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The Imperialists are Still Alive

About the Film
Year Released: 
2010
Running Time: 
90
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

A successful visual artist working in post-9/11 Manhattan, Asya lives the life of the hip and glamorous, replete with exclusive art parties, supermodels, and stretch limousines, while she carefully follows the situation in the Middle East on television. Out partying one night, Asya learns that her childhood friend, Faisal, has disappeared—the victim of a purported CIA abduction. That same night, she meets Javier, a sexy Mexican PhD student, and romance blossoms. Javier finds Asya’s conspiracy theories overly paranoid—but nothing in Asya’s world is as it seems.

Zeina Durra’s atmospheric debut feature is a splendidly alluring and intelligent look at the way the war on terror seeps into the texture of everyday American life. Gorgeous 16 mm grain imbues the film with an anachronistic feel that interestingly evokes times past. The Imperialists Are Still Alive! is an exceptional work and heralds the arrival of Durra as an exciting new directorial talent.

— Shari Frilot
Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
1588
Location: 
Manhattan, NY
Other Interesting Production Info: 
Shot in 23 days.
Categories About the Film
Genre: 
comedy
drama
period drama
romance
Keywords: 
activism and social justice
immigration
interracial relations
state violence and security
urban life
Racial/Ethnic Affiliation: 
Arab American
Asian-American
Chicano/a
Latino/a
Mexican
Middle East
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Zeina Durra
Producer: 
Vanessa Hope
Cinematographer: 
Magela Crosignani
Primary Cast: 
Elodie Bouchez, Jose Maria de Tavira, Karim Saleh, Karolina Mueller
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Film1, Sundance Channel, Sundance Selects
Box Office Earnings: 
$5874
Where to find it/How to get it: 
Streaming (Netflix or other online sites)
Festivals/Awards: 
  • Premiered / Nominated for Grand Jury Price at Sundance (2010)
  • Won Best First Feature at the Warsaw Film Festival
  • Brussels Film Festival
  • Transylvania Film Festival
  • Houston Palestine Film Festival (05/21/11)
  • Glasgow International Film Festival (02/19/11)
  • Birds Eye View Film Festival in London (03/12/11)
  • Thessaloniki Film Festival in Greece (12/9-10/10)
  • Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival in Estonia
  • Morelia International Film Festival in Mexico (10/21/10)
  • Deauville American Film Festival in France (09/9/10)
  • Woodstock Film Festival USA (10/1-3/10)

Never Forever

About the Film
Year Released: 
2007
Running Time: 
105
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

Sophie seems to have an idyllic life; she's the perfect Caucasian housewife for Andrew, her successful Asian American husband. Their relationship is put to the test, though, when she can't conceive a child. To save her marriage, Sophie does something desperate. She initiates a bold and clandestine venture with Jihah, an illegal immigrant from Korea. Sophie soon finds this new arrangement spiraling into a situation that may actually destroy what it was meant to liberate.

In Never Forever, writer/director Gina Kim arranges every shot with a calculating eye, building a step-by-step urgency. Her story is rich and her filmmaking lean and precise. Kim creates the perfect tone, right down to a climate of extreme repression where the sexual energy is nearly combustible. The insightful art direction and costume design are marvelously refined for an independent film. And Vera Farmiga's incredible performance as Sophie is a true gift. Her ethereal beauty--crystal blue eyes and porcelain skin--gives her the appearance of a rare doll, which isn't too far from the pampered existence she represents. As the perfect counterpart to two gifted leading men, her mastery of Sophie's gradual transformation makes Never Forever an unforgettable cinematic experience.

