathtaking and deeply emotional musical masterpiece that will absolutely become a classic. Just to be clear, the director has not remade the movie, "West Side Story" but has made something closer to the original 1957 musical that Jerome Robbins, Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents conceived yet also nimbly reimagined their production so that the story (with a revitalized screenplay by Tony Kushner) would be more grounded, fitting more comfortably in our modern world. Inspired by Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet", the 1950's-set story involves a turf war between New York City street gangs; the Sharks, made-up of recent immigrants largely from Puerto Rico and the Jets, a group of poor white teens, run by Riff (Mike Faist), that don't like outsiders moving into their territory. Caught in the middle is Tony (Ansel Elgort), a former Jet member fresh out of jail and trying to change his ways and Maria (Rachel Zegler in her film debut), a sweet, Puerto Rican girl who is the sister of Bernardo (David Alvarez), the leader of the Sharks. These two fall in love, creating additional tension between these rival gangs and leading to a tragic end. And there is Ariana DeBose, playing as Anita, Bernardo's girlfriend, an electrifying presence that you cannot take your eyes off of during any moment she's on screen. Rita Moreno, who won an Academy Award for playing Anita in the 1961 movie, is an executive producer of this film and the ninety year old makes an incredible appearance in a new role created for her as Valentina.



"TITANE"

And then there's "Titane (Titanium)", Julia Ducournau's trippy, fever dream that won the Best Film prize at the Cannes Film Festival. The French director has merged element of melodrama, mystery and horror to make one of the most fascinating, disturbing, thrilling and weirdest cinematic experiences of not only last year but possibly of all time. Agathe Rousselle makes her screen debut as Alexia, a young woman who was in a car accident as a child, leaving her with a titanium plate in her head. She has become a serial killer and after a botched attempted murder, she goes on the run, pretending to be the long missing son of a fire captain (Vincent Lindon). And the odd part is not that he accepts her without question as his child but that Alexia is pregnant with an automobile as the father. I will stress that "Titane" is not a movie for everyone and even those who like their movies "out there" may have a hard time here. But I really admire Ducournau's audacious nature and "Titane" was a movie that really stayed with me long after I had seen it.

Honorable Mention: "Annette", "Belfast", "Benedetta", "Don't Look Up" , "The Dry", "Everybody's Talking About Jamie" , "The Eyes of Tammy Faye", "The French Dispatch", "The Green Knight", "Luca", "Petite Maman", "Pig", "Red Rocket", "Saint Narcisse", "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings", "The Tragedy of Macbeth", "Zola"







Tuesday, August 31, 2021

WINNERS OF THE 2021 OUTFEST FILM FESTIVAL


"Firstness", the visionary feature film debut by writer/director, Brielle Brilliant, received the Grand Jury Prize for Best US Narrative at this year's Outfest Film Festival. This drama focuses on a wayward father and his non-binary child, each trying to find themselves and their place in the world while living in a small, New Mexico desert community.

For the first time, Outfest has collaborated with IMDb to help select the Audience Award winners, using their app to place your vote instead of traditional paper ballots. And this year's audience winner for Best Narrative Feature was given to "Death and Bowling", writer/director, Lyle Kash's whimsical look in to trans-representation involving a queer bowling league and two trans men who meet at a funeral.

Here is the list of winners from the 2021 Outfest Film Festival:

Grand Jury Awards:

U.S. Narrative Feature Grand Jury Prize: "Firstness"



U.S. Narrative Feature Grand Jury Prize for Best Performance
: Pooya Mohseni, "See You Then"
U.S. Narrative Feature Grand Jury Prize for Best Screenplay: Wes Hurley, "Potato Dreams of America"
U.S. Narrative Feature (Special Mention): The ensemble of  "The Sixth Reel"



