QFest St. Louis Interview: Doug Archibald – Star and Director of I LOVE YOU BOTH

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I LOVE YOU BOTH screens this Sunday in St. Louis as part of QFest, which uses the art of contemporary gay cinema to spotlight the lives of LGBTQ people and to celebrate queer culture. The event will excite, entertain, and enlighten audiences of all identities. The screenings of I LOVE YOU BOTH are at 5:30pm and 8:00pm Sunday April 24th. Director/writer/co-star Doug Archibald and writer/co-star Kristin Archibald will be in attendance at both screenings.

In I LOVE YOU BOTH, the charming first feature from St. Louis native Doug Archibald, twins Krystal and Donny (real-life siblings Kristin and Doug Archibald) are codependent, still living together in their late 20s in a converted one-bedroom house. When they both meet and start dating the same guy, however, the twins confront the fact that they can no longer live the same life — a choice needs to be made. With nowhere to turn for advice except their only two friends — a former Tae Bo teacher and their mother — the twins are finally forced to look for answers from within.

Doug Archibald took the time to answer some questions for We Are Movie Geeks about his film I LOVE YOU BOTH before the screenings at QFest.

Interview conducted by Tom Stockman

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We Are Movie Geeks: What was your filmmaking experience before you made I LOVE YOU BOTH?

Doug Archibald: Before making I Love You Both I had line produced a feature the year after I graduated from UCLA’s film school in the undergrad program.  I had taken a grad class there on producing features and my friend Ryan Finnerty (who produced I Love You Both) hired me to line produce on the film. After that, I worked on various other digital and television productions, producing and script supervising, while I was writing I Love You Both with Kristin. But I think that class, where we actually broke down a script and had to produce a budget, and then line producing a real feature was what gave me the confidence to do it on my own. My emphasis at UCLA was also directing, but I hadn’t directed anything except the pitch trailer for I Love You Both since my thesis short at UCLA.

WAMG: How did you get the idea for the I LOVE YOU BOTH story? Is it at all autobiographical? Were these characters based on people you know?

DA: Kristin and I came up with these twin characters when I was on my first summer break at UCLA. We were writing a feature about these co-dependent twins that had nothing to do with the film as it is now, and then we remembered that a long time ago we both liked the same person for one day–(and then immediately stopped liking him when we realized that)–but started thinking about what would’ve happened had we not immediately stopped talking to that person and if we had both continued to hang out with him for an inappropriate amount of time. We changed the script dramatically then over the course of a few years writing it. It became more of a comedy-drama than just a comedy. The only character based on a real person though (besides ourselves) is our mother, who essentially plays herself.

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WAMG: What is your relationship like with your sister in real life? Are you really twins? Did she have to audition? What’s your code word for “party emergencies”?

DA: We are not actually twins but we are definitely best friends. Both of us had to “audition” ourselves for the film. We made a pitch trailer together where we produced a few scenes from the script with friends and tested ourselves as actors, playing the twins, to see if we were terrible or not. Surprisingly the response to that was the opposite–people actually really liked the “natural” energy between us and the pitch trailer ended up being a big help in getting the film financed and getting other actors in to read for the other parts. And we do not really have a code word for party emergencies. Ha. But we probably should.

WAMG: Which one of you is your mother’s favorite?

DA: Ha. I’m sure she doesn’t have a favorite.

 WAMG: Were any other family members involved in the film?

DA: Both of my parents were incredibly supportive in making this film, and that goes for the rest of my family as well. Everyone was involved in some way. We raised some of the funds for the film on Indiegogo and we relied heavily on everyone in our family to spread the word about our campaign, not to mention making donations themselves. My cousin Jessica (Luther) also played a major role in connecting us with Jes Kramer, who was one of our composers, as well as many other bands who were kind enough to let us use their music in the film. We had to use every resource imaginable. Our aunt connected us with a friend of hers in Riverside, who let us shoot at her home for free (it’s our mother’s house in the film.) It was amazing how everyone came together for us and is something I will never forget.

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WAMG: Where was I LOVE YOU BOTH filmed?

DA: It was filmed in Los Angeles, Riverside, and Solvang, CA.  The twins “treehouse” is actually my house in Bel Air, so that was convenient. Many friends were kind enough to let us take over their apartments/homes for a day. The hotel exterior was shot in Solvang as well as when Krystal and Andy are walking to the show. The interior of the motel (the forest room) was actually an upstairs room in someone’s house in LA that we found. Initially we were going to dress a room as the “forest room” but my boyfriend actually found this amazing room instead and we didn’t have to build, which was nice. Thank God!

WAMG: What were some of the challenges in getting this film completed?

DA: Funding the film and finding the time when Kristin and I could take a month off from our day jobs and personal lives were the biggest challenges.  During writing the film, Kristin still lived in St. Louis and I was in LA. So the script was written over the phone mostly, which was really difficult. Then, when it came time to make the film, Kristin actually moved to LA permanently a year before production. Luckily, we were able to find exactly one month in 2015 to shoot it when the show I was working on went on hiatus and Kristin could be off work. Everything else had to shift around that. Besides that, all the normal challenges of making an independent feature were of course present, but we were working with amazing people who always rolled with the punches and at the end of the day we got pretty lucky actually! We never encountered anything that really set us back or deterred us from shooting that we couldn’t overcome. We were able to shoot every page of the script without having to make any changes due to setbacks in the schedule, thanks to a really dedicated team of awesome people.

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WAMG: Were you involved in the filmmaking community when you lived in St. Louis?

DA:  I was still trying to figure out what to do with my life when I lived in St. Louis (ha).  When I was studying film at Webster I was also studying piano performance, so I was very busy and still very unsure about my path. But about when I decided that filmmaking was what I wanted to do full-time is around the same time I got into the UCLA film program, so I never really had the chance to get into the filmmaking community in St. Louis. I think by the time I would’ve started making more films with my classmates  at Webster I was just transferring out. But Webster was full of amazing, talented, nice people, many of whom are still friends of mine, and it would’ve been amazing to continue at Webster, but ultimately I wanted to move to LA. :)

WAMG: Did you grow up a movie buff?

DA: Only in the sense that I loved making films. I made a feature in high school and was obsessed with making films specifically since middle school when we did a stop motion project. I did not binge watch movie by any means though. For some reason I never felt the obligation/desire to binge every Tarantino movie like other filmmakers do. I definitely should have, but I think sometimes after watching so many films I feel exhausted.

WAMG: Who are some of your favorite filmmakers?

DA: This is a really difficult question to answer. I don’t really have favorites.

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WAMG: Did the actors improvise much or did they stick closely to the script?

DA: There was not much improvising. The film is pretty true to the dialogue in the script. Oddly enough the most improvising was done by my mother. A lot of her dialogue was based on things she had said before and she did a really good job expanding on that. My Mom has never acted before, but when she showed up in LA her script had pencil markings all over it and lines of dialogue scratched out. She was really serious about it and added a lot of great stuff that ended up working.

WAMG: How has the film been received so far? 

DA: We have been feeling very good about the film’s reception. We received multiple offers on the film at Cinequest and right now we are working through and deciding on the best home for it! Once we make a decision, we will be able to announce a release date sometime this year!