— John Cooper, Sundance Film Festival
Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
3,000,000
Location: 
New York City, NY and Queens, NY
Categories About the Film
Genre: 
drama
family
romance
Keywords: 
coming of age
family
immigration
interracial relations
sexuality
urban life
Racial/Ethnic Affiliation: 
Asian-American
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Gina Kim
Producer: 
Andrew Fiergberg, Lee Chang-dong, Lee Jun-dong
Cinematographer: 
Matthew Clark
Primary Cast: 
Vera Farmiga, David Lee McInnis, Joseph Y. Kim
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Now Films, Gravitas Ventures, Arts Alliance, Surreal Films, Arts Alliance, Prime Entertainment
Box Office Earnings: 
$687229
Where to find it/How to get it: 
Streaming (Netflix or other online sites)
Festivals/Awards: 
  • Premiered at Sundance Film Festival in 2007 (Nominated for Grand Jury Prize)
  • Deauville Film Festival (Won the 2007 Jury Special Prize)
  • Rotterdam Film Festival
Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

Despite numerous invitro attempts, Sophie Lee (Vera Farmiga) is unable to get pregnant.  Pressured by her religious in-laws to conceive in the wake of her husbands failed suicide attempt, Sophie turns to Jihah, an undocumented Korean immigrant, whom she pays to impregnate her. But Sophie’s life quickly complicates, as her burgeoning attraction for Jihah and her husband’s neglect leave her on the precipice of two different worlds. Forced to her to confront her failing marriage, her husband’s crippling depression and the helplessness it arouses in her, Jihah’s Chinatown apartment becomes a temporary escape. The most compelling parts of the story Kim weaves are caught in her use of tight, almost claustrophobic, close up shots. Vera Farmiga is fantastic as Sophie, whose desire to make those around her happy, comes at price she finds herself no longer willing to pay. Farmiga’s ability to convey the pain of knowing that sometimes the possibility of happiness requires betraying those you love, is  what makes Sophie’s character so relatable and Kim’s Never Forever a must watch. Never Forever, Kim’s third feature after her 2003 drama, Invisible Light, ruminates on love, loss and the pressures of assimilation.

- Krystal Caban

Dear Lemon Lima

About the Film
Year Released: 
2011
Running Time: 
87
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

When 13-year-old Vanessa experiences her first breakup, she rebounds by following the boy to his stifling prep school, where she receives the only minority scholarship for her Yup’ik background. Landing at the bottom of the school’s social ladder and confined to the weight room during P.E., she begins to rally with the other school misfits, including an animal-loving boy with overbearing parents, a girl named Nothing, and a pathological liar claiming Puff Daddy is her father. Vanessa’s attempts to find herself and win back the love of her life flounder, until she’s presented with an opportunity to captain the oddball team for the school’s bastardized version of the World Eskimo Indian Olympics—the Snowstorm Survivor competition.

Suzi Yoonessi’s delicious debut makes the life of her Alaskan teenage heroine as colorful and sweet as a snow cone. Confected with heartbreak and humor, Vanessa journeys from the fantastical world of unicorns, rainbows, and shadow puppets to the uncertain reality of adult complications, discovering that real friends can be just as fantastic as imaginary ones. A true underdog story, Yoonessi’s tale of compassion and camaraderie is certain to recall one’s own bittersweet memories of the delicate transition to adolescence.

-Jonathan Wysocki, Los Angeles Film Festival, 2009

Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Location: 
Seattle, Washington
Other Interesting Production Info: 
o Shot in 26 days o Production of the Snowstorm Survivor competition was supported by the World Eskimo Indian Olympics (WEIO) organization that loaned the production items for the film.
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Suzi Yoonessi
Producer: 
Jonajo Donley & Melissa Lee
Cinematographer: 
Sarah Levy
Primary Cast: 
o Vanessa Lemor Savanah Wiltfong, Philip Georgey Shayne Topp (So Random), Hercules Howard Zane Huett (Desperate Housewives), Samantha Combs Vanessa Marano (Switched at Birth), Megan Kennedy Meaghan Jette Martin (Camp Rock, Mean Girls 2), Mrs. Howard Melissa Leo (The Fighter, Frozen River), Principal Applebaum Beth Grant (Little Miss Sunshine, Donnie Darko), Coach Roach Elaine Hendrix (Parent Trap)
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Phase 4 Films
Where to find it/How to get it: 
DVD widely available
Festivals/Awards: 
  • LA Film Festival (World premiere, Accolade, Special Jury Award).
  • BFI’s London Int’l Film Festival (International Premier)
  • the Rome Int’l Film Festival and Soa Paulo Int’l Film Festival (Grand Jury Prize at the SF Int’l Asian Film Festival).

