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Big Gay Picture Show

Taking a look at the world of film through gay eyes - news, reviews, trailers, gay film, queer cinema and more

Taking a look at the world of film through gay eyes - news, reviews, trailers, gay film, queer cinema & more

Beijing Queer Film Festival Pulled Off Without Government Intervention For The First Time

July 1, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

beijing-queer-film-festivalThe Beijing Queer Film Festival has had a troubled history, but the sixth festival has reportedly gone off smoothly for the first time in its history, with 28 films from five countries shown.

As reported by Gay Star News, the ‘first festival in 2001 was shut down by government officials, the second edition was forced to move from Peking University to the 798 art district and the authorities forced organizers to cancel the fifth festival in 2011.’

However this time they put in place ways to prevent government intervention, such as only announcing venues at the last minute, as well as using places such as the French and Dutch Embassies and the American Center, which the Chinese authorities have less control over. There was also little publicity, with events billed as separate film screenings rather than a festival.

Indeed, it wasn’t until after the festival had ended that it was officially revealed that there had been a festival at all! It ran from June 19th to 23rd.

‘Through word-of-mouth, the festival gathered a full house at nearly all of its screenings, and only the occasional attendee was surprised to notice that the Beijing Queer Film Festival was behind the different queer film activities,’ said a statement from the festival organisers.

As well as the screenings, a scholarship program, started in 2011, awarded funding for 25 people from less-developed parts of China to attend. ‘They gladly embraced the opportunity to watch and discuss queer-themed films, an unknown luxury in their respective hometowns,’ said the organisers.

At the end of the event, the chairs for the next Festival in 2015 were announced as Queer Comrades Wei Xiaogang and Stijn Deklerck.

‘A lot can change within two years,’ said Wei. ‘The only thing that’s certain is that we need to continue to fight to obtain greater freedom of expression.’

While homosexuality is becoming more accepted in China, it still faces a lot of challenges and oppression. While gay conduct isn’t illegal in the country, the authorities still view it as suspicion, especially when gay people want to gather, as they fear it could lead to organised dissent.

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Alec Baldwin Apologises For Anti-Gay Language In Twitter Rant

June 29, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

alec-baldwinAlec Baldwin has a temper. For many years he’s been prone to go overboard when he gets angry, whether it’s screaming at his daughter that she’s a ‘thoughtless little pig’, tweeting rude things about a flight attendant who asked him to switch off his phone, or saying less than complimentary things about ex-wife Kim Basinger during a lengthy and bitter custody row.

Now he’s embroiled in more controversy over a twitter rant, which ultimately led to him delete his account on the social networking site. Alec took umbrage at Daily Mail reporter George Stark suggesting Baldwin’s wife had been tweeting during James Gandolfini’s funeral.

Using an unpleasant, homophobic tone, he tweeted of the gay journalist, ‘I want all of my followers and beyond to straighten out this little bitch, George Stark’… ‘I’m gonna find you, George Stark, you toxic little queen, and I’m gonna fuck…you…up.’ He then added, ‘I’d put my foot up your fucking ass, George Stark, but I’m sure you’d dig it too much.’

Then he deleted his account.

Initially Alec and his people went into defence mode, with his publicist saying, “It is disgraceful that this reporter manufactured a story and never called for comment or explanation — especially when it needlessly diverted attention away from a day to honor the memory of a beloved figure like Mr Gandolfini.”

Baldwin himself then talked to TheGothamist with a weak, equivocating, ‘words don’t mean to me what they mean to everyone else’ response. He said, “The idea of me calling this guy a ‘queen’ and that being something that people thought is homophobic, a queen to me has a different meaning. It’s somebody who’s just above. It doesn’t have any necessarily sexual connotations. To me a queen – I know women that act queeny, I know men that are straight that act queeny, and I know gay men that act queeny. It doesn’t have to be a definite sexual connotation, or a homophobic connotation. To me those are people who think the rules don’t apply to them. This guy could blatantly lie, I mean blatantly lie about my wife on the internet and there are just no rules that apply to him, but that’s outrageous to me.”