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WAMG: What’s next for Doug Archibald?

DA: Kristin and I have a pilot script that we are very excited about. The story doesn’t have anything to do with the film, but also we do eventually want to come back to these characters and write something for television. But I think right now we have had so many ideas in our head the last few years that we’ve had to put aside while making this film, and we want to explore them now that we have the time. And ultimately I think you should write what excites you. I write on my own, as does Kristin, and I want to continue directing, but I think Kristin and I just love writing together and we work together really well, so we end up writing together primarily. As siblings, we play off of each other’s strengths and we have fun doing it. I think for right now, we’re excited to be working on a project that doesn’t put us both under the microscope as people.

All QFest screenings are at the Hi-Pointe Backlot, 1002 Hi Pointe Place, St. Louis, MO 63117. Individual tickets are $12 for general admission, $10 for students and Cinema St. Louis members with valid and current photo IDs.

Advance tickets may be purchased at the Hi-Pointe Backlot box office or website. Click on Buy Tickets on each film page for a direct link to purchase tickets.

 

Ninth Annual QFest St. Louis – LGBTQ Film Festival Begins Friday at The Hi-Pointe Backlot

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Come get your Q on starting this Friday! The Ninth Annual QFest St. Louis, presented by Cinema St. Louis, runs April 24-28 at the Hi-Pointe Backlot Theatre. The St. Louis-based LGBTQ film festival, QFest will present an eclectic slate of 28 films – 13 features (seven narratives and six documentaries) and 15 short subjects. The participating filmmakers represent a wide variety of voices in contemporary queer world cinema. The mission of the film festival is to use the art of contemporary gay cinema to spotlight the lives of LGBTQ people and to celebrate queer culture.

The 2016 QFest St. Louis begins on Sunday, April 24, and runs through Thursday, April 28. Tickets are on sale now for all shows. Cost is $12 each or $10 for students and Cinema St. Louis members with valid and current IDs. All screenings will be held at the Hi-Pointe Backlot Theatre, located at 1002 Hi Pointe Place, directly behind the Hi-Pointe Theatre. Advance sales are available through the Hi-Pointe website.

Here’s the line-up:

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Chemsex – Monday, April 25, 5 p.m.

William Fairman & Max Gogarty, 2015, U.K., 83 min.

Venturing into hidden basements, bedrooms, and bars across London, this bold documentary frankly and intimately exposes a dark side to modern gay life — enhanced sexual experiences through a variety of club drugs. Traversing an underworld of intravenous drug use and weekend­long sex parties, “Chemsex” tells the story of several men struggling to make it out of “the scene” alive and one health worker who has made it his mission to save them. While society looks the other way, this powerful and unflinching film uncovers a group of men battling with HIV and drug addiction and trying to find acceptance in a changing world.

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Closet Monster – Stephen Dunn, 2015, Canada, 90 min.

Thursday, April 28, 7 p.m.

Treading a daring line between the comic, the horrific, and the surreal, Stephen Dunn’s first feature is a fresh, imaginative take on the traditional coming­out/coming­of­age tale. Oscar (Connor Jessup, “American Crime Story” and “Falling Skies”) is a cute, conflicted teenager who, at the age of 8, witnessed a horrific hate crime that has scarred him deeply. Filled with fear and self­loathing as he struggles with his dawning sexuality — and not helped by living with his bitter, homophobic father — he turns for advice to his “spirit animal,” his pet hamster Buffy, who talks to him in the voice of Isabella Rossellini! But when he becomes obsessed with Wilder, his hot co­worker at the hardware store, Oscar can’t deny his urges any longer.

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Desert Migration – Daniel F. Cardone, 2015, U.S., 80 min.

Wednesday, April 27, 7 p.m.

Saved by the introduction of protease inhibitors in the mid­1990s, many HIV­positive men needed to rebuild their lives, which they thought were hopelessly lost. Now, more than half the people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States are more than 50 years of age. Those whose lives were saved by anti­retroviral therapies are dealing with a barrage of new problems as their aging bodies struggle to maintain the upper hand against the virus and to cope with the side effects of the treatment itself. Many also struggle with the symptoms of post­traumatic stress, having lived through a period of decimation and debilitation. The film focuses on gay men living long term with HIV who sought out an oasis in Southern California’s Palm Springs, where both their homosexuality and their health condition are not just tolerated but also understood. Sponsored by AARP in St. Louis

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Ekaj  –  Cati Gonzalez, 2015, U.S., 80 min.

Thursday, April 28, 5 p.m.

This unique love story between two drifters — “Kids” meets “Midnight Cowboy” — captures a runaway’s journey to New York City. When teenager Ekaj arrives in the city, he’s taken under the wing of hustler Mecca, but the older man has AIDS and multiple problems of his own. Naive Ekaj hopes to become the lover of a rich man who will support him, but his dreams are quickly shattered: Although he makes some money as a prostitute, the teen finds he is disposable and lacks what it takes to survive in the city. Although high all day, Mecca manages to be the only voice of reason in Ekaj’s hopeless world. Leaning on each other for survival, the pair looks for money and places to stay, and their relationship develops into a true friendship and love.

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I Love You Both – Doug Archibald, 2016, U.S., 90 min.

Sunday, April 24, 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.

In this charming first feature from St. Louis native Doug Archibald, twins Krystal and Donny (real­life siblings Kristin and Doug Archibald) are codependent, still living together in their late 20s in a converted one­bedroom house. When they both meet and start dating the same guy, however, the twins confront the fact that they can no longer live the same life — a choice needs to be made. With nowhere to turn for advice except their only two friends — a former Tae Bo teacher and their mother — the twins are finally forced to look for answers from within. With director/writer/co­star Archibald and writer/co­star Kristin Archibald.

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Kiss Me, Kill Me – Casper Andreas, 2016, U.S., 101 min.

Thursday, April 28, 9 p.m.

In the latest film from QFest veteran Casper Andreas (“The Big Gay Musical,” “Violet Tendencies”), Dusty (Van Hansis of “As the World Turns”) leads a charmed life. An aspiring actor, he’s just been promised the hosting role on a brand­new reality show produced by his TV­mogul boyfriend, Stephen (Gale Harold of “Queer as Folk”). At a lavish party celebrating his birthday, Stephen proposes to Dusty. But when Stephen’s ex shows up uninvited and desperately attempts to win back his former lover, the couple argue and Dusty storms off. Waking up in a hospital the next day, an amnesiac Dusty learns Stephen was killed in a violent attack, and police detectives (Jai Rodriguez of “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” and Yolanda Ross of “Treme”) have targeted him as the prime suspect. Now Dusty must either prove his innocence or accept the fact that he just might be a cold­blooded killer.

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Major! – Annalise Ophelian, 2015, U.S., 95 min

Tuesday, April 26, 5 p.m.

.This documentary explores the life and campaigns of Miss Major Griffin­Gracy, a black transgender elder and activist who has been fighting for the rights of trans women of color for more than 40 years. Miss Major is a veteran of the Stonewall uprising, a survivor of Attica State Prison, a former sex worker, a community leader, and a human­rights activist, but she’s simply “Mama” to many in her community. Miss Major’s personal story and activism for transgender civil rights intersects LGBTQ struggles for justice and equality from the 1960s to today. At the center of her activism is a fierce advocacy for “her girls”: trans women of color who have survived police brutality and incarceration in men’s jails and prisons. An invaluable resource for the generations who follow, Miss Major serves as a living embodiment of the queer­rights movement.