Links

Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

Hearts throb and break in Iranian American filmmaker Suzi Yoonessi’s first feature film, Dear Lemon Lima (2009). Originally created as a short, with its feature-premiere at the 2009 LA Film Festival, this coming-of-age film stands out from the typical indie canon: featuring part-Yup'ik actress Savanah Wiltfong as 13-year-old Vanessa Lemor in her first ever acting role. As Vanessa attempts to win back her summer crush, Philip, the film’s animated doodle diary entries offer a lighthearted lens to examine the darker hurt of alienation, prejudice, and tragedy that permeate the large city of Fairbanks, Alaska. While Vanessa navigates the halls of high school and the aches of adolescence, she also wrestles with her Eskimo heritage and what it means to be a student of color in a privileged prep-school. By befriending the “rejects” and embracing her autonomy, Vanessa’s exploration of identity and adversity adds complexity to the film’s sweet and simple structure.

-Kate Elliott

How She Move

About the Film
Year Released: 
2007
Running Time: 
91
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

Raya, a teenager with medical-school aspirations, can no longer afford the tuition at her private high school. When she returns to her tough neighborhood, she dreams of returning to her school, but she needs money. Opportunity knocks when she learns about a step-dancing competition with a top prize of $50,000. She dances her way onto her friend Bishop's all-male JSJ crew and shakes things up as the only girl. The other guys are wary, and the girls are jealous, but Raya only has eyes for the prize and tries to stay above the drama. When she breaks rank and shows off during a preliminary competition, Bishop ignores the chemistry developing between them and throws her out of the JSJ. Raya must either find a new crew or win back Bishop's trust.

Set under the oppressive gray skies of a Toronto winter, How She Move is a well-drawn portrait of a girl who learns that winning always comes at a price. The energizing hip-hop soundtrack fuels exciting and inspiring step-dancing sequences, where characters connect, let aggressions out, and find the strength to escape their bleak surroundings. Authentic performances help turn this coming-of-age story into a gritty, realistic, urban-dance film.

— Matt Anderson, Sundance Film Festival


Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
5,000,000
Location: 
Hamilton, Ontario & Detroit, Michigan
Other Interesting Production Info: 
Shot in Hamilton for finanacial reasons. Very low budget film and Hamilton was offering tax credits to people who wanted to film there. http://jane-finch.com/interviews/ianrashid.htm
Categories About the Film
Genre: 
drama
Keywords: 
coming of age
family
urban life
Racial/Ethnic Affiliation: 
African American
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Annmarie Morais
Producer: 
Colin Brunton
Cinematographer: 
Andrê Pienaar
Primary Cast: 
Rutina Wesley, Dwain Murphy, Kevin Duhaney, Tracey 'Tre'Armstrong
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Paramount Vantage, Sienna Films, Celluloid Dreams, MTV Films
Box Office Earnings: 
$8533187
Where to find it/How to get it: 
Streaming (Netflix or other online sites)
Festivals/Awards: 

Nominated for DGC Team Award- Directors Guild of Canada

Nominated for Golden Reel Award- Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA

Nominated for Grand Jury Prize- Sundance Film Festival

Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

This is the epitome of what a dance film should include-- hard-hitting step dance moves combined with an excellent cast and story produce a new outlook on a predominantly male dominated form of dance. Starring Rutina Wesley from the hit show True Blood in her breakout role as Raya as well as Grammy nominated Keyshia Cole. Raya struggles to revitalize her love for dance when she returns to her old neighborhood filled with crime and memories of her sisters death. Raya and her male step crew enter a competition worth fifty grand that could potentially pay for her way to college. Keep up if you can with this fast-paced choreography and risk-taking story line! -Ashlee Williams

