| DVD/VHS
Camp
Captivating and moving performances steal the
show in the “funny, touching, and vital”
(Rolling Stone) musical comedy Camp. Featuring
a young cast who were selected from a nationwide
talent search, Camp was shot at the real-life
drama camp Stagedoor Manor, whose alumni include
Natalie Portman, Mandy Moore, and Robert Downey
Jr. Nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the
2003 Sundance Film Festival, this exuberant and
hilarious film follows the unique interactions
of young aspiring performers at the well-known
drama camp. The New York Times said, “A
delirious musical-comedy romp. You have to love
it!” • The Camp DVD features deleted
and extended scenes, “The Making of Camp”
featurette, a live cast performance of “How
Shall I See You Through My Tears,” a soundtrack
spot, and the original theatrical trailer. •
Available from MGM Home Entertainment (www.mgmhomevideo.com).
—Troy Carrington
Blue Gate Crossing
The second film from acclaimed Taiwanese writer
and director Chih-Yen Lee (The Lonely Hearts Club),
Blue Gate Crossing is the story of the tomboyish
and sometimes serious Meng Kerou, whose schoolgirl
silliness unleashes itself when she’s with
her close girlfriend Lin Yuezhen. Meng, however,
has the hots for Zhang Shihao, the sexy boy on
the swim team. One evening when Zhang sneaks into
the pool to do laps, he confronts Meng who tells
him that her friend likes him. He thinks “the
friend” is imaginary and that Meng is actually
coming on to him. Little does he realize she actually
has increasing desires on her own best friend.
• “Disarming performances,”
wrote the Village Voice. “Discreetly handled,”
said the New York Post, while The New York Times
noted the film is successful because “it
depends on the truthfulness of its performances
to carry it.” • Available from Strand
Releasing (www.strandreleasing.com). —Suzie
Lynde
Gone, but Not Forgotten
When director/producer Michael D. Akers was growing
up in the 1980s in rural Pennsylvania, Queer Cinema
generally meant an edgy movie about AIDS or coming
out. A gay love story during that time usually
involved a gay guy falling for a straight guy
he could never have. For his first movie, Akers
wanted to make something that he would have wanted
to see as a kid in Amish country: a squishy gay
love story where the boy gets the boy—not
to ruin the ending for you. Fourteen film festivals
and numerous applauding, sold-out audiences later,
it the filmmaker’s reward to know that a
lot of gay people feel the same way. • It’s
wonderful to know that it doesn’t require
Hollywood production values to tell a simple love
story. Akers’ credit card-size budget afforded
him a first-time cast and crew—six actors,
six crew. • Imagine his surprise when in
only two months, Gone, but Not Forgotten became
one of TLA Video’s top-selling movies of
2003. Akers says, “I hope you enjoy my ‘little
move that could’ for all it has to offer:
a drama that doesn’t take itself too seriously—a
sweet love story about two hot guys who, in this
crazy upside-down world, find each other one dark
night, on the side of a mountain, in the middle
of a rainstorm.” • From TLA Video
(www.tlavideo.com). More info: www.gonebutnotforgotten-themovie.com.
—TC
Porn Theatre
In Porn Theatre, writer/director Jacques Nolot
has created an intimate world of sex and peril,
explicitness and heartlessness, and humor and
melancholy. The theater attracts men (and a few
women) of all kinds, of varying races, ages, and
appearance—all on the lookout for hopeful
cruising and brief encounters, though any sort
of human interaction is usually welcomed. The
audience includes transvestites, gay men, and
straight men, all of whom can free their frustrations
and their impulses. There are also lonely and
older people with their own fantasies. The ensemble
drama that is Porn Theatre shrewdly and boldly
shows how the patrons and employees interact,
through both conversation and sex. An illuminating
and nonjudgmental quest for affection and anonymous
sex, Porn Theatre is a fascinating peek at the
sexual comings and goings at an adult movie house
in Paris. • The film was named by the Los
Angeles Times, News-Times newspapers, the New
York Press, and the New York Blade as one the
best films of 2003. • From Strand Releasing
Home Video (www.strandreleasing.com). —TC
Somewhere in the City
Somewhere in the City deftly threads the overlapping
stories of six eccentric residents of a funky
Lower Eastside building in New York City. These
cramped apartments can barely contain the big
dreams of their inhabitants: Betty (Sandra Bernhard)
is a self-absorbed and self-appointed “food
therapist,” desperately seeking the right
guy. Yet she acts as romantic coach to Lu Lu (Bai
Ling), a young Chinese exchange student looking
for a green-card marriage. Betty undertakes the
transformation of Lu Lu from studious scholar
to urban club kid. There’s also Marta (Ornella
Muti), who endures the twice-daily caresses of
the overweight super of the tenement-like apartments,
but dreams of running away with Frankie (Robert
John Burke), the dashing but incompetent crook
who lives upstairs. Down the hall is poor Graham
(Peter Stormare), the gifted Shakespearean actor
who also dreams of finding Mr. Right and his big
break while subsisting on demeaning commercial
work. Of course, all these hopes and dreams will
prove irrelevant if the revolution being planned
in the basement by Che (Paul Anthony Stewart)
succeeds. Che endures calls from his Park Avenue
mom, and succumbs to the seduction of Lu Lu, all
while plotting to kidnap former Mayor Ed Koch
(played by “Hizzoner” himself). •
From First Run Features (www.firstrunfeatures.com).
—SL
Unshackled
Unshackled is based on the best-selling novel
Twice Pardoned by Harold Morris. It’s the
real-life story of Morris (Burgess Jenkins, Remember
the Titans), a white sharecropper’s son
from South Carolina, and Marcus “Doc”
Odomes (James Black, Love and a Bullet, Godzilla),
a black man raised by his mother in the inner
city of New York. Both were poisoned by racism
and sentenced to life in the Georgia State Penitentiary.
Their lives collide when the prison is forced
to integrate under federal mandate . . . it was
the last prison in America to do so. After a violent
riot, the warden threw Morris and Odomes into
an eight-by-ten cell, and the door was slammed
shut. • The film was written by Morris and
stars Stacey Keach and Morgan Fairchild. •
From MTI Home Video (www.mtivideo.com). —TC
Other Voices, Other Rooms
Thirteen-year-old Joel Sansom has been summoned
to the deep South to meet the father he has not
seen since he was a baby. Upon his arrival in
town, he meets a variety of eccentrics including
Amy Scully, the mistress of the house, and Randolph,
her debauched and unpredictable cousin, but Joel’s
father is nowhere to be found. It is not until
he discovers a man lying paralyzed in the forgotten
attic of the crumbling mansion that Joel begins
to unravel the mysterious secrets that surround
him. • Other Voices, Other Rooms is based
on the semi-autobiographical novel by Truman Capote.
• From Culture Q Connection (www.cultureqconnection.com).
—SL
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