Logo
Lovejoy Surgicenter
ISSUE #34.46 • SCREEN •

PLGFF, Week Two


The Portland Lesbian and Gay Film Festival: Now with more wound-fucking!

Share: | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 0 comments
Recently in "Screen"

November 18th, 2009
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies To Watch In Theater Pubs This Week:0 comments

November 18th, 2009
The Blind Side | Sandra Bullock makes an offensive tackle.3 comments

November 18th, 2009
Big Trouble | Precious is a raw story of survival. But it forgets the survivor.2 comments

November 11th, 2009
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies To Watch In Theater Pubs This Week:0 comments

November 11th, 2009
Pirate Radio | The movie that sank.1 comment

November 11th, 2009
2012 | Roland Emmerich to earth: Drop dead.0 comments

November 11th, 2009
Oil And Groundwater | The director of Blair Witch 2 finds real horror in the amazon.0 comments

November 4th, 2009
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies To Watch In Theater Pubs This Week:0 comments

November 4th, 2009
36th NW Film & Video Festival | Made in Oregon. Played in Oregon.0 comments

November 4th, 2009
The Men Who Stare At Goats | The Army has psychic powers, but the movie has no perspective.1 comment


OTTO; or Up With Dead People
BY WW EDITORIAL STAFF | 503-243-2122

[September 24th, 2008]

Chris & Don: A Love Story
Don Bachardy is a native Californian with a fluting British accent; this documentary shows he came by it honestly. In 1953, he began a romance with Christopher Isherwood, an English novelist (he wrote The Berlin Stories, which inspired Caberet) 30 years his senior. Directors Guido Santi and Tina Mascara chronicle the next 30 years with a mixture of home movies, readings from Isherwood’s diaries, and Bachardy’s own recollections. The movie neglects Isherwood’s sense of humor (my favorite anecdote has him rejecting the poet Stephen Spender’s appeal, “Let’s part like men,” with the rejoinder, “But Stephen, we aren’t men”) but compensates by bringing us Bachardy’s exquisite paintings, which Isherwood urged him to create. Chris & Don is the profoundly tender story of how one artist, through his love, created another. AARON MESH. 7 pm Wednesday, Sept. 24.

Save Me
Depending on your point of view, Christian “cure” therapies aren’t all bad—actually, they can be a wonderful place to pick up hot, single gay men. That’s exactly what happens in this predictable flick from director Robert Cary. Out of money, addicted to drugs and with no place to go, Mark (Chad Allen) is strong-armed by his brother into attending an all-male Christian retreat designed to “cure” his homosexuality. But it’s not long before Mark starts exchanging some very un-Christian glances with fellow future ex-gay Scott (Robert Gant). On the bright side, Judith Light gives a brilliant performance as Gayle, a Christian matron preaching homophobia insidiously disguised as God’s love. But otherwise, it’s mediocre acting all around, with a corny country music soundtrack to match. Allen, in particular, suffers from facial glitches. An actor whose looks can best be described as a weak solution of Seann William Scott, he can’t smile, exactly, or weep; instead, he just curls his upper lip and bugs his eyes out. Plus, many viewers will wish the film had been a little harder on so-called “conversion” programs. Although Mark and Scott get together in the end, Save Me offers no hard answers on whether such therapies are right or wrong. JOHN MINERVINI. 9 pm Thursday, Sept. 25.















icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

Otto; or Up With Dead People
[DIRECTOR ATTENDING] Any movie with a running Maya Deren joke and wound-fucking is not exactly gunning for accessibility, but Bruce LaBruce’s Otto; or Up With Dead People is not only one of the smartest films of the year so far, it is simply one of the most fun, too. Experimental filmmaker Medea Yarn (descramble that anagram for 10 points) casts Otto, who is either undead or just a schizophrenic sad sack, in Up With Dead People, her overwrought meditation on revolutionary gay zombies. LaBruce has an impossible-seeming knack for getting irreverent raunch and intellectual wit to cooperate, and Otto is a multivalent wonder. To use Medea’s uptown terminology, zombies are “empty signifiers,” liberators of narrative, floating metaphors that LaBruce can do with what he pleases. The result is a hybrid of porno and comedy and horror and Godard. It shouldn’t work, but LaBruce is so at ease with form and alive to aesthetic possibility that it does, and wonderfully. CHRIS STAMM. 9 pm Friday, Sept. 26.


SEE IT: PLGFF screens at Cinema 21.

 

Rate This Story
5 average/1 vote

 
read all 0 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “PLGFF, Week Two”

 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
December 31st 1969Washington State | The Canada of Oregon has it all—a Stonehenge replica, a longboarder's concrete wet dream and dark, damp underground lava caves. Vive les rocks.
December 31st 1969Oregon's Outer Edges | Crater Lake. Hell's Canyon. Wallowa and Steens mountain ranges. Hell, yeah.
December 31st 1969Central Oregon/High Desert | No rain, plenty of snow, obsidian flows and great local beer. The folks from the real eastside know how to unbend outside.
December 31st 1969Great Cascades/Columbia Gorge | With plenty of room to roam—and hot springs for your weary feet—it's the place to ramble and relax for the weekend.
December 31st 1969Willamette Valley | Monks, tracks, tubing and wine make the fertile strip a virile place to play.
December 31st 1969Stumptown | Tons of public parks, an extinct volcano and nude beach volleyball to keep you jolly. Get out and collect those merit badges, without leaving the city.
December 31st 1969The Coast | The beaches are public. You own them. Go play—hike in the old-growth forests.
December 31st 1969Cycle Tour 101: Your on-bike guide to Highway 101 | To ride the greatest bike route in Oregon, you need to get out of Portland.
December 31st 1969Doggin' It | What happens when a Portland running club jogs with pooches from the pound?
December 31st 1969Over the Edge | Sam Drevo will paddle yr ass.