Showing posts with label QDoc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label QDoc. Show all posts

Thursday, May 17, 2012

QDOC OPENS TONIGHT: A PREVIEW OF PORTLAND'S OWN LGBT NON-FICTION FILM FESTIVAL



The 6th Annual QDoc (Portland Queer Documentary Film Festival) invades McMenamins Kennedy School Theater beginning tonight (5/17) and running through this coming Sunday evening (5/20).  Packing eleven screenings (many with special guests in attendance) into the four day schedule, there are some really wonderful films on offer here.  Here's a rundown of the ones I was able to catch:





Wish Me Away (dir. Bobbie Birleffi & Beverly Kopf):
The story of one woman's coming out.  The major difference between her experience and that of countless others is that she's Chely Wright, the famed Nashville singer who in 2010 became country music's first star to out herself.  The film follows Chely in the anxious days leading up to her very public announcement on The Today Show.  
Along the way, we're given access to Chely as she meets with her spiritual counselor, publisher (there's a tell-all autobiography in the mix), family and fellow musicians.

Wish Me Away is the opening night selection at QDoc.  It screens on Thursday, May 17th at 7pm.
Chely Wright will be in attendance at the screening.





A moving portrait of Vito Russo that encompasses all sides of his activism: as a researcher/archivist of gay experience in cinema via his landmark tome The Celluloid Closet, as a host for the groundbreaking NYC-based television show Our Time, and as a founder of GLAAD and ACT UP.  This is a rare opportunity for Portland crowds to see this theatrically before it has its broadcast premiere on HBO in July.  Vito is highly recommended viewing.  One of the better documentaries I've seen in 2012.

Vito is the closing film for QDoc.  It screens on Sunday, May 20th at 7pm.
Director Jeffrey Schwarz will be in attendance at the screening.





Girl or Boy, My Sex is Not My Gender (dir. Valérie Mitteaux):
A French documentary exploring the lives of four individuals who were born biologically female and have transitioned to male somewhere along the line.  Out of all of the QDoc content I viewed this week, this film contains the best interviews; there are some incredibly lucid statements throughout concerning gender constructs--what it's like to abandon some while adopting others.  There's also some fairly surprising and sickening revelations about how the French govern the bodies (and technically, the minds, I guess) of their transgendered citizens.

Girl or Boy, My Sex is Not My Gender screens at QDoc on Friday, May 18th at 6:45pm.
One of its subjects, Lynnee Breedlove (of Tribe 8 fame), will be in attendance at the screening.





Love Free or Die (dir. Macky Alston):
This is my pick for the must-see film at QDoc.  Macky Alston (Questioning Faith, Family Name) focuses his lens on Gene Robinson, the priest who made international headlines for being the first openly gay, partnered person consecrated as a bishop by the Episcopal Church in the U.S.
The documentary tracks Robinson as he suffers pressure from without over the splintering effects that his ordination have had on the domestic church and its relationship within the worldwide Anglican Communion.
Yeah, it's scheduled for 4 in the afternoon on a Sunday.  That's not an excuse; don't miss it.

Love Free or Die screens at QDoc on Sunday, May 20th at 4pm.
Director Macky Alston will be in attendance at the screening.





























The 6th annual QDoc (Portland Queer Documentary Film Festival) begins this Thursday, May 17th at McMenamins Kennedy School Theater.  More info about the festival can be found here.


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Friday, May 11, 2012

THE RAIN FALLS DOWN ON PDX: WEEKEND ROUNDUP FOR 5/11



Here we go again...it's the weekend roundup of films opening in and around PDX.

First up, Cinema 21 hosts Portland's theatrical run of the Norwegian crime-thriller Headhunters.  I'm still kicking myself for not being able to make the press screening for this one.  Dan Halsted, programmer for the Hollywood Theatre and the Grindhouse Film Festival personally chose it for one of his single night PIFF After Dark screenings back in February.  By all accounts from those who attended, it was a unique take on the genre.  Cinema 21's Tom Ranieri commented via e-mail that it's "a lot of fun, some of it gruesome fun certainly."





The NW Film Center continues their month-long Studio Ghibli retrospective, Castles in the Sky: Miyazaki, Takahata, and the Masters of Studio Ghibli, with Kiki's Delivery Service (reviewed here), Only Yesterday and Princess Mononoke.  It's a rare chance to see these films on the big screen; Only Yesterday has never had an official North American release!  And I believe that two out of the three features will be 35mm prints!  More info on the Studio Ghibli series available here.








Over at the Hollywood Theatre, the annual H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival & CthuluCon runs through the weekend.  Highlights include It's in the Blood, starring Lance Henriksen (Aliens, The Terminator),  and The Horror Express with Christopher Lee (The Wicker Man) and Peter Cushing (Star Wars).  All info pertaining to tickets and passes can be found here.







Living Room Theaters begins showing Jesus Henry Christ with Michael Sheen and Toni Collette today.  They're also getting the magnificent The Deep Blue Sea (reviewed here), which just finished a two week run at Cinema 21.








The Laurelhurst Theater & Pub continues its winning series of classic screenings with John Ford's eternally great 1956 anti-western The Searchers, starring John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter and Natalie Wood.




And, finally, PSU's student-run 5th Avenue Cinema has a three-day screening of Michael Haneke's incredible (as well as incredibly disturbing) 1997 home-invasion classic Funny Games.




A lot on the horizon for next week, including a 35mm print of Jaws at the Hollywood Theater, Cinema Project's latest event (reviewed here), the opening of QDoc (Portland Queer Documentary Festival), HD Fest at the Living Room Theaters, etc.  Keep your eyes on the blog as we'll be following all of these and more over the coming days.

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