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The trailer park love child of Thelma and Louise and The Opposite of Sex, Drool is an outrageous dark comedy that will leave audiences salivating for more.
Anora Fleece (Laura Harring from Mullholland Drive) is trapped in an abusive marriage to a racist bastard and her two kids treat her like a subservient maid. Alone during the day, she loses herself in dreams of a perfect romance.
Things take a turn when a new neighbour, Imogene Cochran, moves in. Imogene sells Kathy K. Kosmetics, 'make-up for the cocoa-skinned woman.' The problem is, people in these parts don't like cocoa-skinned anything, but that doesn't stop Imogene and Anora from bonding over coffee. Soon, they are doing more than just bonding. But when Anora's husband, Cheb, finds them all hell breaks loose and Anora and Imogene load the kids into the Kathy K. car and head out on the road to bury the past.
Screening Sponsor: Capital Xtra!
BEST ACTRESS AWARD FOR LAURA HARRING (OUTFEST LOS ANGELES GAY AND LESBIAN FESTIVAL)
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In Patrik, Age 1.5, Göran and Sven are a happily married couple who have traded in their chic lifestyle in the city for a more family-friendly house in the picturesque suburbs of Stockholm. There is just one thing missing that will make their domestic bliss complete-a baby.
The pair finally cuts through the bureaucratic redtape but a misplaced decimal point produces tremendous consequences - instead of a one-and-a half-year-old infant, Göran and Sven end up with fifteen-year-old Patrik, a homophobe with a criminal past.
Patrik drives a wedge between the happy couple. Sven doesn't want the little delinquent in their house while Göran refuses to give up on the young offender.
Full of witty perceptions on suburban life, Director Lemhagen handles the material with a stylish eye for detail. The result is a thought-provoking film that finds humour in unexpected situations and humanity everywhere, even in the most unlikely people.
Screening Sponsor: Jer's Vision
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Before the Indigo Girls and before Ani DiFranco, there was Ferron, whose plaintive and poetic songs provided the soundtrack for an entire generation of lesbians. Nearing 60 and feeling the urge to reconnect with her audience, Ferron reunites with her band to perform a concert after nearly a decade away. Director Gerry Rogers (My Left Breast) is there to capture the moment.
Ferron: Girl on a Road opens on British Columbia's Saturna Island, where Ferron welcomes her band mates into her home to rehearse. The action shifts to a stage in Victoria, where Ferron and the band perform some of her most adored songs-Shadows on a Dime, Girl on a Road and Snowin' in Brooklyn. Interspersed between tunes are interviews with the band members and with Ferron herself, who talks openly about her painful childhood, her rise and fall in the music industry, her past feelings of shame regarding her Native ancestry and, finally, about coming to terms with herself after a lifetime of struggles.
Screening Sponsor: Lesbian Information Xchange (LIX)
ELLE FLANDERS AWARD FOR BEST DOCUMENTARY (INSIDE OUT TORONTO LGBT FILM AND VIDEO FESTIVAL)
The program will feature six works that reference cinema from the past four decades, including the premiere of Body Double 22 (based on Eyes Wide Shut), in which French actor and visual artist Jean-Luc Verna plays all the roles - resulting in a gender-bending parallel to the original.
Program:
Body Double 16 (based on A Clockwork Orange and Women in Love)
Body Double 17 (based on Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me)
Body Double 19/20 (based on Flash Gordon)
Body Double 22 (based on Eyes Wide Shut)
Body Double 23 (based on The Black Dahlia)
Presented by SAW Video and the Embassy of France
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Tala, a Jordanian of Palestinian origin living in London, is preparing for her elaborate wedding when she meets Leyla, a young British-Indian woman who is dating her best friend Ali. Spirited Christian Tala and shy Muslim Leyla could not be more different but the attraction is immediate and soon both women reveal their feelings for each other.
But Tala is not ready to accept what her heart is telling her and she escapes back to Jordan where her chain-smoking high-brow mother finishes preparations for her ostentatious wedding.
As the wedding day approaches, simmering family tensions come to a boil and the pressure mounts for Tala to be true to herself. Meanwhile heartbroken Leyla relishes her new-found identity and moves on with her life - much to the shock of her traditional parents. Single again, Tala flies back to London but will she be able to win Leyla back?