It's a Wonderful Afterlife

About the Film
Year Released: 
2009
Running Time: 
100
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

With nods to Frank Capra, ghost stories, murder mysteries, and screwball comedies, Gurinder Chadha whips up an irreverent caper about the pressures on Indian women to tie the knot. Set in West London (Bend It Like Beckham territory), the film centers on Mrs. Sethi, a doting Punjabi mother obsessively seeking a suitor for her appealing, but (heaven forbid!) rapidly aging, daughter, Roopie. When a string of curious murders involving poisonous curries and chapati dough begins to rattle the neighborhood, things really start to heat up. As detectives and ghosts trample through the Sethi household, Roopie’s love life gets an injection of excitement, too. Nothing in this supernatural escapade is, as it seems as spicy truths unspool and fate takes its madcap course.

A top-notch cast, including celebrated Indian actress Shabana Azmi, sexy Sendhil Ramamurthy, and a zany Sally Hawkins, breathe life into Chadha’s clever tale about appreciating what’s right under our noses—with a little help from the Hereafter

— Caroline Libresco, Sundance Film Festival

Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
10,000,000
Location: 
London, England, UK
Other Interesting Production Info: 
Director Gurinder Chadha's sister Parminder Chadha has written and performed "Madhaniyan Nikkiye", one of the songs in the movie, which is a feminist reworking of a Punjabi classic. http://www.gomolo.com/its-a-wonderful-afterlife-movie-trivia/38911
Categories About the Film
Genre: 
comedy
Keywords: 
family
Racial/Ethnic Affiliation: 
South Asian
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Gurinder Chadha, Paul Mayeda Berges
Producer: 
Gurinder Chadha
Cinematographer: 
Dick Pope
Primary Cast: 
Shabana Azmi, Goldy Notay, Sendhi Ramamurthy, Sally Hawkins
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Icon Film Distribution and Hanway Films
Box Office Earnings: 
$1309129
Where to find it/How to get it: 
Streaming (Netflix or other online sites)
Festivals/Awards: 

World Premiere-Sundance Film Festival

Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

Bringing forth a comedic effort to explain the difficulties of most mothers who try to find their daughters the perfect spouse. Willing to do anything for her daughter, and I mean anything—(Shabana Azmi) Mrs. Sethi, the mother of Roopi Sethi played by Goldy Notay, known as the ‘Curry Killer’ for reasons apparent in the film will show her dedication to her daughters happiness. This film thrives at delivering a humorous story as well as fortifying a deeper meaning about the importance family as the film develops. Coming at you with another notable film the director of "Bend It Like Beckham" makes her film come to life with some traditional Bollywood sounds. Join Roopi as she journeys in her quest for love. 

Half-Life

About the Film
Year Released: 
2008
Running Time: 
106
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

Set in the idyllic hills of northern California, Jennifer Phang’s marvelously original first feature, Half-Life is a supernormal tale about self-absorbed and disillusioned suburbanites who live in a futuristic time of natural disasters, suffocating air quality, and accelerating global cataclysms. Single mom Suara Wu and her two kids, Pam and Timothy, struggle to rebuild their family in the presence of a sinister, but charming, interloper. Pam seeks refuge in her object of desire, a young hipster named Scott who, in turn, attempts to jar hid fundamentalist parents out of their denial of his gay identity. Timothy, meanwhile, stumbles upon a way to develop and hone paranormal powers that he summons to alter everyone’s reality. Modern and philosophical, Half-Life masterfully blends menacing rage with tenderness and vulnerability of youth to create a tale that injects an empowering and preserving hopefulness into the family’s fatalistic fears of a disintegrating world. A visually ambitious accomplishment filled with gorgeous cinematography, handcrafted animation, and expertly concocted faux news reports, this auspicious directorial debut is without precedent and firmly establishes Jennifer Phang as an exciting talent to watch. 