GLAAD then reached out to Baldwin for an explanation of the Twitter rant, and the actor has now released a statement, which starts off sounding like he’s trying to make more excuses, but gets slightly better as it goes on

He says: “My ill-advised attack on George Stark of the Daily Mail had absolutely nothing to do with issues of anyone’s sexual orientation. My anger was directed at Mr. Stark for blatantly lying and disseminating libelous information about my wife and her conduct at our friend’s funeral service. As someone who fights against homophobia, I apologize

“I have worked, periodically, with numerous marriage equality organizations, especially over the past couple of years, to achieve the very rights that gay couples are earning by recent court decisions.

“I would not advocate violence against someone for being gay and I hope that my friends at GLAAD and the gay community and understand that my attack on Mr. Stark in no way was the result of homophobia.”

GLAAD’s Vice President of Communications Rich Ferraro responded, “Alec Baldwin is making it clear that the intent behind his tweets does not excuse his language, especially at a time when there were 11 incidents of violence against gay men in New York City just last month… As we all work to end such senseless acts of violence, allies like Baldwin are right to use these moments to reinforce support for the community and LGBT equality.”

Some are less convinced than GLAAD though, suggesting that that fact he publicly supports gay rights doesn’t excuse the homophobic tone and violence of what he said. For example, journalist Andrew Sullivan responded to the rant by saying, “This is not just hate speech; it’s a specific call for other people to physically attack a gay man. It’s a call to violence against a specific person, which, last time I checked, was a crime. He’s a pro-gay liberal, so he may get a pass for this. He shouldn’t.”

Indeed, some have suggested a double standard, as if he’d Tweeted something racist rather than homophobic, he’d have become a pariah no matter what his intent. At the moment though – and as with Baldwin’s earlier rants – it doesn’t look like it’ll affect his career too much.

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Mark Ruffalo Tweets First Official Pic From Ryan Murphy’s AIDS Drama The Normal Heart

June 29, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

mark-ruffalo-taylor-kitsch-normal-heart
HBO is continuing its support for all things gay (following Behind The Candelabra and commissioning a new Frisco set gay-themed series) with The Normal Heart, which Glee creator Ryan Murphy has been trying to get off the ground for a few years, but which only came to fruition when the cable channel put up the money.

The film version of Larry Kramer’s acclaimed AIDS play is now in production in New York, and while there have been quite a few unofficial snaps from the set floating around the Internet, it’s Mark Ruffalo who’s given us our first proper look at the movie. He tweeted it in reaction to the Supreme Court rulings, saying, ‘Everybody on set of “The Normal Heart” is celebrating this historic day. #DOMA. THANK YOU LARRY KRAMER’

The image shows Ruffalo alongside Taylor Kitsch, who will be joined by the likes of Julia Roberts, Matt Bomer, Jim Parsons, Jonathan Groff for the movie.

Ruffalo is taking on the lead role of Ned Weeks, who in the early 80s is one of the first people to raise an alarm about the new disease that initially was known as ‘Gay Cancer’, but later became HIV/AIDS. Big Bang Theory star Jim Parsons will be gay activist Tommy Boatwright, a role he previously took in a 2011 Broadway revival of the play.

Julia Roberts is Emma Brookner, a wheelchair bound doctor who is the only one of her peers in New York taking AIDS seriously. Matthew Bomer is set for Felix Turner, a gay fashion journalist who becomes Ned’s lover. Groff is playing an early victim of the disease called Craig, whose boyfriend, Taylor Kitsch, starts off as a closeted investment banker but eventually becomes an AIDS activist.

Larry Kramer’s play is considered one of the most important reactions to the early AIDS epidemic, written by someone who has on the front lines of the fight, such as co-founding Gay Men’s Health Crisis and ACT UP. He later wrote a follow-up, The Destiny Of Me.

The film will air on HBO early next year.

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Les Invisibles Trailer – Inside the lives of elderly LGBT people

June 28, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment


It’s a common joke that in the youth-obsessed world of all thing gay, you cease to exist when you reach 30. But what happens when you’re in your 60s or 70s and you’re gay?

