Getting Uptown Down Quantic Remix
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These shorts made a long gratifying feature at this year’s Seattle Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. They’re very powerful, compelling, uplifting, and entertaining. The shortest time is 8 minutes and the longest one is 21 minutes. The Producers, Directors, and Actor were in attendance and answered questions after the premiere of this classic and well polished shorts that are a welcome in the gay community. Frequent Traveler Frequent Traveler is a humane comedy of errors that just keeps getting worser as the activenesses become hilarious. A man is at the Airport Security waiting to get checked through. A hot security guard is on responsibility with wand in hand. The traveler sets off the alarm of beeps and has a big grin on his face. The hot guard asks him to step to the side which he does all smiles and cooperation. The smiles become a frown when a ugly guard takes over for the hot one. But not for long, the traveler enjoys the frisking all over his body and up and down his legs. He looks at the object of his affection as he goes through the motions. He ends up getting stripped searched and has to bend over and assume the position for a cavity search all while smiling in the mirror where the hot guard is standing watching everything. After going through horrors of it all with a dog of a guard he’s released. The hot guard apologizes for making the traveler miss his plane. The traveler stomps off in a huff. On hearing the alarm go off, the handsome guard looks over and sees that it’s his friend all over again. If firstborn you don’t succeed. . . . Great Short that’s very agreeably diverting and humor at it is funniest. Non-Love-Song On the last day of summer before heading off to college, two 18-year-old best friends undertake to connect as adults, and for the basi time in their lives part a “final” moment. In a digital world one kid still uses his Polaroid camera to take pictures of the beach and his best friend who he has it bad for. College is around the corner and the two won’t see each other until Thanksgiving. In a world of voice messaging and CD’s the smitten one tells his bud that he recorded a tape for him on his tape recorder. He wants him to listen to it while he’s away at college then he ducks and dodges questions when it comes to it only to say that it’s not a love song. Their moment is interrupted by two girls who’re are friends with the two. His object of positive feeling of liking asks him to take a picture of him with the girls. The hurt look on his face says it all. He makes the moment by pulling the tape labeled Not A Love Song in his back pack. The End. In my Arts class we were asked to come up with a summary on what happened to the characters? My guess? After listening to the non love song he returns home and lays his friend on his back and stuffs him like a turkey on Thanksgiving Day. The Island Trevor Anderson; 2008 Canada 5 minutes The premise of this film takes on the homophobic comment; “all you faggots ought to be shipped off to an island someplace where they could give each other AIDS and die. ” Trevor Anderson from Alberta Canada ponders on this as he walks through the snow. As he elaborates on this topic his ideas come to life in animation that’s originative graphics at it is best. A tropical “homo utopia” doesn’t sound like a bad idea as he lays it out in his fantasies. The animation transforms his snowy environs into a colorful paradise of sand, sun, and palm trees where ape masseurs are always on call and any person who dies gets his body shucked into a volcano and worshiped as a god. The “homo utopia” has super-fancy tree huts and AIDS cocktails served in coconut shells with pineapple wedges gets more and more refined and tasteful and upscale. The bananas growing on the trees look like penises and the coconuts like test-t-cos. Wow! What an imagination! Sign me up! This is five minutes of pure-d-entertainment that makes a negative into a positive. Right on! After All That Michael Culpepper; 2009 U. S. Of A. 17 minutes. After All That takes place in the Mississippi Gulf Coast, three years after Katrina. The TV frenzy is over with the media packed up and moved on to the next tornado, earthquake, and next tragedy. The damages are still undone and the opening frames show a tiny, ruined house that still standing with a sign;”Do Not Demolish. ” This screenplay is firsthand accounts from hurricane survivors still engaged in a struggle and attempting to pick up the pieces of their shattered lives. Michael Culpepper brings about a simple, powerful story of three men in one such little Mississippi town. Deacon (Tom Thon) lost almost everything to the hurricane, including his house and his business. His heavy drinking loses him his driver’s license and he spends his days prowling the town on an ATV. Mike (Dale Basescu), Deacon’s nephew, is coming out of the shadows of his old life. Deputy Burnett (David Chattam) is likewise one of the lucky ones. Mike and Deputy Burnett are in a kinship that’s a well guarded secret. Deputy Burnett cuts Deacon a heap of slack for disturbing the peace. Life is still in ruins and can’t be rebuilt like the house in the opening. No light has been cast on the darkness from the storm. Very Moving! I talked to Michael Culpepper who confirmed that things aren’t any better and there’s a sense of abandonment. Sombrero Nathaniel Atcheson; 2008 U. S. Of A. 12 minutes Sombrero won the 2008 Palm Springs International ShortFest and “Best of the Fest. ” It ought to win the favored awards at this years Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. James and Raymond meet for a blind date in a Mexican restaurant. They’re both hoping for a connection and hope that things take off for them. James is so nervous and falls isolated while Raymond remains calm, cool, and collected. James ends up wearing the pink drink that Raymond ordered for him by a man who bumps into their table. The evening takes on the spun of a date from hell with everything that could go faulty going wrost. Just as everything is when it comes to to go over the waterfall with objects of pending doom falling behind it. James and Raymond find out that neither one is the person whom they thought they were meeting. Especially after the birthday cake arrives with the waiters serenading Happy Birthday to James. It isn’t his birthday! The mystery is solved in a very weird and exceedingly strange way. Loved It! This ought to must ace the prize. Transatlantic David Quantic; 2009 U. S. Of A. 12 minutes Wig Todd Holland; 2009 U. S. Of A. 21 minutes Kent(Tim Bagley) is in his telling his Therapist Michele (Judy Greer) in regards to how his rock of a collaborator Jax(Scotch Ellis Loring)has fallen isolated after the death of his mother. Jax steals his mother’s favored wig leaving her bald as a plum for the funeral in 3 days. To make manners crazier he’s wearing and refuses to take it off. Jax is shown wearing the wig in his underwear and running his fingers through the wig. Jax activenesses pushes his sister Cacey(Kim Coles) further isolated and frightens the hell out of her husband, and has bells, whistles, alarms, and flares sounding to their caring group of friends that aid them. Including their best of best friend Duffy(Jason Dudey). They heard Jax out and support him get through this tragic loss in his life. How they do it is pure-d-comedy at it is best. Great Movie! Scotch Ellis Loring spoke after the film and thanked his lover of 9 years for doing the movie for him from a screenplay. His next effort is with HBO and his other half is working on a alternate show for Fox. These shorts made a long pleasurable feature at this year’s Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. Three Dollar Bill Cinema is fellow member generated establishment that needs members to flourish it is continued success. Support the Arts, become a fellow member and enter to win a trip to London. The reception was kept at Table 219 where I enjoyed the bar-q-que pork sandwiches and sweet potato fries. Please aid the sponsors of The Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. |



