Advertising
Advertising
advertising
advertising
advertising

Tucson Film Festival

Out in the Desert debuts with two weekends of films, including some by Arizona filmmakers.

By Liz Massey

Camera Lens

Picture Perfect

Inaugural Out in the Desert Film Festival brings multiple movie premieres to Tucson

In gauging the appetite for an LGBT-themed film festival in southern Arizona, it's helpful to look at the numbers associated with the Out in the Desert Film Festival, set to make its inaugural run in Tucson on Feb. 17-19 and Feb. 24-26.

To select films for the festival program, members of the Southwest LGBT Film Society, the festival's parent organization, screened more than 500 submissions. The roster of films consists of 162 movies, including 142 short works of an hour or less. More than 40 movies to be will be represented by their director or other cast members at the festival.

And a hefty number of filmmakers are choosing the event to introduce their work to the public. Out in the Desert will play host to 50 Southwestern premieres, six United States premieres and one world premiere, according to Han Nguyen, the festival's communications chair.

The film festival is the brainchild of festival director Joe Sprague and programming chair Tom Forester. Nguyen said both men had been involved with queer film festivals in Chicago and wanted to bring the experience of an international festival to Tucson.

Out in the Desert will screen films at three venues in Tucson. After-parties will take place at the Arizona Riverpark Inn. A Ladies Night Out at the New Moon Tucson bar will follow the screening of the movie Jamie & Jessie Are Not Together.

In the future, the Southwest LGBT film society hopes to expand the organization beyond the festival to provide financial support for filmmakers.

"Tucson has a very artsy LGBT community," Nguyen noted. "This is going to become one of the premiere arts events in Arizona."

To give back to the community that is supporting it, the film festival will be doing fundraising for Tucson Pride, Nguyen said.

Echo Magazine is among the sponsors of Out in the Desert Film Festival.    -E


Film stills from Out in the Desert Film Festival

Arizona Centerpiece films celebrate homegrown filmmaking

Who says you need big bucks or a Hollywood address to make a good film? The Out in the Desert Film Festival will celebrate local filmmakers with a night dedicated to films produced in Arizona on Feb. 24. The films will be screened at the Grand Cinemas - Crossroads 6 complex in Tucson.

  • A Belch Can Ruin A Wedding (18 minutes): A throwback to the early silent film era with a gay twist, this is an old-fashioned melodrama about Little Mel searching for his true love, Studly Do-Right, while fending off the evils of the Far Right Rev. Fred Belch.
  • A Fairy Tale (11 minutes): The story of Jack and Jill on the night of their senior prom. When Jack is left alone after Jill goes to the prom with Prince Charming, it's up to his sassy, drag queen, fairy godmother (Sherry Vine) to save the night!
  • Dinner at the Last Chance Café (26 minutes): When a young fundamentalist Christian woman dies, she wakes up at the Last Chance Café. Heaven can wait until Evelyn confronts her own homophobia and gets forgiveness from the gay man she hated most.
  • Reunion (11 minutes): Kenny, the host of a TV decorating show, returns to his small Arizona town for his high school reunion, boyfriend in tow, and discovers his former classmates aren't who he thought they were.
  • Thresholds (7 minutes): This film is a powerful drama about three people — Benny, his mother Nancy, and Detective Gomez — all marked by one life-changing moment that shatters the power of everyday assumptions.
  • Well Done (4 minutes): A private detective takes a fateful journey as he finds out things are not always what they appear at the Wellington Estate in this film produced by the AZ Gender Outlaws.

Source: www.outinthedesertff.org

VITAL STATISTICS

Out in the Desert Film Festival
Feb. 17-19 and Feb. 24-26
Fluxx Studio & Gallery, the Screening Room and the Grand Cinemas - Crossroads 6, all in Tucson
Tickets: $8 each screening;
$5 for films before 2 p.m.,
$12 for double features
www.outinthedesertff.org

Han Nguyen director of Faith of the Abomination

Han Nguyen keeps the faith in documentary Faith of the Abomination

Besides being communications chair for the Out in the Desert Film Festival, Tucson-based filmmaker Han Nguyen is the director of Faith of the Abomination, a provocative 2009 documentary that will be screened at the festival.

The film exposes the hypocrisy and corruption at the heart of the evangelical Victory Christian Center "mega-church" based in Austin, Texas, after lesbian ministers Nguyen and her partner changed their identities to appear as heterosexuals.

Nguyen answered questions about the making of the film.

Question: What led to the creation of the documentary Faith of the Abomination?

Answer: Faith of the Abomination started out as an idea for a social experiment. After we were rejected as lesbian ministers in an evangelical church, we assumed our experiences would be totally different had one of us been a male minister. To get to the truth, we had to experience an evangelical church as a heterosexual couple — and this became the premise for our social experiment.

Q: Had you ever done a film relying on this sort of undercover work?

A: No, I'm a first-time filmmaker.

Q: What sorts of risks were you taking with the infiltration?

A: The church we infiltrated was in the same town we were living in. Needless to say, we had to go completely underground in our real lives. Had we been spotted by a church member while we were out of character, the entire project would have had to be scrapped.

Q: Did you live as a heterosexual couple 24/7 while you were filming the documentary?

A: No. We only played a heterosexual couple while at church or other social events involving the church crowd.

Q: When did you decide to "come out" to the congregation? Why?

A: After having bonded with the pastors and members of the congregation over the course of several months, we discussed the fact that they had already accepted us as heterosexual ministers. The easier route for us would have been to not come out and slip away quietly from the church, but we couldn't go without letting them know that the people they have come to love were actually lesbians in disguise.

Q: Why did you move to Tucson to finish the film after you came out to the congregation?

A: Once we came out to the church and into post-production phase of the film, we went public with our story, which resulted in harassing phone calls at all hours of the night and vandalism of our property. We needed to leave the "hot spot," so to speak.

Q: What did you learn from making the film and going undercover?

A: I learned that the church leaders loved, accepted and honored us, as long as we were being fake in order to fit into their mold. When we revealed the truth about who we really are, they cut us out of their church and family. What surprised me most was how a few physical modifications can make all the difference with how I'm treated by other "representatives" of God.

Q: What do you hope the audience takes away from seeing this movie?

A: I would like to see the audience find a little inspiration and courage from the film to come out of their closets and celebrate who they are, because the condemning message against the LGBT community are hateful lies and schemes that are not of God, which divide people, tear apart families and destroy lives.    -E

Faith of the Abomination will be screened at 7 p.m. Feb. 24 part of the Out in the Desert Film Festival's Arizona Centerpiece films at Grand Cinemas – Crossroads 6 in Tucson.