That’s the subject of Sébastien Lifshitz (best known for Presque Rien) award-winning documentary Les Invisibles, which reaches UK cinemas on July 12th.

It follows ‘Eleven men and women born between the wars. Seemingly they have nothing in common except their homosexuality and growing up in a less open, more intolerant society. Now in their 60s and 70s, they tell their personal stories, either shared or alone, revealing often pioneering lives in urban and rural environments through seven decades of experience.’

The film offers intimate portraits of gay and lesbian life from an older generation who often remain invisible and unheard.  They recount with refreshing honesty and humour their passions and politics, their sexual encounters and loving relationships, their self doubts and liberating experiences.

Take a look at the trailer above. [Read more…]

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Was Hollywood Key To The Supreme Court Gay Rights Victories?

June 27, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Rob-ReinerCelebrities like to support causes, but there’s a general sense that while they some give money, turn up and have their picture taken and say nice things on Twitter, the people of Hollywood don’t really make much difference when it comes to social issues. However that may not have been true with yesterday’s US Supreme Court decisions on DOMA and Prop. 8, where various Hollywood figures were central to the fight.

Back in 2008 a court decision that not allowing gay people to marry was unconstitutional suddenly made same sex marriage legal in California. However a ballot measure in the November elections – Proposition 8 – sought to end that by adding an amendment to the State Constitution saying ‘only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California’. It passed with 52.24% of the vote, ending same sex marriage and leaving the thousands who’d already married in a legal limbo.

However campaigners weren’t going to take this lying down. After the measure passed, various campaigners, including director Rob Reiner (This Is Spinal Tap, When Harry Met Sally), met at the Hollywood setting of the Polo Lounge to discuss mounting a legal challenge to Prop 8, arguing that irrespective of an individual state’s constitution, the overall US Constitution guarantees equal protection under the law.

To do that they needed money, and a large part of the seed cash for the legal battle came from David Geffen (the ‘G’ of Dreamworks SKG) and JJ Abrams (Star Trek Into Darkness). Reiner and political strategist Chad Griffin then founded American Foundation for Equal Rights (AFER) to fight the battle.

AFER has since attracted other Hollywood names, such as Milk screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, who joined its board. He also wrote the play ‘8’, about the trial to overturn Prop 8, which saw the likes of Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Martin Sheen, and Kevin Bacon appearing in a staged reading last year, in order to raise money for the fight.

There was another Hollywood figure who was perhaps even more key to the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the Prop 8 case and that’s Arnold Schwarzenegger. As Governor Of California – and a Republican Governor at that – he took the decision that his administration would not defend the Proposition in court (it would normally be the Attorney General or the Governor who’d be expected to officially defend it). In fact the case that ended up at the Supreme Court was officially known as Perry Vs. Schwarzenegger when it was first filed, but Arnie conceded that Prop. 8 was not constitutional and so refused to fight for it in court.

arnold-schwarzenegger2As a result of Schwarzenegger and his successor Jerry Brown’s decision not to defend the case, the coalition of anti-gay marriage groups behind the original attempts to get Prop. 8 on the ballot got together to defend it. After a huge amount of legal manoeuvring, most of which the Prop 8. proponents lost, the case ended up at the highest court in the US.

The Supreme Court then decided they could not look at the case because those anti-gay marriage groups did not have legal standing to mount the case (as they could not prove they’d been harmed), which essentially meant that the original District Court ruling that Prop 8 is unconstitutional now stands. As a result, same sex marriages should now resume in California soon.

The fact is, if Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jerry Brown had decided to defend the measure in the first place, this question of who had the right to defend Prop. 8 would have never come up. It would also have meant the arguments for the Proposition would have been a lot stronger (many have criticised the anti-gay marriage side’s shoddy lawyering) and the outcome could well have been different.

Many other celebs did their bit too, such as Ellen Degeneres submitting a friend of the court brief to the Supreme Court and Clint Eastwood signing his name to a list of prominent Republicans who support gay marriage.

