The Queer Film Festival

The Queer Film Festival

Author: Stuart James Richards

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2017-01-05

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 1137584386

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This book examines the queer film festival and opens the discussion on social enterprises and sustainable lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) organisations. With over 220 events worldwide and some of the bigger budgets exceeding $1 million, the queer film festival has grown to become a staple event in all cosmopolitan cities’ arts calendars. While activism was instrumental in establishing these festivals, the pink dollar has been a deciding factor in its financial sustainability. Pretty gay boys with chiselled abs are a staple feature, rather than underground experimental faire. Community arts events, such as these, are now a creative industry. While clearly having a social purpose, they must also concern themselves with the bottom line. For all the contradictory elements of its organisational growth, this conflict makes the queer film festival an integral site for analysis. This book takes a multidisciplinary approach in examining the queer film festival as a representative snapshot of the current state of queer cinema and community based film festivals. The book looks at queer film festivals in San Francisco, Hong Kong and Melbourne to argue for the importance of these institutions remaining as community events.


LGBTQ Film Festivals

LGBTQ Film Festivals

Author: Antoine Damiens

Publisher: Amsterdam University Press

Published: 2020-03-17

Total Pages: 298

ISBN-13: 9048543894

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While scholars have theorized major film festivals, they have ignored smaller, ephemeral, events. In taking seriously minor European and North-American LGBT festivals which often only exist as traces within archival collections, this book revisits festival studies' methodological and theoretical apparatuses. As the first 'critique' of festival studies from within, LGBTQ Film Festivals argues that both festivals and queer film cultures are by definition ephemeral. The book is organized around two concepts: First, 'critical festival studies' examines the political project and disciplinary assumptions that structure festival research. Second, 'the festival as a method' pays attention to festivals' role as producers of knowledge: it argues that festivals are not mere objects of research but also actors already shaping academic, industrial, and popular cinematic knowledge. Drawing on my experience on the festival circuit, this book pays homage to the labour of queer organizers, critics, and scholars and opens up new avenues for festival research.


Queer Cinema in the World

Queer Cinema in the World

Author: Karl Schoonover

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 2016-11-17

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13: 082237367X

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Proposing a radical vision of cinema's queer globalism, Karl Schoonover and Rosalind Galt explore how queer filmmaking intersects with international sexual cultures, geopolitics, and aesthetics to disrupt dominant modes of world making. Whether in its exploration of queer cinematic temporality, the paradox of the queer popular, or the deviant ecologies of the queer pastoral, Schoonover and Galt reimagine the scope of queer film studies. The authors move beyond the gay art cinema canon to consider a broad range of films from Chinese lesbian drama and Swedish genderqueer documentary to Bangladeshi melodrama and Bolivian activist video. Schoonover and Galt make a case for the centrality of queerness in cinema and trace how queer cinema circulates around the globe–institutionally via film festivals, online consumption, and human rights campaigns, but also affectively in the production of a queer sensorium. In this account, cinema creates a uniquely potent mode of queer worldliness, one that disrupts normative ways of being in the world and forges revised modes of belonging.


French and Spanish Queer Film

French and Spanish Queer Film

Author: Chris Perriam

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Published: 2016-06-02

Total Pages: 216

ISBN-13: 0748699201

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Advancing the current state of film audience research and of our knowledge of sexuality in transnational contexts, French and Spanish Queer Film analyses how French LGBTQ films are seen in Spain and Spanish ones in France.


Post-Yugoslav Queer Festivals

Post-Yugoslav Queer Festivals

Author: Sanja Kajinić

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2019-09-19

Total Pages: 115

ISBN-13: 3030282317

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This book explores two festivals over ten years: Queer Zagreb and Ljubljana Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. Kajinić focuses on the festivals’ participation in a regional network of queer festivals and provides an insight into how these festivals and their audiences negotiated the limits of non-normativity in particularly intensive ways between 2002-2012. By offering an interdisciplinary perspective and exploring the possibilities of critical visual methodology, the author relates the history of these important cultural projects and their organizational practices to the ways in which they impacted the lives of their participants. Post-Yugoslav Queer Festivals will be of interest to readers studying the region of Southeast Europe from a range of perspectives including gender studies, history, politics and festival studies.


Turning the Page

Turning the Page

Author: David R. Coon

Publisher: Rutgers University Press

Published: 2018-07-11

Total Pages: 243

ISBN-13: 0813593735

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First runner-up for the 2019 John Leo and Dana Heller Award from the Popular Culture Association Surprisingly, Hollywood is still clumsily grappling with its representation of sexual minorities, and LGBTQ filmmakers struggle to find a place in the mainstream movie industry. However, organizations outside the mainstream are making a difference, helping to produce and distribute authentic stories that are both by and for LGBTQ people. Turning the Page introduces readers to three nonprofit organizations that, in very different ways, have each positively transformed the queer media landscape. David R. Coon takes readers inside In the Life Media, whose groundbreaking documentaries on the LGBTQ experience aired for over twenty years on public television stations nationwide. Coon reveals the successes of POWER UP, a nonprofit production company dedicated to mentoring filmmakers who can turn queer stories into fully realized features and short films. Finally, he turns to Three Dollar Bill Cinema, an organization whose film festivals help queer media find an audience and whose filmmaking camps for LGBTQ youth are nurturing the next generation of queer cinema. Combining a close analysis of specific films and video programs with extensive interviews of industry professionals, Turning the Page demonstrates how queer storytelling in visual media has the potential to empower individuals, strengthen communities, and motivate social justice activism.