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The Passionate Pursuits of Angela Bowen – Jennifer Abod, 2016, U.S., 73 min.

Tuesday, April 26, 7 p.m.

This empowering biography provides a window into the life of black lesbian feminist Angela Bowen, who grew up in inner­city Boston during the Jim Crow era and went on to become a classical ballerina, legendary dance teacher, and inspirational activist, organizer, writer, and professor. For six decades, Bowen has influenced untold numbers, speaking out strongly not just for LGBTQ issues but also for the arts and for the rights of African­Americans and women. Candid and compelling, the film depicts Bowen’s life across the decades, using archival footage, musical selections, photographs, and interviews to reveal how race, class, gender, age, and sexuality played into her decisions and strategies for survival. Sponsored by Lilly’s — Music & Social House

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Portrait of a Serial Monogamist – John Mitchell & Christina Zeidler, 2015, Canada, 84 min.

Monday, April 25, 7 p.m.

Smart, successful, and charming, Elsie is the perfect girlfriend; she alsohappens to be a serial monogamist, with a long history of broken hearts.When Elsie breaks up with her longstanding girlfriend to pursue anotherwoman, she faces her mother’s disapproval, conflicting advice from friends,and the nagging suspicion that she may have made a big mistake. Set in theParkdale neighborhood of Toronto, “Portrait of a Serial Monogamist” invitesaudiences to peek behind the curtain on a world of smart, funny, andrelatable queer characters, dealing with the universal complications ofmodern relationships. Not another coming­out story, this is a freshcoming­of­middle­age romantic comedy.

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Queer Voices Shorts – A collection of queer shorts from around the world.

Wednesday, April 27, 9 p.m., 104 min.

“Equal Justice Under Law” (Dan Goldes, 2015, U.S., 3 min.): A combination of President Barack Obama’s speech about the Supreme Court’s historic ruling on marriage equality with video of the reaction in San Francisco.

“Escape Hatch” (David Willing, 2016, Australia, 10 min.): In this feel­good film about love and courage, a girl walks into a restaurant dressed as Wonder Woman.

“How to Be Alone” (Erez Eisenstein, 2015, Israel, 23 min.): A woman grapples with her lonely existence as a singleton.

“My Refugee Story” (Mohamed Nour & Eldin Metwally, 2015, Lebanon, 17 min.): A documentary film about the challenges and legal issues confronting LGBTQ Syrian refugees when they arrive in Lebanon.

“The Orchid” (Ferran Navarro­Beltrán, 2016, Spain, 3 min.): A man has something important to tell his son but can only get through to his voicemail.

“Pool” (Leandro Goddinho, Brazil, 2016, 30 min.): Claudia investigates her recently deceased grandmother’s past and discovers an old German woman who lives in Brazil.

“Ribbons” (Brandon Cordeiro, 2015, U.S., 9 min.): A mother brings her 8­year­old son to a public AIDS memorial on a beach in Provincetown, Mass.

“Trigger” (Christopher Folkens, 2015, U.S., 10 min.): After being rejected by his family, a shy young man battles the warring thoughts in his head.

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The Same Difference – Nneka Onuorah, 2015, U.S., 78 min.

Wednesday, April 27, 5 p.m.

Director Nneka Onuorah takes an in­depth look at the internalized hetero­normative gender roles that have become all too familiar within the African­American lesbian and bisexual community. The film explores the troubling phenomenon of lesbians discriminating against other lesbians based on gender roles and shows how these behaviors reproduce the homophobic oppression and masculine privilege of the straight world. Self­identified studs — and the women who love them — discuss hypocrisy in terms of gender roles, performative expectations, and the silent disciplining that occurs between community members. The film features such queer celebrities as Felicia “Snoop” Pearson (HBO’s “The Wire”) and Lea DeLaria (“Orange Is the New Black”).

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Summertime (La belle saison) – Catherine Corsini, 2015, France, 101 min.

Sunday, April 24, 3 p.m.

There was little chance that Carole, a Spanish teacher and feminist militant in Paris circa 1971, would ever meet Delphine, the daughter of Limousin farmers. But they do meet — and fall passionately in love. Unfortunately, when Delphine’s father has a stroke, the young woman has no choice but to go back home to help her mother run the family farm. Smitten by Delphine, Carole can’t stand the estrangement and decides to join her lover at the farm. But can feminism and lesbianism easily be transferred to the countryside, especially given the attitudes of rural France at the time?

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Trans Lives Shorts – Tuesday, April 26, 9 p.m., 120 min.

Shorts about the emotional and societal pressures on those living out loud as transgender in the modern world.

“Alexa to Exa” (Exa Zim, 2016, U.S., 19 min.): Exa uses more than a decade of short films, skits, and video­diary entries to explore his own life.

“Alison and Jeremy” (Alyxandra Press, 2014, U.S., 28 min.): 25­year­old artist Alison is reunited with her childhood love and best friend, Jeremy, whom she hasn’t seen for 10 years.

“Mazy” (Yuting Jiang, 2016, U.S., 6 min.): Growing up in an interracial family in mid­Missouri, transgender 10­year­old Mazy Gilleylen struggles

with her racial and gender identities.

“Roxanne” (Paul Frankl, 2014, U.K., 14 min.): An isolated transgender sex worker takes in a young girl who has been abandoned by her mother.

“Stealth” (Bennett Lasseter, 2014, U.S., 22 min.): Born a boy, Sammy lives in stealth as a girl with the support of her mother and a doctor, but when the threat of a betrayal arises, she must decide whether to run or to live as her whole self.

“Vessels” (Arkasha Stevenson, 2015, U.S., 15 min.): A young transgender woman considers a dangerous black­market surgery that may be her only option in gaining a more feminine body.

“Whittier Boulevard” (Michael Patrick Spillers, 2015, U.S., 17 min.): A rock ’n’ roll fable about André, a transgender teen runaway who falls in love with

a rockabilly princess on the streets of East Los Angeles.

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Upstairs Inferno – Robert L. Camina, 2015, U.S., 96 min.

Monday, April 25, 9 p.m.

On June, 24, 1973, an arsonist set fire to a gay bar in New Orleans called the Up Stairs Lounge. The result was the largest gay mass murder in U.S. history. Despite the staggering historical significance, few people know about the tragedy, and the prime suspect was never charged with the crime. Thirty­two people were killed, and some bodies were never identified because families were ashamed that the victims were gay. Those who escaped the fire also suffered, with their lives permanently altered by resultant struggles. This chilling documentary features heart­wrenching interviews by survivors and witnesses, many of whom haven’t discussed the fire until now, plus never­before­seen photographs, news footage, and evidence. The film is narrated by famed New Orleanian Christopher Rice, a New York Times best­selling author.

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The Watermelon Woman – Cheryl Dunye, 1996, U.S., 90 min.

Sunday, April 24, 1:15 p.m.

