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2008 San Francisco Lesbian and Gay Film Festival - Docs - Week One

David Lamble



Post date:
06/13/08- 00:00:00 AM
Location:
San Francisco Bay Area

Documentaries have replaced domestically produced feature length fiction films as the staple of this year's festival.

 

Punch Like A Girl/A Ring of Their Own: The growing sport of female boxing gets a long overdue spotlight in two flashy docs that demonstrate that gals with ring moxie can still muster a surprising amount of feminist worthy sisterhood. Maya Gallus and Justine Pimlott's focus on the Canadian amateur clubs springing up around Toronto, Punch Like a Girl, alternates the efforts of Savoy "Kapow" Howe to establish her city's first all-female boxing gym with several impressive bouts as Howe, who moonlights as a teacher, explains why this ancient sport, long mythologized as a path out of the ghetto for generations of hungry men, has now become a platform for female empowerment. Howe confesses her personal inability to muster a "killer instinct" in the ring, an instinct vigorously demonstrated by Mary Bennett, an Asian Canadian professional nurse who boasts of using her knowledge of human anatomy to deliver disabling knockout punches to the kidneys of her female opponents, including Howe.

Michael Penland's A Ring of Their Own shows a happily coupled lesbian duo – Anne-Marie Saccurato and Angel Bovee – helping each other survive in the financially challenging wild west of women's pro boxing. The couple describe how much they depend on each other to stay focused in a sport where there are few paydays and where scheduled bouts may vanish like deer in the forest if an opponent gets wind of your prowess. The arc of the film follows Saccurato's preparation for her biggest fight: a ten round brawl against a more experienced Canadian. The film ends on an exciting display of female pugilistic fireworks as we meet some articulate and very sexy role models for a generation of young women truly stretching their boundaries. (Roxie/6-24)

 

Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon: Jeffrey Schwarz's immensely entertaining doc tells the wildly improbable tale of a little blonde boy who grew up to be a male porn star in order to please his Hollywood producer daddy. It's the story of little Jack Stillman, whose Beverly Hills family had shed its Jewish roots to become good media savvy Episcopalians. Everything in his world pushed a kid, who thought he was skinny with an odd shaped head, to be something he wasn't. Getting an early taste of the spotlight as a TV child sidekick, young Jack desperately tried to succeed in show business, and finally did, but only by slipping almost accidentally into the burgeoning male erotic film business. Porn directors didn't care a wit about his line readings, but they loved that he could cum over and over without a fluffer. Adopting the screen name "Wrangler," swiping it literally off a belt buckle, the young stud became an erotic star when the movies were still shot on film and their makers still cared about art. Schwarz has some revealing insights about Wrangler from pioneering director Joe Gage, whose wildly popular Kansas City Trucking Co. trilogy facilitated the now ubiquitous macho male porn image.

Members of Wrangler's celebrity fan club (including playwright Robert Patrick) explain why it was so important in the early 70's to have a non-sissy image to worship. The films led to personal appearances  --where Wrangler surprised his horny fans with a comedy act that featured a disarming, self-deprecating wit – product tie-ins: his enormous cock becomes a plastic bedroom accessory – and finally a bond with veteran singer Margaret Whiting that, to everybody's amazement, leads to wedding bells. (Victoria/6-21)

 

Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delaney, Gentleman:

"I think of myself as the world's most ordinary, dull, boring black faggot." After watching Fred Barney Taylor's sophisticated reconstruction of the life of popular queer science fiction novelist Samuel R. Delaney I very much doubt that the boring is word to describe this ultimate New Yorker's sixty-four-years and counting. Actually counting is an apt word since Delaney (son of a successful Harlem funeral parlor owner) makes a startling use of numbers: in the first act he describes the prodigious amounts of anonymous sex he was having as a young closeted writer – Delaney (who seems to have had sex on the brain even more than Jack Wrangler) estimates that he's had fifty thousand male contacts, and that he still logs in a hundred or more a year: he slyly notes that young men have a thing for pudgy seniors with Santa style beards.

Polymath is broken up into digressive chapters in which Delaney uses his fiction as a jumping off point for his distinct philosophy. Filmmaker Taylor makes good use of some amazing home movie footage of the younger Delaney. Ultimately this is a soulful man whose chronicle climaxes with a tearful moment on a New York commuter train as he explains to his traveling companions why it was so important for him to have his students speak up in class. (Roxie/6-20)    

 

Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell: At some point in Matt Wolf's loving essay devoted to the most talented musician/composer you've probably never heard of, a friend describes the late genius as an ahead of his time synthesizer of serious experimental tunes and disco dance beats, as the inventor of his own genre: "Buddhist bubblegum."

The son of sober Iowan parents, who had no idea he was gay, a troubled, acne prone musical prodigy, Arthur Russell (his Christian name was Charles but he hated the dismissive nickname "Chuck") would flee the cornfields after graduation from high school, wind up in a San Francisco spiritual commune where he would buddy up with Allen Ginsberg, later flee to the bohemian and sexually charged badlands of lower Manhattan where he would blaze a serendipitous musical trail between Philip Glass and Studio 54. His career cut short by AIDS in 1992, Russell's hundreds of compositions, such as Is It All Over My Face, have captured a new generation of Internet fans. (Roxie-6-21)