Screening Sponsor: Pink Triangle Services
BEST FEATURE (VANCOUVER QUEER FILM FESTIVAL)
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Almost 35 years after starring in The Naked Civil Servant, John Hurt reprises his role as writer and raconteur Quentin Crisp in An Englishman in New York, which traces what happened when Crisp landed in Manhattan to conquer America.
In 1981, at the age of 72, Crisp arrives in New York City's East Village and launches a one-man off-Broadway show. His natural flair for a bon mot earns him a place at the trendiest social engagements and he becomes a fixture on what he calls 'the champagne and peanuts' circuit.
The adulation and attention he has garnered, however, is threatened when Crisp publicly dismisses the AIDS crisis as a fad. Depressed and alone, Crisp is rescued by performance artist Penny Arcade (Sex and the City's Cynthia Nixon), who puts him back on stage and back in the spotlight.
Screening Sponsor: Great Canadian Theatre Company
BEST ACTOR (BERLIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL)
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From our perennial favourite, John Greyson and composer David Wall, comes a video opera/documentary that blends scathing critique with humour and spellbinding visuals.
The film is based on the opera Four Saints In Three Acts by Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson, with Toronto's Tim McCaskell (founding member of AIDS Action Now) and Zackie Achmat (founder of Treatment Action Campaign) of South Africa as the film's central subjects. Through their fearless activism, they ensure that the fate of treatment programs are not left in the hands of ineffective governments and greedy corporations. From Bush to Bono, no one escapes Greyson's critical eye. The brunt of the critique is aimed at the major pharmaceutical companies whose profit motives outweigh the value of human lives.
Art cinema, documentary and opera meld in a complex and compelling essay on the continuing fight for treatment and justice for people living with HIV/AIDS everywhere.
Screening Sponsor: Available Light Screening Collective
BEST DOCUMENTARY/ESSAY TEDDY AWARD (BERLIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL)
ENTERTAINMENT PARTNERS CANADA AWARD FOR BEST FEATURE (INSIDE OUT TORONTO LGBT FILM AND VIDEO FESTIVAL)
Commissioned by the BBC to mark the 40th anniversary of the decriminalization of homosexuality in England, Clapham Junction is a raw and often disturbing glimpse into the lives of eight Londoners and the devastating consequences that unfold when their lives collide during a 36-hour period in the posh neighbourhood of Clapham Junction.
Gavin and Will celebrate their love at their civil partnership ceremony but, for one of them, the commitment doesn't last long when caterwaiter Alfie offers up more than canapés. Hot and horny Terry dotes on his frail grandmother during the day and at night prowls the bars. Author Robin has just had his latest novel rejected and seeks solace in a public toilet. Teenage Theo confronts his ongoing obsession with Tim, his sexy older neighbor.
The Altman-esque vignettes come together in a climax of violence, discrimination and denial that reveals the dark side of human nature.
Screening Sponsor: Ottawa Art Gallery
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Javier Cámara played the empathetic nurse in Pedro Almodóvar's Talk to Her, and early on in Chef's Special he is again at a hospital bedside - that of his ex-wife, who is dying. But in this high-strung comedy, Cámara's Maxi is a bitchy queen who won't cut anybody any slack.
Although he is a perfectionist at his job as manager of a fine dining restaurant in Madrid's gay neighbourhood, Maxi is not similarly motivated to be a good gay dad to his two kids, especially to his fifteen-year-old son, whose abandonment issues are manifesting as homophobia. Maxi's best friend and maître d' is cleavage-baring drama queen Alex (played by Lola Dueñas, another Almodóvar regular). She is fed-up with men but then she spies Maxi's new neighbour, a hunky ex-soccer player whose ambiguous sexuality manages to turn the two friends into rivals.
Driven by a series of misunderstandings and pratfalls, this romp is the perfect showcase for Cámara, who walks a fine line between hysterically funny and merely hysterical.
Screening Sponsors: Cruiseline and Centretown Pub
On closing night, we put the letters LGBT into a blender, pouring out a cocktail that celebrates the spectrum of gender. Trans activists, butch lesbians, child drag queens and more come together in this glorious ode to difference. The event coincides with the closing of the exhibition by dyke art star Allyson Mitchell at SAW Gallery.
Screening Sponsor: Divergence Movie Night and Galerie SAW Gallery