Of course many, many other people were involved in the fight too, but this really is a case where the people of Hollywood made a difference and that without the likes of Rob Reiner and Arnold Schwarzenegger, there might have been a different outcome yesterday. Tinsel Town certainly didn’t win single-handedly, but it definitely helped.

Rob Reiner also said a few months ago that he’s hoping to direct a film version of 8, which he hopes will help with the equal marriage fight in the rest of the US – so perhaps Hollywood influence in this battle isn’t over yet.

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Celebs React To US Supreme Court Gay Rights Rulings With Twitter Happiness

June 27, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

ellen-degeneres-portia-de-rossiWith the US Supreme Court striking down the Defense Of Marriage Act and refusing to hear Prop 8, a lot of gay and LGBT-friendly celebrities were very happy yesterday. We already reported that it caused Kristen Bell to propose to Dax Shepard on Twitter. However there were plenty of others expressed their happiness on Twitter. Here’s a selection of their tweets.

Thank u2 #SCOTUS! This bday gift far surpasses the Hungry Hippos game I got when I was 7 years old. It truly is the best day ever. #Love4All
– Sean Hayes (@TheSeanHayes)

a great day to be gay! so much gratitude to all the people who fought so hard for this historic milestone. equality forever.
– Zachary Quinto (@ZacharyQuinto)

Prop 8 was dismissed?!? Huzzah! Christmas comes six months early this year! (Less one day…)
– Neil Patrick Harris (@ActuallyNPH)

It’s a supremely wonderful day for equality. Prop 8 is over, and so is DOMA. Congratulations everyone. And I mean everyone.
– Ellen Degeneres (who married in the four-month window when gay marriage was previously legal in California) (@TheEllenShow)

Today is a good day. A great day. A historic day. So proud of our country. #love&equalityforall
— Debra Messing (@DebraMessing)

DOMA’s ruling is historic and a thrilling milestone in our American history. #SCOTUS. #HappyGayPride. #LoveIsLoveIsLove
— Cheyenne Jackson (@cheyennejackson)

A good day for equality indeed! Now come on California…don’t embarrass me.
— Alison Brie (@alisonbrie)

First Wendy, now DOMA gets the boot! Sometimes things are really great.
— Lena Dunham (@lenadunham)

‘Any straight person complaining about the Supreme Court striking down DOMA should be forced to hire a heterosexual wedding planner.’
– Joan River (@Joan_Rivers)

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Roland Emmerich Promises Gay Character For Independence Day 2

June 27, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

roland-emmerichRoland Emmerich, director of The Day After Tomorrow, 2012 and Godzilla hasn’t generally run around screaming about his sexuality at the top of his lungs. However he is gay, and indeed has said in recent years he’s been getting more involved in LGBT causes, such as the Gay & Lesbian Centre in Los Angeles.

Now he’s suggesting that he wants to bring a gay character into Independence Day 2, the planned sequel to his 1996 hit movie. Talking to the Huffington Post, he was asked if he would consider including gay rights in the storyline of one of his films.

He said, “Actually in the next Independence Day there is a gay character.” However when pressed for more info, he declined to comment. It’s safe to say though that the gay character won’t be the lead, as Hollywood is still rather afraid of that in its big budget movies.

It’s not the only gay theme Emmerich is thinking of bringing into one of his films, as he’s also planning a movie about the Stonewall riots, but that’s unlikely to come until after Independence Day 2, which is due out in 2015.

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DIRECTORS: Roland Emmerich  FILMS: Independence Day: Resurgence  

Dax Shepard And Kristen Bell Celebrate The End Of DOMA With Twitter Proposal

June 27, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Kristen-Bell-and-Dax-Shepard
There was a lot to cheer yesterday when the US Supreme Court struck down key parts of DOMA (the Defense Of Marriage Act), meaning that the United States Federal Goverment could no longer deny  benefits to same sex couple who were legally married. They also refused to hear a case involving Prop 8, the ordinance that banned equal marriage in California, meaning that same sex weddings are likely to begin there again soon.

One couple who were celebrating were Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell, who’ve long been staunch supporters of gay marriage and vowed not to marry themselves until that right was also extended to gay couples.

