US PREMIERE

SHORT FILM PROGRAM

WORLD PREMIERE

FESTIVAL SPOTLIGHT

THROWBACK FROM 

Queer Women of Color Media Arts Project

Wednesday

May 8, 2013

@

7:00 pm

Boston LGBT Film Festival 2013

With in person.
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Director
Year
Run Time
min
Country
Language
PROGRAM Time
94
minutes
CONTENT WARNING:
This film is presented in with English subtitles.
From queer family values, to a mother coming out to her grown children, to magical musical film mash-ups with novice fairy godmothers, these joyous films rip the veil off societal expectations, elope with your heart, and solemnly vow undying delight!
Wicked Queer is proud to co-present this program with
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Presented with...

Program includes...

This short film program includes the following films:

Drum Joy Love

CONTENT WARNING:
For 40 years, legendary drummer Carolyn Brandy has infused her percussion with DRUM LOVE JOY.
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Family Blessings

CONTENT WARNING:
Queer Asian women and their children see their FAMILY BLESSINGS shine through everyday devotion.
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Corazon de Melon

CONTENT WARNING:
A queer Mexicana couple journey through online dating and across borders to find their CORAZON de MELON.
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Love Ability

CONTENT WARNING:
After a life-changing accident, a Black lesbian model finds her true LOVE ABLITY where she least expects it.
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A Night in the Woods

CONTENT WARNING:
During a zombie apocalypse, a genderqueer Asian survives A NIGHT IN THE WOODS with some help.
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One Wish

CONTENT WARNING:
With her new fairy godmother, a woman gets ONE WISH packed with much more than she asked.
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Chicks and Love

CONTENT WARNING:
A queer Asian efficiency expert focuses on CHICKS AND LOVE to get betrothed by her next birthday.
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WORLD PREMIERE
FROM 2011
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WILDNESS is a portrait of the Silver Platter, a historic bar in the MacArthur Park area that has been a thriving part of the Latin/LGBT immigrant communities since 1963. Chronicling what happens to the bar when art student, Chicago transplant and director Wu Tsang falls in love with the bar and sets up a weekly dance/performance art party, it raises the questions of how popular is too popular? What happens when the safe spaces in our community start to go mainstream? Throughout the film we see the bar struggle with success as the clientele start to move away from its Latino working class, immigrant and transgender base towards a more hipster flavored audience that doesn’t always respect the original community and family aspect of the bar. As media outlets start covering the immensely popular party, the new attention on the bar brings increased police surveillance and some of the regular girls of the bar are deported. Inspired by narrative documentaries such as Marlon Riggs’s Tongues Untied and Charles Atlas’s Hail the New Puritan director Wu Tsang decided at that moment to utilize his previous organizing experience and film it. The film shows what can happen when such a precious safe space is threatened by gentrification and its own growing popularity. Full of love, energy, pathos and community, Wildness in essence is the love story between a young, idealistic queer person in search of something and the magical bar that takes him in and helps him grow up.
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Event Info↗
SPOTLIGHT
US PREMIERE
WORLD PREMIERE
FROM 2012
Special Guest
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Stud Life

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Fri, May 03 @ 8:00 pm
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in person
J, a black lesbian stud with mad swagger and stone butch tendencies, and her best friend Seb, a cute white twink with a penchant for brightly colored nail polish, do everything together. Seb assists JJ when she’s photographing gay and straight weddings, they club together, get high together, and they live together…usually harmoniously, even when JJ catches Seb masturbating in their flat’s kitchen. When JJ meets a beautiful femme named Elle at the local pub, Seb warns her that the seductress is trouble, to no avail: JJ is determined to have her, whether she’s seeing someone else or not. As JJ becomes more and more enamored with Elle and they begin a tumultuous, boundary‐pushing relationship, while Seb is busy lusting after his online conquests while thwarting the advances of a flamboyant drug dealer, their once solid friendship begins to waver. But it turns out that Elle has something to hide that JJ can’t wrap her mind around, and Seb’s manly cyber crush isn’t all that he seems. As urban London’s homophobia affects both of their lives in different ways, JJ and Seb must lean on each other and both are forced to reevaluate their own stereotypes and beliefs on love and life. Description courtesy of Angelique Smith of Frameline Film Festival.
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