Product Description The most entertaining gay history lesson you've ever had. Picks up where The Celluloid Closet left off! The superstars of gay and lesbian cinema shine in this amazing overview of LGBT film history. Fabulous! The Story of Queer Cinema is packed with smart interviews and a tremendous array of film clips from the greatest movies of the genre celebrating more than half a century of queer independent filmmaking from Kenneth Anger's pioneering, Fireworks (1947) to the smash hit blockbuster Brokeback Mountain. Starring John Waters, Wilson Cruz, Guinevere Turner, Peter Paige, B. Ruby Rich, Gus Van Sant, Alan Cumming, the list goes on. .com Fabulous! The Story of Queer Cinema is constructed with interview snippets featuring a wide array of actors, directors, and festival organizers, to portray our last century's history of same-sex films. Dealing mostly with American film, minus acknowledgment of a couple European directors such as Chantal Ackerman, Fabulous! tells the story, by citing filmic examples from each decade, of post-war repression in the '40s and '50s, the gay civil rights struggle of the '60s and '70s, AIDS in the '80s and '90s, and the blossoming of new gender genres in a contemporary setting. With timelines to contextualize conversation, Fabulous! leads the viewer through discussions of Kenneth Anger's seminal 1947 work, Fireworks, to Warhol, through Derek Jarman, John Waters, and the Rocky Horror Picture Show, all the way into Brokeback Mountain's current success. Interviews with independent film icons such as Todd Haynes, Gus Van Sant, John Waters, critic B. Ruby Rich, and Outfest's Stephen Gutwillig, make this an enjoyable journey through the minds of Hollywood's auteurs. More actual film footage of some difficult-to-see underground pieces would be nice, but clearly this documentary is an introduction to the history of transgressive cinema, meant to urge people to investigate further. --Trinie Dalton
S**R
A Great Overview...
This doc from the Independent Film Channel is a surprisingly comprehensive look at the history of gay, lesbian, and transgendered cinema (mostly in America) over the course of, well, the last century. The infamous Hayes Code prohibited the representation of gay characters starting in the 1930s, so there's a fairly large blank spot in that history, but this program recognizes the contributions of non-commercial indies like Kenneth Anger, and the whole thing picks up speed in the 1970s with some of the very first truely 'indie' productions. Entertainingly presented, with talking head input from a wealth of GLBT film makers and a lot of clips, this is at least a good solid beginning to understanding where "queer cinema" has come from and where it's headed. Very worthwhile!
A**L
Talking heads with some clips
Lots of talking heads telling you about the new queer cinema. B. Ruby Rich expounding on everything. Some stars thrown in, too. A great item for Queer Studies classes, but I don't know if the average audience will be as "fabulously" entertained.
K**R
Interesting Documentary On Queer Cinema
I had wanted to purchase this for some time. It is well produced and interesting. From my point of view it seems to focus more on the lesbian angle regarding queer cinema than other documentaries that I own. It was well worth buying and was a welcome addition to my queer cinema documentary library.
K**S
Good quality.
Entertaining. Good quality.
A**R
Five Stars
Very useful!! Thank you.
R**O
Decent but familiar
I'm always interested in any film documentaries especially when there about the history of queer films. As a gay man I am a huge movie fan and love seeing myself in the films I love. That being said this 2006 film is just slightly disappointing. After the superior Celluloid Closet it not only lacks the information in that film but also doesn't really bring anything new to the plate. That being said it's fine but there's definitely better explorations of the topic out there.6/10
J**T
Fabulous
This documentary was good. It was a little long in some places, but was still entertaining. The special features were fun; it featureas some coming out stories of some of my favourite queer actors (Jane Lynch, this means you!). A good purchase for those interested in queer cinema.
S**T
Pretension Pandering
I just watched this documentary. How many ways can an elite group of queer filmmakers break their arms patting themselves on the back? And how hyperserious can any group of people be? Quite frankly, no matter how much queer filmmakers try to parse the "greatness" of their work, they're still subject to the same criticism as their straight contemporaries...sometimes the film is great, sometimes good, and many times dreadful.The development of "new queer cinema" is no different than the development of other film narratives throughout the past 120 years of filmmaking. To glorify it as something special is to deny its natural progression. As film mercifully left "Stepinfetchit" far behind to create great roles for black actors, so have we left Kenneth Anger's tawdry "Fireworks" behind to create such classic films as "Brokeback Mountain". It's called "evolution", folks, and doesn't need self-serving filmmakers glorifying their own films to show how narrow-minded they think mainstream moviegoers are. The public is savvy enough to understand the evolution of film without being told what it needs to understand. Trust me, pretentious ones, we GET IT.
N**7
Un MUST
Dans le style du réalisateur, pour compléter une collection, avec "Walk Away Renée" et autres films/docs traitant du sujet. Je recommande SI prix faible.
B**E
detaield analysis of a seldom treated subject
Very rich study of an aspect of American movies often forgotten or avoided (censorship). Shows how film directors and script writers have progressively introduced controversial subjects into mainstream cinema
M**5
Echt faszinierend
Ein wirklich sehr guter Film. Hochinteressant, informativ und mit ungewöhnlichen Eindrücken. Kommt aber leider nicht ganz an den Vorgänger: "The Celluloid Closet" ran.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
5 days ago