-Shari Frilot, Sundance Film Festival

Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
$1,000,000
Location: 
Diablo Valley, Bay Area, Northern California
Other Interesting Production Info: 
The project took 35 days to film, one year to cut, and one year to add the dramatic animation that fills the film with despair and hope. Developed at the Film Independent (FIND) Directors Lab under the instruction of film and television director Rodrigo García. (http://www.unomaha.edu/jrf/vol12no1/sundance_2008.htm)
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Jennifer Phang
Producer: 
Alan T. Chan, Reuben Lim, Robert Zimmer Jr.
Cinematographer: 
Aasulv Austad
Primary Cast: 
Sanoe Lake (Pamela Wu), Julia Nickson (Saura Wu (as Julia Nickson-Soul)), Leonardo Nam (Scott Parker), Ben Redgrave (Wendell), Lee Marks (Jonah Robertson), James Eckhouse (Richard Parker), Susan Ruttan (Lorraine Parker), Alexander Agate (Timothy Wu)
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Wolfe Releasing, Warner Brothers Digital Distribution, the Sundance Channel, and Comcast VOD
Where to find it/How to get it: 
DVD widely available
Festivals/Awards: 
  • Sundance Film Festival (2008, World Premiere)
  • Tokyo International Film Festival (Grand Prix Nominee, Gen Art Grand Jury Prize)
  • AAIFF Emerging Director Award for Best Feature,
  • San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (Best Narrative)
  • Calgary's Fairy Tales Queer Diversity Festival (the Visionary Award for Excellence in Visual Innovation)

History and Memory: For Akiko & Takashige

About the Film
Year Released: 
2001
Running Time: 
32
Documentary/Fiction: 
Documentary
Synopsis: 

During WWII, after the US was bombed by the Japanese in Pearl Harbor, the US government ‘relocated’ Japanese Americans living in the US seizing their property and houses. Japanese American director Rea Tajiri recalls her parents experiences during internment through personal and cultural memories. History and Memory is a film that, through traces and fragments of images and poetry, unravels a history of memories that were denied and distorted by the official history that America presented through Hollywood motion pictures and film footage.

-Kim Seon-A, 12th International Women’s Film Festival in Seoul

Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
$25,000.00
Location: 
NY, NY
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Rea Tajiri
Producer: 
Rea Tajiri
Cinematographer: 
George, Rea Tajiri
Primary Cast: 
Sokhi Wagner, Noel Shaw
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Women Make Movies
Where to find it/How to get it: 
Direct from Distributor
Festivals/Awards: 
  • Whitney Biennial  (1991, World Premiere, Distinguished Achievement Award from the International Documentary Association)
  • San Francisco International Film Festival (1992, Special Jury Prize: "New Visions Category").
  • Atlanta Film and Video Festival (1992, "Best Experimental Video”).
  •  Named as one of the Top 100 American Films by Women Directors, Spring 2008 Mediascape (UCLA’s Journal of Media Studies).
  • Fukuoka Asian Film Festival (1998, Grand Prix – Strawberry Fields)
Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

Rea Tajiri’s History & Memory: For Akiko & Takashige provides a haunting account of the Japanese-American experience after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Crosscutting historical, personal, and found-footage, Tajiri juxtaposes various accounts of the Japanese American internment calling to question whose story has most often been heard. Having screened in over 250 venues around the world since its 1991 Whitney Biennial premiere, History & Memory, one of Tajiri’s first video art productions, is now considered a staple for courses on Asian Independent cinema. Through intimate interviews with previously interned family members, Tajiri complicates the relationship between historical memory and cinematic representations. This intricate manipulation of perception and perspective engages with the theoretical in a visual way, bringing forth a stunning examination of untold histories and silenced voices.  Currently in development on a new dramatic fiction project, Venus’ Celestial Beauty, and completing post-production on an experimental short, Bridge, Tajiri continues to explore the interplay between social history and personal memory.

