Why we still need LGBT film festivals (CBC)

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Summertime

What a perfect way to start June – Pride month. The CBC breaks down Why we still need LGBT film festivals,

Next month, San Francisco’s Frameline Film Festival turns the ripe old age of 40. That makes it the longest running LGBTQ film festival, and a grandmother to over 100 similar events around the world, most of which have also been around for a few decades. Canada’s three primary examples are also aging — Montreal’s Image+Nation will be 29 this year, Vancouver’s Queer Film Festival will celebrate 28 come August, and Toronto’s Inside Out — the country’s largest LGBTQ film festival — is turning 26 this Thursday. But what do these festivals represent in the wake of all the progress that has been made since they began?

Cut to 2016. In Canada, LGBTQ people have come very far in three decades, winning recognition of our legal rights from marriage and adoption to freedom from discrimination. We have access to LGBTQ-themed film and television in ways we could never have imagined in 1989, with pretty much anything available via a few clicks on our computers. Which begs the question, do film festivals created out of such urgency at their origins still matter to the relatively privileged people they represent today?

Next month, San Francisco’s Frameline Film Festival turns the ripe old age of 40. That makes it the longest running LGBTQ film festival, and a grandmother to over 100 similar events around the world, most of which have also been around for a few decades. Canada’s three primary examples are also aging — Montreal’s Image+Nation will be 29 this year, Vancouver’s Queer Film Festival will celebrate 28 come August, and Toronto’s Inside Out — the country’s largest LGBTQ film festival — is turning 26 this Thursday. But what do these festivals represent in the wake of all the progress that has been made since they began?

The three noted Canadian film fests were products of the late 1980s and early 1990s, a time when LGBTQ people were coming together to fight for the lives of those affected by HIV/AIDS — a disease that governments in Canada and other nations were tragically ineffective at fighting. LGBT film festivals (or gay and lesbian film festivals, which they were pretty much exclusively considered at the time) were born out of necessity, meeting a need for safe and concentrated spaces to share work whose existence countered the rampant discrimination being faced on every corner.

Cut to 2016. In Canada, LGBTQ people have come very far in three decades, winning recognition of our legal rights from marriage and adoption to freedom from discrimination. We have access to LGBTQ-themed film and television in ways we could never have imagined in 1989, with pretty much anything available via a few clicks on our computers. Which begs the question, do film festivals created out of such urgency at their origins still matter to the relatively privileged people they represent today?

“Inside Out offers a different kind of pride celebration where they can come together, watch their stories on screen, interact with the filmmakers and stars, do business, and maybe even get down to business if all goes well after a heated Q&A.”

Despite the incredible advancements for LGBTQ people in society as a whole, it’s not as though your local cinema has extensive options for LGBTQ audiences eager to see themselves on screen. On the contrary, the only film with a lead character who identified as LGBTQ to receive a wide release in the last decade was, of all things, Sacha Baron Cohen’s problematic mockumentary Bruno. LGBTQ film festivals matter because they bring to audiences across the country the films that would otherwise be pushed out of the multiplex by $200-million superhero sequels.

More importantly, though, these festivals encourage links rather than divisions between the communities represented under the increasingly divisive LGBTQ umbrella (or LGBTQQIP2SAA if we’re really getting inclusive). Inside Out, for example, has a wide range of programming representing the dozens of different identities —whose degree of privilege in our society varies greatly — that are often lumped together elsewhere under various acronyms.

Read the full article.
Happy Pride Month!

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