In this newly restored 20th­anniversary edition of the indie classic by acclaimed queer director Cheryl Dunye, young black lesbian Cheryl (played by Dunye) works in Philadelphia with best friend Tamara. She is consumed by a film project: the making of a video about her search for the so­called Watermelon Woman, a black actress from Philly who appeared in films in the ’30s. Following various leads, Cheryl discovers the Watermelon Woman’s real name and surmises that the actress had a long affair with Martha Page (Guinevere Turner), a white woman who was one of Hollywood’s few female directors. While engaged in her investigation, Cheryl becomes involved with Diana, who’s also white, and the relationship strains her friendship with Tamara.

Actor Burt Reynolds Added To 2016 TCM Film Festival Lineup

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2013 TCM Classic Film Festival at TCL Chinese Theatre on Apr 27, 2013 in Los Angeles, CA.

Turner Classic Movies (TCM) announced today that renowned actor Burt Reynolds is set to attend the 2016 TCM Classic Film Festival, taking place in Hollywood April 28 – May 1, to participate in a sit-down interview about his life and career. In addition to the interview, Reynolds will be on-hand to introduce a screening of The Longest Yard (1974), for which he received a Golden Globe® nomination for Best Actor. The interview will be taped Saturday, April 30 in front of a live audience of festival pass holders at The Ricardo Montalbán Theatre.

“For more than five decades, Burt Reynolds has been both a superstar and a force to be reckoned with on screens around the globe, having ranked among the top ten box office attractions in the world on 13 different occasions,” said TCM host Robert Osborne. “He is one of the great talents of our time and a true film icon. I’m thrilled our fans will be able to hear him discuss his life as a movie star, the classic films he’s had the privilege of working on and the talented artists he’s worked alongside.”

In addition to directing four feature films, Reynolds movies include Deliverance (1972), The Longest Yard (1974), Gator (1976), Hooper (1978), The End (1978), Starting Over (1979), Sharky’s Machine (1981), Breaking In (1989) and, of course, Smokey and the Bandit (1977).

Each year, the TCM Classic Film Festival features an extended interview taped in front of a live audience for telecast on TCM under the Live from the TCM Classic Film Festival banner. In 2010, the first TCM Classic Film Festival welcomed two-time Oscar® winner Luise Rainer, who was 100 at the time. In 2011, Peter O’Toole was the featured guest, followed in 2012 by actress Kim Novak. In 2013, Oscar-winning actress Eva Marie Saint participated, followed by Academy Award®-winner Alan Arkin in 2014, and last year, Academy Award®-winner Sophia Loren was featured as was Norman Lloyd.

Reynolds joins an already exciting roster at this year’s festival, including previously announced appearances by director John Singleton for the 25th anniversary screening of his coming-of-age classic Boyz N The Hood (1991), Carl Reiner with an extended conversation and screening of Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982) Elliott Gould with screenings of his Golden Globe nominated performance in M*A*S*H (1970), The Long Goodbye (1973) and Eva Marie Saint who will be on hand to introduce a screening of the political comedy The Russians Are Coming The Russians Are Coming (1966).  Actor Stacy Keach will be discussing John Huston’s gritty look at the world of small-time boxing in Fat City (1972) and French actress Anna Karina will be introducing Band of Outsiders (1964), Jean-Luc Godard’s riff on gangster films.

Ninth Annual QFEST ST. LOUIS – LGBTQ Film Festival Runs April 24-28th at The Hi-Pointe Backlot

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It’s almost time to get your Q on, St. Louis!! The Ninth Annual QFest St. Louis, presented byCinema St. Louis, runs April 24-28th at The Hi-Pointe Backlot (1002 Hi Pointe Place)

The St. Louis-based LGBTQ film festival, QFest will present an eclectic slate of  films from filmmakers that represent a wide variety of voices in contemporary queer world cinema. The mission of the film festival is to use the art of contemporary gay cinema to illustrate the diversity of the LGBTQ community and to explore the complexities of living an alternative lifestyle.

All screenings at the Hi-Pointe Backlot, 1002 Hi Pointe Place, St. Louis, MO 63117. Individual tickets are $12 for general admission, $10 for students and Cinema St. Louis members with valid and current photo IDs.

Advance tickets may be purchased at the Hi-Pointe Backlot box office or website. For more info, visit the Cinema St. Louis site HERE

http://www.cinemastlouis.org/qfest

Here’s the line-up:

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Chemsex – Monday, April 25, 5 p.m.

William Fairman & Max Gogarty, 2015, U.K., 83 min.

Venturing into hidden basements, bedrooms, and bars across London, this bold documentary frankly and intimately exposes a dark side to modern gay life — enhanced sexual experiences through a variety of club drugs. Traversing an underworld of intravenous drug use and weekend­long sex parties, “Chemsex” tells the story of several men struggling to make it out of “the scene” alive and one health worker who has made it his mission to save them. While society looks the other way, this powerful and unflinching film uncovers a group of men battling with HIV and drug addiction and trying to find acceptance in a changing world.

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Closet Monster – Stephen Dunn, 2015, Canada, 90 min.

Thursday, April 28, 7 p.m.

Treading a daring line between the comic, the horrific, and the surreal, Stephen Dunn’s first feature is a fresh, imaginative take on the traditional coming­out/coming­of­age tale. Oscar (Connor Jessup, “American Crime Story” and “Falling Skies”) is a cute, conflicted teenager who, at the age of 8, witnessed a horrific hate crime that has scarred him deeply. Filled with fear and self­loathing as he struggles with his dawning sexuality — and not helped by living with his bitter, homophobic father — he turns for advice to his “spirit animal,” his pet hamster Buffy, who talks to him in the voice of Isabella Rossellini! But when he becomes obsessed with Wilder, his hot co­worker at the hardware store, Oscar can’t deny his urges any longer.

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Desert Migration – Daniel F. Cardone, 2015, U.S., 80 min.

Wednesday, April 27, 7 p.m.

Saved by the introduction of protease inhibitors in the mid­1990s, many HIV­positive men needed to rebuild their lives, which they thought were hopelessly lost. Now, more than half the people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States are more than 50 years of age. Those whose lives were saved by anti­retroviral therapies are dealing with a barrage of new problems as their aging bodies struggle to maintain the upper hand against the virus and to cope with the side effects of the treatment itself. Many also struggle with the symptoms of post­traumatic stress, having lived through a period of decimation and debilitation. The film focuses on gay men living long term with HIV who sought out an oasis in Southern California’s Palm Springs, where both their homosexuality and their health condition are not just tolerated but also understood. Sponsored by AARP in St. Louis

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Ekaj  –  Cati Gonzalez, 2015, U.S., 80 min.

Thursday, April 28, 5 p.m.

This unique love story between two drifters — “Kids” meets “Midnight Cowboy” — captures a runaway’s journey to New York City. When teenager Ekaj arrives in the city, he’s taken under the wing of hustler Mecca, but the older man has AIDS and multiple problems of his own. Naive Ekaj hopes to become the lover of a rich man who will support him, but his dreams are quickly shattered: Although he makes some money as a prostitute, the teen finds he is disposable and lacks what it takes to survive in the city. Although high all day, Mecca manages to be the only voice of reason in Ekaj’s hopeless world. Leaning on each other for survival, the pair looks for money and places to stay, and their relationship develops into a true friendship and love.