U.S. Narrative Short Grand Jury Prize: "Girls & The Party"
U.S. Narrative Short (Special Mention): "The Recorder"
International Narrative Feature Grand Jury Prize: "A Distant Place"
International Narrative Feature Grand Jury Prize for Best Screenplay: Ümit Ünal, "Love, Spells and All That"
International Narrative Feature Grand Jury Prize for Best Performance: Nell Barlow, "Sweetheart"
International Narrative Feature (Special Mention): Cloris Leachman, "Jump, Darling"



International Narrative Short Grand Jury Prize: "Squish"
International Narrative Short (Special Mention): "Private Photos"
Documentary Feature Grand Jury Prize: "No Straight Lines: The Rise of Queer Comics"



Documentary Feature (Special Mentions): "Sediments" and "North By Current"
Documentary Short Grand Jury Prize: "Narcissister Breast Work"
Documentary Short (Special Mention): "F1-100"

Audience Awards:

Narrative Feature Audience Award: "Death and Bowling"
Narrative Short Audience Award: "And Then"
Experimental Short Audience Award: "Jupiter & Europa"
Documentary Feature Audience Award: "This is Jessica"



Documentary Short Audience Award: "Right To Try"

Special Programming Awards:

Emerging Talent: Joseph Sackett, "Homebody"
Freedom: Whitney Skauge and Terence Smith for their collaboration on the short documentary, "The Beauty President"
Artistic Achievement: Bo McGuire, "Socks on Fire"

And here are a couple of films I saw at the fest (and very happy to report seen in a theater with an audience); "Everybody's Talking About Jaime" is a delightfully charming coming-of-age musical about a gay, British teenager who know exactly what he wants to be when he graduates from high school; a fabulous drag queen.

Based on the acclaimed West End stage show, Max Harwood (making his feature film debut) plays Jaime New who is about to turn sixteen and his loving mother, Margaret (Sarah Lancashire) gives her son the birthday gift he has always wanted; sparkling, red high-heels. He shows his best friend, a Muslim teen named Pritti (Lauren Patel) his new shoes and reveals to her his dream of becoming a female illusionist. She encourages Jamie to go to their upcoming prom in a dress. Deciding to go for it, Jamie ventures in to a shop that is known to cater to drag queens, run by Hugo (a wonderful Richard E. Grant). Once the legendary queen, "Loco Chanelle", Hugo takes the young teen under his wing, not only with preparing him for the prom but also to take the stage for the first time in make-up and a wig. And while Margaret loves Jamie unconditionally and supports his dream, her estranged husband (Ralph Ineson) finds his son's homosexuality disgusting and wants nothing to do with him. Desperate to protect her son from his father's hostile attitude, Margaret pretends that he sends birthday cards and encourages him to follow his passion.

Jonathan Butterell, a British director and choreographer for the stage, makes his cinematic debut behind the camera. He knows this story quite intimately, having worked with Dan Gillespie Sells and Tom MacRae (who wrote the screenplay) to develop the stage musical back in 2017, based on the real-life story of a Sheffield teen who wanted to go to his prom in drag. This has lead Butterell to successfully bring a vibrant energy, colorful characters and heartfelt emotion to this thrilling film version. What will make-or-break any musical are the songs and "Everybody's Talking About Jamie" is filled with truly memorable ballads and dance tunes that perfectly highlights the joy, heartbreak and humor that is being expressed in this story. This film is a wonderful inspiration and encouragement for young LGBTQ+ teens to follow their dreams, no matter how challenging or difficult they may seem to be.

Gloria Swanson was one of the biggest stars of the early Silent Movie era. But once sound came on the scene, the glamourous actress had difficulty transitioning, causing her star power to dim. It was Billy Wilder who turned her career around by casting Swanson in "Sunset Blvd", the story of Norma Desmond, a faded silent movie star who meets a handsome, struggling screenwriter (William Holden), wanting him to write her a comeback project but falls in love with him, leading to tragic results. This role put Swanson back in the spotlight and has remained her best known movie role.

And while we all know that Andrew Lloyd Webber transformed this film classic into a Tony Award-winning musical, few are aware that decades earlier, Swanson had teamed-up with two unknown playwrights in a first attempt to turn "Sunset Blvd" into a musical. Jeffrey Schwarz, the filmmaker behind the fascinating documentaries on Divine and Tab Hunter, leads us on an investigative look with "Boulevard! A Hollywood Story" which reveals many of the juicy details behind this little-known story.

