
Olympia Dukakis
Image by: Michael Gibson
Olympia Dukakis won hers for
Moonstruck, while U.K. actress Brenda Fricker won hers for My Left Foot.
Those wins would be Academy Awards, by the way, and the lauded ladies are now
going to star side-by-side in the latest film from gay Canadian director Thom
Fitzgerald (Beefcake, Three Needles). Dukakis and Fricker will star as an
older lesbian couple, with Fricker finding herself placed in a nursing home by
her adult children. But when those same family members decide to shut out
Dukakis from the home the women have built together, the pair decide to break
out and run off to be married in Canada. No one seems to bother telling them
that Canadian laws don’t hold in the U.S., but that doesn’t stop them from
taking one last stab at freedom. Think Thelma and Louise only with two women
who have kissed more than once, and then catch it when it comes to a local film
festival or independent cinema near you.
Glee and Twilight stars leap
to White Frog
Somebody must have once given
indie filmmaker Quentin Lee good business advice about keeping his overhead low
and never giving up. Because while most of the world wasn’t looking, the gay
director has racked up five well-regarded indie features, including The People
I’ve Slept With, Drift and Shopping For Fangs, a couple of documentaries
and several short films. Are they busting down box offices? No, but they get
made and they get seen on screens at film fests and arthouse theaters. Ask
anybody in the film business and they’ll tell you that that equals success. And
for Lee’s next project, the high profile stars are coming out to play. The film
is called White Frog and it stars Booboo Stewart (part of the Twilight wolf
pack) as a young man with Asperger’s syndrome who brings about change in his
family. It feature’s Glee’s Harry Shum Jr. in a pivotal role, Teen Wolf’s
Tyler Posey, Law and Order SVU star BD Wong and Twin Peaks alum Joan Chen.
Be on the lookout for it to start making the film festival rounds this summer.
Then buy a ticket and support small films. It’s the least you can do after
paying money to see Battleship.
Actividad Paranormal
It’s not a sequel or a
reboot, but it is a marketing decision, make no mistake. That’s the only way to
describe the next project from the Paranormal Activity production team of
Jason Blum, Oren Peli and gay writer-director Christopher Landon (son of
Michael). They’re hard at work developing a Paranormal Activity-style film
with a Latino cast and a plot involving Catholic concepts of evil and the
paranormal. Landon will write and direct this one (he’s already written PA2
and PA3, so he’s ready) and production on the English-language film starts
soon. And why? Well, with the United States Latino population growing faster
than any other ethnic group, it stands to reason that there’ll be more
Latino-themed cultural product coming along, and what better, more
opportunistic plan is there than a tiny-budgeted horror film that grabs all its
cash back and more on opening weekend? Meanwhile, as long as it doesn’t turn
into a tacky Virgin Mary vs. La Llorona cage match, who’s to say there’s
anything wrong with that?
Corpus Christi: The
Documentary
Corpus Christi, the play by
Terrence McNally that retells the New Testament gospels from the perspective of
Jesus and his disciples as a group of gay men living in modern day Texas, is
probably the most argued-over American play to come along in the past 15 years.
From its 1998 Broadway debut to regional productions, the play is frequently
the target of protests, attempts to ban or cancel it, death threats and bomb
scares. So you know it’s got to be good. And now the story of the plays
reception is a big screen documentary, Corpus Christi: Playing With
Redemption, from filmmakers Nic Arnzen and James Brandon. The film follows the
play as it cuts its controversial path across the country, including a
production in Corpus Christi, Texas. Premiering at San Francisco’s Castro
Theater on April 29 before its eventual cable/DVD/download future, it’s an
important contribution to the dialogue over artistic freedom, the First
Amendment and United States citizens who don’t really like either one.