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I Love You Both – Doug Archibald, 2016, U.S., 90 min.

Sunday, April 24, 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.

In this charming first feature from St. Louis native Doug Archibald, twins Krystal and Donny (real­life siblings Kristin and Doug Archibald) are codependent, still living together in their late 20s in a converted one­bedroom house. When they both meet and start dating the same guy, however, the twins confront the fact that they can no longer live the same life — a choice needs to be made. With nowhere to turn for advice except their only two friends — a former Tae Bo teacher and their mother — the twins are finally forced to look for answers from within. With director/writer/co­star Archibald and writer/co­star Kristin Archibald.

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Kiss Me, Kill Me – Casper Andreas, 2016, U.S., 101 min.

Thursday, April 28, 9 p.m.

In the latest film from QFest veteran Casper Andreas (“The Big Gay Musical,” “Violet Tendencies”), Dusty (Van Hansis of “As the World Turns”) leads a charmed life. An aspiring actor, he’s just been promised the hosting role on a brand­new reality show produced by his TV­mogul boyfriend, Stephen (Gale Harold of “Queer as Folk”). At a lavish party celebrating his birthday, Stephen proposes to Dusty. But when Stephen’s ex shows up uninvited and desperately attempts to win back his former lover, the couple argue and Dusty storms off. Waking up in a hospital the next day, an amnesiac Dusty learns Stephen was killed in a violent attack, and police detectives (Jai Rodriguez of “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” and Yolanda Ross of “Treme”) have targeted him as the prime suspect. Now Dusty must either prove his innocence or accept the fact that he just might be a cold­blooded killer.

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Major! – Annalise Ophelian, 2015, U.S., 95 min

Tuesday, April 26, 5 p.m.

.This documentary explores the life and campaigns of Miss Major Griffin­Gracy, a black transgender elder and activist who has been fighting for the rights of trans women of color for more than 40 years. Miss Major is a veteran of the Stonewall uprising, a survivor of Attica State Prison, a former sex worker, a community leader, and a human­rights activist, but she’s simply “Mama” to many in her community. Miss Major’s personal story and activism for transgender civil rights intersects LGBTQ struggles for justice and equality from the 1960s to today. At the center of her activism is a fierce advocacy for “her girls”: trans women of color who have survived police brutality and incarceration in men’s jails and prisons. An invaluable resource for the generations who follow, Miss Major serves as a living embodiment of the queer­rights movement.

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The Passionate Pursuits of Angela Bowen – Jennifer Abod, 2016, U.S., 73 min.

Tuesday, April 26, 7 p.m.

This empowering biography provides a window into the life of black lesbian feminist Angela Bowen, who grew up in inner­city Boston during the Jim Crow era and went on to become a classical ballerina, legendary dance teacher, and inspirational activist, organizer, writer, and professor. For six decades, Bowen has influenced untold numbers, speaking out strongly not just for LGBTQ issues but also for the arts and for the rights of African­Americans and women. Candid and compelling, the film depicts Bowen’s life across the decades, using archival footage, musical selections, photographs, and interviews to reveal how race, class, gender, age, and sexuality played into her decisions and strategies for survival. Sponsored by Lilly’s — Music & Social House

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Portrait of a Serial Monogamist – John Mitchell & Christina Zeidler, 2015, Canada, 84 min.

Monday, April 25, 7 p.m.

Smart, successful, and charming, Elsie is the perfect girlfriend; she alsohappens to be a serial monogamist, with a long history of broken hearts.When Elsie breaks up with her longstanding girlfriend to pursue anotherwoman, she faces her mother’s disapproval, conflicting advice from friends,and the nagging suspicion that she may have made a big mistake. Set in theParkdale neighborhood of Toronto, “Portrait of a Serial Monogamist” invitesaudiences to peek behind the curtain on a world of smart, funny, andrelatable queer characters, dealing with the universal complications ofmodern relationships. Not another coming­out story, this is a freshcoming­of­middle­age romantic comedy.

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Queer Voices Shorts – A collection of queer shorts from around the world.

Wednesday, April 27, 9 p.m., 104 min.

“Equal Justice Under Law” (Dan Goldes, 2015, U.S., 3 min.): A combination of President Barack Obama’s speech about the Supreme Court’s historic ruling on marriage equality with video of the reaction in San Francisco.

“Escape Hatch” (David Willing, 2016, Australia, 10 min.): In this feel­good film about love and courage, a girl walks into a restaurant dressed as Wonder Woman.

“How to Be Alone” (Erez Eisenstein, 2015, Israel, 23 min.): A woman grapples with her lonely existence as a singleton.

“My Refugee Story” (Mohamed Nour & Eldin Metwally, 2015, Lebanon, 17 min.): A documentary film about the challenges and legal issues confronting LGBTQ Syrian refugees when they arrive in Lebanon.

“The Orchid” (Ferran Navarro­Beltrán, 2016, Spain, 3 min.): A man has something important to tell his son but can only get through to his voicemail.

“Pool” (Leandro Goddinho, Brazil, 2016, 30 min.): Claudia investigates her recently deceased grandmother’s past and discovers an old German woman who lives in Brazil.

“Ribbons” (Brandon Cordeiro, 2015, U.S., 9 min.): A mother brings her 8­year­old son to a public AIDS memorial on a beach in Provincetown, Mass.

“Trigger” (Christopher Folkens, 2015, U.S., 10 min.): After being rejected by his family, a shy young man battles the warring thoughts in his head.

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The Same Difference – Nneka Onuorah, 2015, U.S., 78 min.

Wednesday, April 27, 5 p.m.

Director Nneka Onuorah takes an in­depth look at the internalized hetero­normative gender roles that have become all too familiar within the African­American lesbian and bisexual community. The film explores the troubling phenomenon of lesbians discriminating against other lesbians based on gender roles and shows how these behaviors reproduce the homophobic oppression and masculine privilege of the straight world. Self­identified studs — and the women who love them — discuss hypocrisy in terms of gender roles, performative expectations, and the silent disciplining that occurs between community members. The film features such queer celebrities as Felicia “Snoop” Pearson (HBO’s “The Wire”) and Lea DeLaria (“Orange Is the New Black”).

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Summertime (La belle saison) – Catherine Corsini, 2015, France, 101 min.

Sunday, April 24, 3 p.m.

There was little chance that Carole, a Spanish teacher and feminist militant in Paris circa 1971, would ever meet Delphine, the daughter of Limousin farmers. But they do meet — and fall passionately in love. Unfortunately, when Delphine’s father has a stroke, the young woman has no choice but to go back home to help her mother run the family farm. Smitten by Delphine, Carole can’t stand the estrangement and decides to join her lover at the farm. But can feminism and lesbianism easily be transferred to the countryside, especially given the attitudes of rural France at the time?

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Trans Lives Shorts – Tuesday, April 26, 9 p.m., 120 min.

Shorts about the emotional and societal pressures on those living out loud as transgender in the modern world.

“Alexa to Exa” (Exa Zim, 2016, U.S., 19 min.): Exa uses more than a decade of short films, skits, and video­diary entries to explore his own life.