The British actor, Richard Stapley began his career as a contract player with M-G-M (with supporting roles in remakes of "The Three Musketeers" and "Little Women") throughout the late 1940's and '50's before leaving Hollywood and returning to Europe to resume his career as "Richard Wyler" in 1960. Dickson Hughes was a popular Los Angeles cabaret pianist working on trying to create the next great musical. These two men met one night, Hughes was performing in a nightclub; Stapley was there on a date with woman, and not long after began a romantic and professional relationship. These novice writers presented an idea for a stage show to Swanson but she was only interested in a musical version of "Sunset Blvd". Then this trio went to work to put a show together. Yet after nearly completing the musical, it all fell apart for various, complicated reasons.

We see Schwartz on camera digging around and researching for any traces about this project, eventually getting his hands on separate interviews with Stapley and Hughes and the original demo recordings of Swanson performing songs for the musical. "Boulevard!" not only covers what happened during the creation of this doomed production but reveals the interesting events that happened in the lives of each of these three central figures after the collapse of the musical. With archival footage, interviews with friends and family and animated illustrations by Maurice Vellekoop that whimsically recreates sequences in the story, "Boulevard! A Hollywood Story" is a delicious treat for devotees of the Billy Wilder-Charles Brackett movie and fans of riveting tales involving classic Hollywood.

Wednesday, July 28, 2021

2021 OUTFEST FILM FESTIVAL


After last year's fest was forced to be completely a streaming event, the 2021 Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ Film Festival will be returning with in-person screenings to be held at the DGA, Harmony Gold theater, the Orpheum and Redcat. But for the first time, there will be an outdoor screening held at the Hollywood Forever cemetery with the Opening Night Film of Jonathan Butterell’s "Everybody’s Talking About Jamie" on August 13th. This is the movie adaptation of the popular theatrical musical (based on the 2011 British television documentary, "Jamie: Drag Queen at 16"), telling the story of a queer teenager who pushes back against high school bullies and fulfills his dream to become a drag queen.



The ten day event (running through August 22nd) will feature 200 films from across the globe and nearly every film presented at the festival will also be available for streaming for those at-risk or who live outside of LA area. The US Centerpiece selected will be "The Novice" which looks at a college freshman who becomes obsessed with becoming the very best on her school's varsity rowing team, leading her to some unhinged behavior. The Documentary Centerpiece is "Being BeBe" from filmmaker, Emily Branham which examines the very first winner of "RuPaul’s Drag Race", BeBe Zahara Benet, using footage that was shot over a fifteen year period. A special live performance by the legendary Benet will follow the screening. And a Special Centerpiece Tribute will feature, "The Sixth Reel" that will pay tribute to producer and Outfest alum, Ash Christian, who passed away during the development of this film in 2020. This world premiere, from directors, Charles Busch & Carl Andress, is about the discovery of a long lost final reel of a classic film. A small group of film-obsessed friends plot to beat each other at getting their hands on this precious reel of celluloid.

The Trans & Nonbinary Summit, in it's fifth year, will be taking place on August 21st and features a panel of established and emerging trans & nonbinary creators and a shorts program to highlight the work of these filmmakers. The Legacy section of classic LGBTQ films will feature the world premiere of the new restoration of director, Maria Maggenti's 1993 feature, "The Incredibly True Adventures of Two Girls in Love" and the fifteen year anniversary screening of "Quinceañera" by filmmakers, the late Richard Glatzer & Wash Westmoreland.





The Closing Night Film will be "Fanny: The Right to Rock", a documentary about the little-known, '70's all-female rock band, Fanny who were the very first to release an album on a major record label. The screening will be held at The Orpheum Theatre and will be followed by a live reunion performance by Fanny.



For the complete list of films, additional information and to purchase tickets, please click below:

2021 Outfest Film Festival