After the rulings, Bell tweeted, ‘.@daxshepard1 will you marry me? Xo #marriageequality #loveislove’

While gay marriage still isn’t legal throughout the US, Bell obviously feels the SCOTUS decisions are strong enough that she can now marry Shepard with a clear conscience, especially now that the way has been cleared for gay people in California to marry.

Indeed, many now see equal marriage as somewhat of an inevitability throughout the US. There are still numerous obstacles to that, not least that while 13 states allow same sex marriage, there are more than that which specifically proscribe it, often within their individual constitutions. That’s not a  complete block, as some states that once had bans (such as Connecticut) now allow same sex marriage, while others that specifically ban same sex marriage are on the road to overturning that, by retaining a ban on the word marriage but providing unions with rights similar to marriage.

Even Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who has long been the Court’s most unpleasant hater of all things gay has said he thinks equal marriage in the US is now inevitably, no matter how much he personally dislikes that.

And with Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell now likely to marry, will Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie now follow suit? They previously said they were waiting for equal marriage but that was getting more difficult to hold to. Perhaps now they’ll decide the time is right.

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ACTORS: Dax Shepard, Kristen Bell  

Milk Screenwriter Dustin Lance Black Shares Why The Equal Marriage Fight Is So Personal For Him

June 26, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

dustin-lance-blackDustin Lance Black won an Oscar for writing Milk, but in the last couple of years he’s become almost as well known as an activist, fighting against Prop. 8, which sought to ban gay marriage in California.

He helped to co-found the American Foundation for Equal Rights (AFER) in order to challenge Proposition 8 in federal court, and he even wrote 8, a play showing what happened when the Californian courts struck Prop 8 down.

As the US awaits the Supreme Court decision as to whether they’ll allow that Californian court’s decision to stand, which is expected to come today, Black has been writing on Huffington Post about why the fight is so personal for him.

He sees it as a fight for his brother, who came out to him during the making of Milk, and who tragically died on cancer. Black writes, ‘My big brother is with me still in this fight. I know it. And regardless of the decision tomorrow, I know that together we will soon be equal in all matters governed by civil law in all 50 states. Because this is personal. I know we as a people will not stop fighting until we live in a nation where we no longer leave a single one of our brothers or sisters behind, no matter whom they love or what state they call home.

‘For so many of us, for so many reasons and for so long now, tomorrow is, was and has always been about family… those we’ve loved, those we’ve lost, those we were born to, the families we’ve built and the families we still dream of building.

‘And for me, tomorrow is about my big brother.’

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Curzon & Peccadillo Pictures Team For Queerest Tales Ever Told Online Film Season

June 25, 2013 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment


It’s been announced that Curzon Home Cinema has partnered with independent UK film distributor of LGBT and art-house titles, Peccadillo Pictures, to bring an exclusive season of feature and short films, solely running on the online platform from Friday June 28th to Monday July 29th, titled ‘The Queerest Tales Ever Told’.

The season is to mark the UK cinema release of Travis Mathews’ (Interior. Leather Bar) debut feature film, I Want Your Love, which is released in cinemas Friday June 28th, including shows at the brand’s own cinema site, Curzon Soho.

This is the first time the video on demand platform have partnered with a film distributor in the UK for an exclusive film season. The season entitles customers to purchase one of eight feature films from the Peccadillo Pictures catalogue, which also entitles the consumer to a free short film with every feature title purchased, taken from the distributor’s popular short film series; Boys On Film and Here Come The Girls.

Alternatively, members can buy a season pass giving them access to all eight feature films and eight shorts, plus Peccadillo’s latest cinema title, I Want Your Love, for just £20, which they will be allowed to watch anywhere and anytime, for the extended period of one month.

Titles include award winning feature films such as Tomboy, North Sea Texas and Keep The Lights On, along with eclectic and ground-breaking short films from around the world.

It’s a great way to catch up on some of the best in LGBT cinema, offering you an entire season featuring some truly great films.

Details of the season and exclusive competitions will be announced on: http://www.curzoncinemas.com/queeresttales/

Full cinema listings for I Want Your Love can be found by clicking here. [Read more…]

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