“Alison and Jeremy” (Alyxandra Press, 2014, U.S., 28 min.): 25­year­old artist Alison is reunited with her childhood love and best friend, Jeremy, whom she hasn’t seen for 10 years.

“Mazy” (Yuting Jiang, 2016, U.S., 6 min.): Growing up in an interracial family in mid­Missouri, transgender 10­year­old Mazy Gilleylen struggles

with her racial and gender identities.

“Roxanne” (Paul Frankl, 2014, U.K., 14 min.): An isolated transgender sex worker takes in a young girl who has been abandoned by her mother.

“Stealth” (Bennett Lasseter, 2014, U.S., 22 min.): Born a boy, Sammy lives in stealth as a girl with the support of her mother and a doctor, but when the threat of a betrayal arises, she must decide whether to run or to live as her whole self.

“Vessels” (Arkasha Stevenson, 2015, U.S., 15 min.): A young transgender woman considers a dangerous black­market surgery that may be her only option in gaining a more feminine body.

“Whittier Boulevard” (Michael Patrick Spillers, 2015, U.S., 17 min.): A rock ’n’ roll fable about André, a transgender teen runaway who falls in love with

a rockabilly princess on the streets of East Los Angeles.

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Upstairs Inferno – Robert L. Camina, 2015, U.S., 96 min.

Monday, April 25, 9 p.m.

On June, 24, 1973, an arsonist set fire to a gay bar in New Orleans called the Up Stairs Lounge. The result was the largest gay mass murder in U.S. history. Despite the staggering historical significance, few people know about the tragedy, and the prime suspect was never charged with the crime. Thirty­two people were killed, and some bodies were never identified because families were ashamed that the victims were gay. Those who escaped the fire also suffered, with their lives permanently altered by resultant struggles. This chilling documentary features heart­wrenching interviews by survivors and witnesses, many of whom haven’t discussed the fire until now, plus never­before­seen photographs, news footage, and evidence. The film is narrated by famed New Orleanian Christopher Rice, a New York Times best­selling author.

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The Watermelon Woman – Cheryl Dunye, 1996, U.S., 90 min.

Sunday, April 24, 1:15 p.m.

In this newly restored 20th­anniversary edition of the indie classic by acclaimed queer director Cheryl Dunye, young black lesbian Cheryl (played by Dunye) works in Philadelphia with best friend Tamara. She is consumed by a film project: the making of a video about her search for the so­called Watermelon Woman, a black actress from Philly who appeared in films in the ’30s. Following various leads, Cheryl discovers the Watermelon Woman’s real name and surmises that the actress had a long affair with Martha Page (Guinevere Turner), a white woman who was one of Hollywood’s few female directors. While engaged in her investigation, Cheryl becomes involved with Diana, who’s also white, and the relationship strains her friendship with Tamara.

 

2016 TCM Classic Film Festival Opens With 40th Anniversary Screening Of ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN

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Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will open the 7th annual TCM Classic Film Festival on April 28thwith a 40th Anniversary screening of the Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman political thriller All The President’s Men (1976).

The festival, set to take place April 28 – May 1 in Hollywood, will also include tributes to the following screen legends:

· Director-writer Carl Reiner featuring a screening of Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982) and an extended conversation

· Actor Elliott Gould featuring screenings of his Golden Globe nominated performance in M*A*S*H (1970), The Long Goodbye (1973) and a conversation in Club TCM
This year’s festival will include appearances by:

· Eva Marie Saint – on hand to introduce a screening of the political comedy The Russians Are Coming The Russians Are Coming (1966)

· Director John Singleton – presenting a 25th anniversary screening of his coming-of-age classic Boyz N The Hood (1991)

· Actor Stacy Keach – discussing John Huston’s gritty look at the world of small-time boxing in Fat City (1972)

· French actress Anna Karina – introducing Band of Outsiders (1964), Jean-Luc Godard’s riff on gangster films

The 2016 TCM Film Festival will also feature special live events including:

· North American premiere of Holiday in Spain aka Scent of Mystery (1960) presented in “Smell-O-Vision” in a one-of-a-kind presentation at the Cinerama Dome

· Opening night poolside screening at the Hollywood Roosevelt of master comedian Harold Lloyd’s biggest hit, The Freshman (1925), featuring DJ Thomas Golubić spinning a unique live music mix for the silent film

TCM is pleased to announce the return of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures as an official festival partner as well as the co-host of the opening night screening and party. Returning once again as the festival’s exclusive founding partner, Delta Air Lines will serve as the official airline of the TCM Classic Film Festival. Additionally, DIRECTV, The Hollywood Reporter and Bonhams all return as official sponsors of the festival.

All the President’s Men (1976)

Producer and star Robert Redford helped change the face of newspaper movies when he teamed with Dustin Hoffman for this tense political thriller about Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s investigation of the Watergate break-in, a story that led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation. Presented in a 40th anniversary screening in collaboration with Warner Bros. Classics.

Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982) – Featuring an appearance by Carl Reiner

This masterful cinematic treat, created by director-writer Carl Reiner, intercuts scenes with Steve Martin as a private eye investigating the murder of the world’s leading cheese scientist, with classic films from the 1940s, casting him opposite such legends as Ingrid Bergman, James Cagney and Burt Lancaster. Presented in collaboration with Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.

M*A*S*H (1979) – Featuring an appearance by Elliott Gould

Director Robert Altman gave the war film a new look with this anarchic comedy about a mobile surgical unit during the Korean War where surgeons Donald Sutherland and Elliott Gould—in a Golden Globe nominated performance — spend almost as much time playing pranks on each other as they do saving lives. Presented in collaboration with Twentieth Century-Fox.

The Long Goodbye (1973) – Featuring an appearance by Elliott Gould

With Elliott Gould as Phillip Marlowe, director Robert Altman turns Raymond Chandler’s novel into a dreamlike riff on film noir—with the private eye trying to help a friend while searching for a missing novelist, only to land in more trouble than he can handle. Presented in collaboration with MGM/United Artists and Park Circus LLC.

The Russians Are Coming The Russians Are Coming (1966) – Featuring an appearance by Eva Marie Saint

The Cold War goes from bad to mirth in this political comedy directed by Norman Jewison about a New England town sent into a tizzy when a Russian sub runs aground on a nearby sandbar. The large cast includes Eva Marie Saint, Alan Arkin, Carl Reiner and Brian Keith. Presented in collaboration with MGM/United Artists and Park Circus LLC.

Boyz N The Hood (1991) Featuring an appearance by John Singleton

This semi-autobiographical tale of a young man (Cuba Gooding, Jr.) growing up in South Central L.A. who gets caught up in the area’s gang life marked the feature writing and directing debut of John Singleton, the first African-American nominated for a Best Directing Oscar, shown in a US premiere restoration in collaboration with Rialto Pictures.

Fat City (1972) – Featuring an appearance by Stacy Keach  

Director John Huston’s gritty yet affectionate look at the world of small-time boxing, with Stacy Keach as a down-and-out slugger and Jeff Bridges as a young up-and-comer, both moving gracefully through a world of seedy gyms and flop houses, presented in collaboration with Sony Pictures.