-Kate Elliott

Readings: 
  • Deirdre Boyle: “History and Memory: On Visual Media and the Collective Memory of the Japanese American Internment”
  • Kathleen Hulser, “Film Reviews—History & Memory directed by Rea Tajiri”, The American Historical Review, 1142.
  • Robert M. Payne, “History and Memory: Who’s Going to Pay for These Donuts, Anyway? Visions of Silence” Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media, 67-76.

Go Fish

About the Film
Year Released: 
1994
Running Time: 
85
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

No fishing expedition, this first feature is an insider view of lesbian life in the nineties by a writer and filmmaker team who are as a good at angst as they are at irony. Go Fish has already been dubbed a “dyke slacker” pic for its low-budget, black-and-white chronicling of daily hopes, fears, and banalities. At once gritty and lyrical, it tracks an interlinked cast of characters (most of them played by nonprofessionals) through a fanciful girl-meets-girl saga.

Max is looking for love. Her roommate, Kia, already has it in the person of Evy, who lives at home with her mom, still trying to shake off her ex-husband. Then there’s Ely, Kia’s student and seemingly available. Ely shares a place with Daria, the quintessential dyke about town, constantly in and out of women’s beds and hearts. Kia thinks Max would like Ely: Daria thinks Ely should like Max. Everyone schemes. We’re treated to a date, a dinner party, pride, honor, friendship, laundry, nail clipping – and, of course, sex.

There’s an innocence about the characters that’s usually missing in Lesbian Chic coverage: these women look more like the twenty-something figures in underground video or Alison Bechdel’s cult comic, “Dykes to Watch Out For.” Go Fish begins just about where coming-out film used to end: all the women are dykes, and sex is on everybody’s mind. Since it’s the lesbian universe, so is romance. Seriocomic and navigated by a wistful narrator, an unlikely chorus of elders, and an assured cinematic ability to confer grace upon lesbian-identity escapades, Go Fish is the film to watch out for.

(B. Ruby Rich, 1994 Sundance Film Festival - http://history.sundance.org/films/234)

Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
$15,000
Location: 
Buck Town, Lincoln Square; Wicker Park, West Town, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Other Interesting Production Info: 
After all the credits, appearing as subliminal film scratches: “MEN SUCK.” Additional scenes are shown during the first part of the closing credits (IMDB). Rose Troche and Guinevere Turner were partners at the time (GLBTQ).
Categories About the Film
Genre: 
comedy
period drama
romance
Keywords: 
glbtq
interracial relations
urban life
Racial/Ethnic Affiliation: 
Latino/a
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Rose Troche, Guinevere Turner
Producer: 
Rose Troche, Guinevere Turner
Cinematographer: 
Ann T. Rosetti, Art Stone
Primary Cast: 
V. S. Brodie, Guinevere Turner, T. Wendy McMillan, Migdalia Melendez
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Samuel Goldwyn Company
Box Office Earnings: 
$2408311
Where to find it/How to get it: 
DVD widely available
Festivals/Awards: 
  • Berlin International Film Festival* (Rose Troche won the Teddy Bear Award for Best Feature Film, 1994)
  • Deauville Film Festival (Rose Troche won the Audience Award and was nominated for the Critics Award, 1994)
  • Gotham Awards (Rose Troche won the Open Palm Award, 1994)
  • Sundance Film Festival (US Premiere; Rose Troche nominated for Grand Jury Prize for Dramatic, 1994)
  • GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Film (1995)
  • Independent Spirit Awards (V.S. Brodie nominated for Best Supporting Female, 1995)
  • Political Film Society, USA (nominated for PFS Award in Human Rights, 1995)
  • Lambda Literary Award, Drama (1996)
  • Paris Gay and Lesbian Film Festival (2004)
  • Outfest Film Festival (USA, 2011)
Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

