| Local Filmmaker Forum | ![]() |
Date: Monday, 10/18/2004
Time: 6:00 pm
Venue: DCJCC
Tickets: Free
Type: Collection of short films
Metro Weekly Rating: 

(3 out of 5)
by Randy Shulman
IN THE JEWISH religion, a mitzvah is an extra special good deed, the kind of selfless act that helps to define the goodness in a person's soul. Anyone can perform a mitzvah -- you don't have to be Jewish -- given the right opportunity.
The Local Filmmaker Forum offers such an opportunity. Imagine what it means to the filmmakers to see their movies reacted to by a full house of their queer peers.
Of course, part of this particular mitzvah means having to endure Brian: The
Gnome Slayer (
) , an unfortunate short film involving killer Barbie
dolls, a young man who dresses as Wonder Woman, and (in a truly offensive and
unnecessary side note) a blackface-sporting drag queen who stalks the woods and
emits strange lights from her vaginal area. There is one lone moment --
involving a doll's-eye view of a bathroom floor and a woman taking a shower --
that shows talent lurking within star/writer/director Brian Tosoko Bello, who
one hopes will grow that talent before having to consider another, less
expensive means of creative expression.
Asher Beckwitt's Women's Rugby, Women's Voices (
) is as tedious as
its title makes it sound -- a clunky, unenlightening look at the Washington
Furies.
Brighter notes include barefeet (

) , an eloquent cinematic poem, in
which a young Indian girl ultimately determines that "Home is where I take
my shoes off," and the hilarious Booty Dance (



) which
deconstructs, in a matter-of-fact scientific manner, why gay men and lesbians
have such trouble sharing the same dance floor. "Collision is
inevitable," says the clinical voiceover. It's an inspired hoot.
Finally, there's Speaking Our Minds (


) , Courtenay Singer and Al
Miner's absorbing look inside the monthly lesbian poetry slam, mothertounge.
Though rough around the edges, the homespun documentary captures the spirit of
the event, embellishing with commentary by founder Karen Taggart and mothertongue
regular Bonnie Morris (whose own depicted slam exhibits a masterful,
crowd-pleasing manipulation of a single sentence). Morris calls mothertounge,
"Dyke Disney," but this cultural phenomenon goes way beyond jokey
categorization. It's a feminist art form that is cathartic for its participants
and clearly thrilling for the onlookers.
| More information |
Film Links:
· Reel Affirmations details
Festival Venue:
Cecile Goldman Theater at the
DCJCC
1529 16th Street, NW; Washington, DC 20009. (202) 518-9400. (map)
3 blocks east of Red Line Metro / Dupont Circle station.
Tickets:
You may buy your tickets or passes in advance: Online at BoxOfficeTickets.com
or by phone at (800) 494-TIXS (494-8497). Or you may visit the Lincoln
Theatre (1215 U Street, NW, WDC); the DCJCC (1529 16th Street, NW,
WDC); Lambda Rising (1625 Connecticut Avenue, NW, WDC); or Universal
Gear (1601 17th Street, NW, WDC).
|
For more info visit the official Reel Affirmations website. |