Band Of Outsiders (1964) – Featuring an appearance by Anna Karina

With its story of a bored student (Anna Karina) who gets involved with small-time crooks (Jean-Claude Brialy and Sami Frey), this dreamlike riff on gangster films by director Jean-Luc Godard is also a love letter to Paris, transporting the American crime figures to a Parisian world of cafes and landmarks. Shown in a US premiere restoration in collaboration with Rialto Pictures.

Holiday in Spain aka Scent of Mystery (1960)  

This combination mystery-travelogue, about a British mystery writer trying to protect an American heiress from murderers, features offbeat comedy, beautiful shots of Spain and, in this special North American premiere of the presentation at the Cinerama Dome, the return of Smell-O-Vision. Presented in collaboration withCinerama Inc., Redwind Productions, Scented Storytelling, Scent Events and the Institute for Art and Olfaction, presentation at ArcLight Cinemas’ Cinerama Dome.

The Freshman (1925) – Featuring music by DJ Thomas Golubić with Suzanne Lloyd in attendance

Music Supervisor Thomas Golubić presents a live DJ re-score for master comedian Harold Lloyd’s biggest hit: the story of a college freshman so eager to please he makes a fool of himself and threatens to blow the big game, presented in collaboration with Harold Lloyd Entertainment.

For the seventh consecutive year, thousands of movie lovers from around the globe will descend upon Hollywood for the TCM Classic Film Festival. The 2016 festival is set to take place Thursday, April 28 – Sunday, May 1, 2016. Over four packed days and nights, attendees will be treated to an extensive lineup of great movies, appearances by legendary stars and filmmakers, fascinating presentations and panel discussions, special events and more.

TCM host and film historian Robert Osborne will once again serve as official host of the TCM Classic Film Festival, with TCM’s Ben Mankiewicz introducing various events. The festival’s official hotel and central gathering point for the sixth consecutive year will be The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, which has a longstanding role in movie history and was the site of the first Academy Awards ceremony. The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel will also offer special rates for festival attendees. Screenings and events during the festival will be held at the TCL Chinese Theatre IMAX, the TCL Chinese 6 Theatres and the Egyptian Theatre, as well as other Hollywood venues.

The magic of movies isn’t just motion, it’s emotion.  As we watch cinematic stories play out, they feel like our own.  In 2016, the TCM Classic Film Festival explores MOVING PICTURES—the ones that bring us to tears, rouse us to action, inspire us, even project us to a higher plane.  In the heart of historic Hollywood we’ll gather to share the big-time emotions of big screen stories, from coming-of-age pictures to terminal tearjerkers, from powerful sports dramas we feel in our bones to religious epics that elevate our spirits.  These are the films that that set our love of cinema in motion.

SXSW To Hold World Premiere Of Secrets of The Force Awakens: A Cinematic Journey

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“Secrets of The Force Awakens: A Cinematic Journey, ” a feature-length documentary will have its world premiere during the South by Southwest Film Festival (SXSW), being held in Austin, Texas, March 11-19, 2016. The documentary, a bonus feature on the upcoming Digital HD and Blu-ray Combo Pack release of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, is an inside look at the making of this epic movie, revealed through in-depth footage and exclusive interviews with the actors and filmmakers.

The documentary will be shown at the Paramount Theatre in downtown Austin on Monday, March 14, at 12:00 p.m. Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ BAFTA Award–winning and Academy Award–nominated visual effects supervisor Roger Guyett, Academy Award®–nominated supervising sound editor Matthew Wood and co-producer Michelle Rejwan will be on hand for a Q&A following the screening.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens shattered box office records upon its debut to become the cinematic event of a generation with over $926 million domestic and $2 billion worldwide.

The epic movie will be available to own early on Digital HD and Disney Movies Anywhere on April 1, and is available on iTunes and other digital providers for pre-order now. Fans can also explore all things Star Wars at iTunes.com/Starwars. It comes home on Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD on April 5.

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ONCE MY MOTHER, FIDELIO: ALICE’S ODYSSEY Win EDA Awards At 2015 St. Louis International Film Festival

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After 11 days of celebrating magnificent and electric movies, the 24th Annual St. Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF) concluded on Sunday evening. At the closing ceremony the International Alliance of Women Film Journalists (AWFJ) presented awards to two women filmmakers. Cate Marquis (St. Louis Jewish Light) and myself were on hand to announce our winners – chosen by a panel of AWFJ members.

Lucie Borleteau’s FIDELIO: ALICE’S ODYSSEY received the EDA for Best Female-Directed Narrative Feature, while Sophia Turkiewicz’s ONCE MY MOTHER took the EDA for Best Female-Directed Documentary.

Actress Lucie Borleteau makes her feature directing debut with this insightful study of a woman situated in an almost exclusively male milieu. Sailor Alice (Ariane Labed) joins the freighter Fidelio as a replacement engineer, soon discovering that the captain, Gaël (Melvil Poupaud), is a man with whom she was once romantically involved. Though she leaves behind a fiancé on land (Anders Danielsen Lie, Oslo, August 31st), she finds her feelings for Gaël have not abated. Buttressed by a remarkable international cast, Fidelio, Alice’s Odyssey presents a rounded portrait of a passionate woman faced with difficult choices. Greek actress Labed won Best Actress at Locarno for her memorable performance. Nominated for two César Awards including Best Debut Feature.

When Australian filmmaker Sophia Turkiewicz was 7 years old, her Polish mother, Helen, abandoned her in an Adelaide orphanage. Sophia never forgot this maternal act of betrayal. Now in middle age, as Sophia examines her troubled relationship with Helen, she discovers the full story behind her mother’s miraculous survival in the years before, during, and after World War II. The details of Helen’s pre-Australia life are the stuff of epics: orphaned at 6; abandoned at age 9 by an indifferent uncle; forced to live for years on the streets of her small Polish town (now part of the Ukraine); shipped at 16 to a Russian gulag to work as a slave laborer after Stalin and Hitler divvy up Poland; twice compelled to trek endless miles through Russian territory, ending up first in Uzbekistan and then in Persia; displaced to a refugee camp in Rhodesia, where she becomes pregnant — by an Italian soldier — with Sophia; finally arriving in Australia, where she’s forced to temporarily place her daugher in an orphanage. With Helen now sliding into dementia, Sophia must confront some difficult questions: Did she ever truly know her mother? Does she have it in her heart to forgive her? And is it too late?

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SLIFF Executive Director Cliff Froehlich said, “Dating back to the silent era, women have been vital contributors to film art, but they have long been underrepresented and underappreciated in the industry. Thankfully, that situation is changing, and the number of women filmmakers has grown exponentially in recent years. SLIFF believes it’s important to shine a spotlight on their increasing role, and the EDA Awards are an excellent means of acknowledging the diverse works that contemporary women filmmakers are directing.”

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According to AWFJ President Jennifer Merin, “SLIFF is one of the country’s top regional showcases for independent and international film, and it has been a delight to collaborate with them and to honor them for presenting such an exciting slate of films by and about women.”