New Queer Cinema

New Queer Cinema

Author: B. Ruby Rich

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 2013-03-26

Total Pages: 353

ISBN-13: 0822399695

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B. Ruby Rich designated a brand new genre, the New Queer Cinema (NQC), in her groundbreaking article in the Village Voice in 1992. This movement in film and video was intensely political and aesthetically innovative, made possible by the debut of the camcorder, and driven initially by outrage over the unchecked spread of AIDS. The genre has grown to include an entire generation of queer artists, filmmakers, and activists. As a critic, curator, journalist, and scholar, Rich has been inextricably linked to the New Queer Cinema from its inception. This volume presents her new thoughts on the topic, as well as bringing together the best of her writing on the NQC. She follows this cinematic movement from its origins in the mid-1980s all the way to the present in essays and articles directed at a range of audiences, from readers of academic journals to popular glossies and weekly newspapers. She presents her insights into such NQC pioneers as Derek Jarman and Isaac Julien and investigates such celebrated films as Go Fish, Brokeback Mountain, Itty Bitty Titty Committee, and Milk. In addition to exploring less-known films and international cinemas (including Latin American and French films and videos), she documents the more recent incarnations of the NQC on screen, on the web, and in art galleries.


Festivals, Uncut

Festivals, Uncut

Author: Antoine Damiens

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13:

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In the past decade, scholars have increasingly paid attention to film festivals. While the constitution of festival studies as a semi-independent field seems to further legitimise festivals as a site of scholarly inquiry, film critics have long questioned the continued relevance of LGBT film festivals. In 1982, for instance, Thomas Waugh wondered why (and whether) a new film festival should be organised in Montreal. Similarly, B. Ruby Rich notes that, given the commercial success of independent queer cinema in the mid-1990s, LGBT festivals are simultaneously "outlasting their mandate and invited to cease and desist." In focusing on LGBT festivals' conflicted temporalities and historiography, this dissertation explores the intersection of queer cinematic cultures, academic knowledge production, and film criticism: since their humble beginnings in 1970s adult theatres, universities, and community centres, LGBT festivals have been instrumental in shaping both gay and lesbian film studies and queer cultural memory. In that context, this dissertation centres on the tension between queering festival studies (what I call "critical festival studies") - uncovering the disciplinary unconscious and political project of the field through a careful examination of festivals which have been ignored in traditional historical narratives - and the constitution of queer cultural memory through festivals' curatorial practices ("the festival as a method"). As such, this project is highly indebted to queer/feminist historiographies and epistemologies. In queering festival studies, it hopes to foreground our own attachment to objects of studies (academic research is, as festival organisers put it, a "labour of love"), to do justice to the ways queer people access history, and to open up a space for a critical re-examining of queer film scholarship.


Queer European Cinema

Queer European Cinema

Author: Leanne Dawson

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-12-07

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13: 1351711571

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Queer European Cinema commences with an overview of LGBTQ representation throughout cinematic history, interwoven with socio-political reality in Europe and beyond, to consider trends including the boarding school film, the gay road movie, and queer horror such as the lesbian vampire tale, before analysing case studies from the ‘low culture’ of pornography to the ‘high culture’ of arthouse cinema. This collection of essays explores borders and boundaries of geography, temporality, ethnicity, class, gender, sexuality, and desire in a range of European films at a time when both LGBTQ politics and the concept of Europe are under intense scrutiny in representation and reality, to demonstrate how LGBTQ film can serve as a political tool to create visibility and acceptance as well as providing entertainment. Chapters include an analysis of both trans and femme identities in Academy Award-winning Boys Don’t Cry alongside German film, Unveiled; the intersection of lesbian visibility and the notion of nation on the Croatian screen at its point of entry into the European Union and during the gay marriage referendum; music and its relation to camp in Italian transnational cinema; European lesbian feminist pornography; and an analysis of liminal spaces and citizenship in queer French-language road movies. This book was originally published as a special issue of Studies in European Cinema.


New Queer Cinema

New Queer Cinema

Author: B. Ruby Rich

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 2013-03-26

Total Pages: 353

ISBN-13: 0822354284

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B. Ruby Rich designated a brand new genre, the New Queer Cinema (NQC), in her groundbreaking article in the Village Voice in 1992. This movement in film and video was intensely political and aesthetically innovative, made possible by the debut of the camcorder, and driven initially by outrage over the unchecked spread of AIDS. The genre has grown to include an entire generation of queer artists, filmmakers, and activists. As a critic, curator, journalist, and scholar, Rich has been inextricably linked to the New Queer Cinema from its inception. This volume presents her new thoughts on the topic, as well as bringing together the best of her writing on the NQC. She follows this cinematic movement from its origins in the mid-1980s all the way to the present in essays and articles directed at a range of audiences, from readers of academic journals to popular glossies and weekly newspapers. She presents her insights into such NQC pioneers as Derek Jarman and Isaac Julien and investigates such celebrated films as Go Fish, Brokeback Mountain, Itty Bitty Titty Committee, and Milk. In addition to exploring less-known films and international cinemas (including Latin American and French films and videos), she documents the more recent incarnations of the NQC on screen, on the web, and in art galleries.