Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

"When I'm 64," "Sevigne" "Guys & Balls," and "Girl Play" Take

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • "When I'm 64," "Sevigne" "Guys & Balls," and "Girl Play" Take

    "When I'm 64," "Sevigne" "Guys & Balls," and "Girl Play" Take Philadelphia
    Gay Fest Accolades

    Indiewire
    July 28, 2005
    by Brian Brooks

    A scene from Sherry Horman's "Guys & Balls," which won the audience award
    for best feature (gay male) at the recently concluded Philadelphia
    International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. Image courtesy of the
    Philadelphia Film Society.

    The Philadelphia International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival concluded its
    two-week run last week, with a screening of Craig Lucas' "The Dying Gaul,"
    preceded by the announcement of jury and audience competition winners.
    British director Jon Jones' "When I'm 64" won the jury prize for best
    feature (gay male), while Spanish director Marta Balletbo-Coll's "Sevigne"
    won the best feature prize in the 'lesbian' category.

    BBC-produced "64" is the story of a retiring Latin teacher, who meets a
    similar aged former football (soccer) yob, and embarks on an intense
    friendship that later morphs into more. "Sevigne," meanwhile, is the story
    of a screenwriter who attempts to get her story on French socialite Madame
    de Sevigne off the ground with the help of a former actress turned theater
    director. The festival's jury prize for best documentary went to American
    director Nicole Conn's "little man," the story of a lesbian couple's
    determination to see their surrogate newborn son's survival, despite a
    0.00004% chance of living.

    In other jury awards, Canadian director Armen Kazazian's "Gold" won best
    short (gay male) and Jennie Livingston's ("Paris is Burning") "Who's the
    Top" took best short (lesbian), and American Eric Smith's "Irene Williams:
    Queen of Lincoln Road" took best short documentary.

    German director Sherry Horman's "Guys & Balls" took the fest's audience
    award for best feature (gay male). The film, which also took an audience
    prize at Outfest, is the story of a closeted gay man who gets kicked off of
    his homophobic soccer team and vows revenge by assembling a motley crew of
    fellow gays determined to exact a sporting revenge on the field. "Girl
    Play," by Lee Friedlander (U.S.) won the audience award for lesbian film.
    The feature, based on the original play "Real Girls," revolves around two
    actresses with opposite personalities, who are cast in an L.A. play.
    Initially, their love scenes are difficult, but as the rehearsals continue
    and the pressure increases, the acting becomes real. Finally, the audience
    nod for best documentary went to Daniel Peddle's "The Aggressives." The film
    follows six lesbians around New York City. The women each fall into a
    category ranging from "bull dyke" to "pretty tomboys," but their style is
    not a temporary drag persona, rather its a lifestyle.

    PIGLFF featured 59 features, 23 documentaries, 75 shorts and two special
    screenings from 26 countries, with eight world premieres screening in the
    line up. The festival, produced by the Philadelphia Film Society, which also
    hosts the annual Philadelphia International Film Festival, took place July
    7-19. Next year's dates are slated for July 13-25.
Working...
X