AWFJ EDA Award Jurors

Marina Antunes (Quietearth.us, Vancouver, Narrative), Laurie Coker (True View Reviews, Austin, Documentaries), Cate Marquis (St. Louis Jewish Light, St. Louis, Narrative), Jennifer Merin (chair, Women’s eNews, New York, Narrative), Michelle McCue (chair, We Are Movie Geeks, St. Louis, Documentaries), Rebecca Pahle (Film Journal International, Brooklyn, Narrative), Betsy Pickle (AWFJ, Knoxville, TN, Documentaries), and Diana Saenger (Review Express, Alpine, CA, Documentaries).

AWFJ, an organization of top women film journalists and critics from across the U.S, Canada and UK, will distribute in December a full slate of EDA Awards recognizing the year’s best (and worst) films by and about women.

Click HERE for the full list of winners.

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SLIFF 2015 Review : FOUR WAY STOP

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Nationwide news media seems to be filled with tales of urban violence (for those living in the larger cities, these stories can fill the first third of local newscast). How do these neighborhoods become powderkegs waiting to ignite and explode? Is it from tensions and frustrations simmering to a boil just under the surface of society? That’s the question posed by the new drama FOUR WAY STOP. The film’s focus is 17 year-old Allen (Paul Craig), who is going through the interview section of another fruitless job search. He’s got a part job at a corner snack shack, but his tardiness and absences (looking for a better gig) has raised the ire of his unsympathetic boss. Things aren’t that great at home since his folks split quite a while ago. His sickly mother (Mary K Casey) needs his wages to support them and her new live-in beau (of course this bully constantly clashes with him). Several blocks away is Allen’s drug-addled dad (Jaan Marion) who repeats tales of his former glory days while also hitting up his boy for cash. Well, Allen’s old childhood pal Tay (Jason J Little) can offer him some work, but it’s not really, you know, legal. But Allen’s determined to resist that route even as every door slams in his face while his anger builds until…

Director Efi Da Silva inspires terrific performances from this energetic cast. Particularly memorable is Marion as he rambles and rants about the better times while resisting the urge to collapse after his latest bender. There’s also very effective use of St. Louis locations, best showcased in an early sequence of Allen and Tay racing down the gritty blocks, lit by rows of street lamps under twilight and darkness. There are scenes that crackle with tension as Allen keeps butting heads with uncaring employers and their staff. FOUR WAY STOP is an unflinching, raw tale of tough times on the still very mean streets.

FOUR WAY STOP screens at Webster University’s Winifred Moore Auditorium on Sunday, November 15 at 1PM as part of the 24th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival. Purchase tickets here

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SLIFF 2015 Review : ARCHIE’S BETTY

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Here’s an idea that many kids (and adults) dearly wanted (or still want) to do. I’m talking about having such a love of literary characters, that you believe that you could actually visit their homes and towns. For fans of famous prose novels there might be a desire to go to Narnia, Oz, or Middle Earth. DC comics fans would love to live or work in Metropolis or Gotham City (Marvel superhero lovers quickly discover that the actual NYC isn’t filled with Avengers and mutants). Ah, then reality kicks in and we realize that these locales can only exist in our daydreams. But what happens when you hear rumors of a real place that inspired your favorite comics line. This is what happened to film critic and historian Gerald Peary. In his youth he didn’t gravitate toward the spandex crowd, rather he was smitten with Archie Andrews, along with his pals Jughead, Moose, and Reggie. And he was especially with the other two sides of Archie’s eternal “love triangle”, raven-haired rich gal Veronica and fresh-scrubbed blonde next door Betty. They’ve been having adventures in the little idyllic town of Riverdale for nearly 75 years now. Peary decided to follow up on rumors that it was based on an actual town, Haverhill, MA to be exact. As narrator of this entertaining documentary, he relates the story of cartoonist Bob Montana (source of some controversy-many believe he created the Archie feature, while the company insists that its founder John Goldwater come up with the concept) and how he fell in love with the town and high school, though only having lived there a few years. Peary and an Archie expert comb through high school yearbooks, newspaper clippings and the classic comic books and comic strips like a pop culture Holmes and Watson unraveling a mystery. Though Mr. Andrews was a print media hybrid of teen Henry of “The Aldrich Family” radio show and Mickey Rooney as Andy Hardy in MGM’s popular feature film series, that ginger lad is all East Coaster. Many of the comics models are tracked down (there’s an old video interview with the real “Moose”), but the surprising reveal of the title “four-color” queen makes for a heart-warming finale.

Peary makes for an entertaining guide through this quaint little town and the journey of this freckle-faced funster first appearing as a humor filler in publisher MLJ’s mostly action hero anthology “Pep Comics” into a media juggernaut that would ultimately take over the name of the company (MLJ became Archie Comics). There’s a lots of original art and classic (very valuable) books plus the merchandising: fashions, toys, a radio show, and a live-action TV movie (little mention though of the smash hit 1968 CBS Saturday morning show produced by Filmation Studios that registered Super Bowl-like ratings numbers and spawned the number one hit record “Sugar Sugar”). ARCHIE’S BETTY is a touching, whimsical ode to a bygone era and a tribute to the folks that created and inspired America’s favorite bunch of immortal ageless teens.

ARCHIE’S BETTY screens at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Theatre on Sunday, November 15 at noon as part of the 24th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival. Purchase tickets here

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SLIFF 2015 Review – IT HAD TO BE YOU

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Review by Stephen Jones

IT HAD TO BE YOU screens Friday, November 13th at 7:00pm at The Tivoli Theater as part of this year’s St. louis International Film Festival. Ticket information can be found HERE

IT HAD TO BE YOU is a very, very average movie elevated by the sheer likability of Cristin Milioti. Nothing in the movie is particularly groundbreaking, no envelopes are pushed, but Milioti radiates. She isn’t exactly new on the acting scene; she got her initial exposure (of note) being way too good for the last season of How I Met Your Mother, then a too-brief role in “Wolf of Wall Street,” but here she is carrying an entire movie on the back of her screen presence and charm.

The rest of the movie is perfectly fine, save the person-shaped section of drywall they cast as the male lead. The cast as a whole is mostly solid, some of the jokes have a really good Sarah Andersen vibe to them, and Sasha Gordon is a decent first time director. That her background is in music and she cast a musically talented actress who bears some resemblance to her in the lead role of the quirky young composer is a little first-time-writer, but there are much worse ways to show that hand.

Really, though, aside from Dan Soder showing about as much charisma as a hole in your pocket, there’s nothing to complain about in the movie. It’s not great, but it’s not trying to be. Gordon seems to be keenly aware that she’s a first time writer/director and plays it safe, but in a smart way. It’s the sort of small, low-stakes movie that can get one really good thing going for it, and Milioti is definitely that. I wouldn’t nearly nominate this for any big acting awards, but I could watch Milioti be a more human Zooey Deschanel all day.

But beyond that there isn’t much to say about it. It’s a good “let’s go to the movies, I don’t care what we see” pick. Or if you just went to see one of the heavier SLIFF films, this would be a very nice, light palate cleanser. It’s fun, entirely inoffensive (aside from some weird slurs thrown around by a character while yelling in the background, I have no idea what that was about…), and there are a lot worse things out there to see than this. Even if it won’t necessarily stick with you for very long after you leave the theater.