Rose Troche’s Go Fish (1994) goes where no other feature debuts has gone before in capturing unapologetic lesbian culture on film.  But despite their visibility in this romantic comedy, meta-commentary by its queer characters reveals the Puerto Rican filmmaker’s awareness of the lack of lesbian representation on screen.  Through 16mm black-and-white film, Troche teeters between a whimsical and comical love story on one hand and the politics of representation on the other.  Her use of a local cast speaks to an attempt to showcase the colloquial, even in a painfully early 90s art-house pre-hipster kind of way that makes it hard to believe Go Fish paved the way for more mainstream lesbian drama such as The L Word – which Troche also directed and wrote for three seasons.  Nonetheless, the novelty of this independent lesbian classic spearheaded the onset of an emergent “New Queer Cinema” at the time of its production.  Though the plot centers on the matchmaking of an unlikely couple, Max and Ely, it also addresses the many qualms of queer life lyrically sub-narrated by a black lesbian professor, Kia.  From butch to femme, young to old, crunchy to suave, Go Fish spans the spectrum of races and sexualities to find love. 

(Jacinda Tran, 2012)

Susan Anderson's picture

Finding a Particular Significance in Cats on the Internet

                                 

Welcome II the Terrordome

About the Film
Year Released: 
1995
Running Time: 
90
Documentary/Fiction: 
Fiction
Synopsis: 

Welcome II The Terrordome is a fast paced, vibrant, action thriller set in the decaying and racially segregated city of the near future. Employing a powerful mixture of historical narratives, the film charts the life of the McBride family over three traumatic centuries. Running parallel to the main themes of the simmering sexuality and interracial love are underlying stories of gang violence, police brutality and revenge. The visual style is strong and unflinching, the message biting.

(“Onwurah Filmography" - http://brit-black-pack.tripod.com/id1.html)

Poster Image: 
Director
Film Director: 
Production Info
Reported or Estimated Budget: 
£5,000
Location: 
UK
Other Interesting Production Info: 
Director Ngozi Onwurah struggled for three years to get funding for this film (IMDB). Her brother Simon Onwurah produced it.
Categories About the Film
Genre: 
action
drama
sci-fi
Keywords: 
family
history and memory
interracial relations
state violence and security
urban life
Racial/Ethnic Affiliation: 
African
British
Filmmaking Team
Writer's Name: 
Ngozi Onwurah
Producer: 
Simon Onwurah
Cinematographer: 
Bruno de Keyzer, Dean Semler
Primary Cast: 
Suzette Llewellyn, Saffron Burrows, Brian Bovell, Felix Joseph
Exhibition/Distribution Info
Distributor: 
Delta Entertainment Corporation, MTI Home Video (2001, USA), Metro Tartan Distribution Ltd.
Where to find it/How to get it: 
DVD widely available
Festivals/Awards: 

1995 Verona Love Screens Festival in Italy (Audience Award), Birmingham International Film Festival (1st Prize), Cologne Film Festival (1st Prize)

Analysis
Personal Film Review and Cultural Context: 

In Ngozi Onwurah’s drama Welcome II the Terrordome, the Nigerian-British filmmaker melds past and present, filmic and factual as she explores race relations in the futuristic dystopia of Terrordome.  A drug- and gang-ridden community caged off from the white world, Terrordome is home to Anjela, her brother Spike, and his expecting white girlfriend Jodie.  When Jodie’s white ex-boyfriend discovers that she had “crossed over”, he returns to the Terrordome for revenge.  His revenge results in an all-out race war as Anjela transforms from nurturing mother to militant fighter.  Onwurah’s film captures the plight of the female protagonists as they are faced with the violence incurred not only by the limitations of race, but also the challenge of crossing colored boundaries.  Welcome II the Terrordome recognizes the role of women while demonstrating how the future is compromised when history has not yet been reconciled.  Screened from the Verona Love Screens Film Festival in Italy to the Cologne Film Festival in Germany, this political action thriller is one of the first independent Black British feature.  It captures Onwurah’s experimental and (auto-)ethnographic essence evident in her other works such as Coffee Colored Children (1988) and The Body Beautiful (1991).

(Jacinda Tran, 2012)

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