Reeling: The Chicago LGBTQ+ International Film Festival has set its full slate of programming for 2021, opening September 23, 2021 at the Music Box Theatre and running September 24-30, 2021 at the Landmark Century Centre Cinemas and virtually from September 27-October 7, 2021. Boasting 42 shows including 33 feature films and 9 short film programs, this year’s festival includes films from more than 15 countries including Israel, Turkey, Iran, Australia, Italy, Romania, and Chile. Now in its 39th year, Reeling is the second-oldest LGBTQ+ film festival in the world and a beloved Chicago cultural institution.
“Cinema is supposed to be communal, and after more than a year of social distancing and isolation it’s never been more important to experience independent film with one another,” said Reeling Film Festival founder and executive director of Chicago Filmmakers Brenda Webb. “Filmmakers interpret the world around them and bring us new perspectives and new ideas with stories of love and loss, bravery and struggle, humor and revelation–the tapestry of the human experience. Reeling’s 39th slate of films celebrates and embrace this crucial piece of our shared existence.”
Opening night features Firebird, UK director Peeter Rebane’s epic story of forbidden queer love set against the backdrop of the 1970s Cold War in Estonia when two military men in the Soviet Air Force find their clandestine, illegal affair threatens their careers and their lives. Opening night takes place on Thursday, September 23rd at the Music Box Theatre.
Legendary drag performer Charles Busch stars in Reeling’s closing night feature, the Midwest premiere of his tribute to movie mania, The Sixth Reel. The film also stars Margaret Cho, Julie Halston, Tim Daly, and Broadway legend Andre DeShields.
Other festival highlights include Jump, Darling, featuring Cloris Leachman in one of her last roles, playing the sardonic grandmother of a down on his luck drag queen; Sweetheart, starring newcomer Nell Barlow as a salty teenager dragged on a family vacation to a tacky seaside holiday park seemingly stuck in a bygone era; Saint-Narcisse, outrageous queer filmmaker Bruce LaBruce’s love letter to psychosexual thrillers of the 70’s; and Potato Dreams of America, Wes Hurley’s whimsical autobiographical fantasia about his journey to America with his mother, who was a mail order bride from the Soviet Union.
This year’s Reeling features four U.S. premieres, including the world premiere of Baja Come Down, following two women as they travel from Los Angeles to Mexico in a last-ditch effort to save their relationship, starring Caitlin Michael Riley and Michelle Ortiz. Italian dramedy Mascarpone follows 30-year-old twink Antonio who, after being dumped by his husband, reinvents himself as a baker surrounded by delectable Italian men and mouth-watering baked treats. In Down In Paris, gay filmmaker Richard experiences a crippling crisis of confidence during his latest shoot, and walks off the set to wander Paris in search of the inspiration to continue. Documentary feature Marry Me However explores the lives of orthodox Jewish LGBTQ men and women who choose heterosexual spouses to raise a heteronormative family, denying their own identities to obey the rules of their society.
Narrative films centering transgender stories include the award-winning Iranian film At The End Of Evin, which tells the suspenseful story of a protagonist seeking gender reassignment surgery who is entrapped in an elaborate plot of identity exchange. Rising trans actress Mya Bollaers is the titular heroine in Lola, about a young transgender woman who must put her gender re-assignment surgery on hold when her mother dies and finds herself on an emotional road trip with her estranged father. Trans director Mari Walker’s directorial debut, See You Then, brings together two former lovers whose paths have gone in very different directions for a night of reckoning about their past.
Documentary program highlights include Being Bebe, the awe-inspiring story of BeBe Zahara Benet, winner of the first season of Rupaul’s Drag Race: Boulevard! A Hollywood Story, about Gloria Swanson’s attempt to turn Sunset Boulevard into a musical; Invisible: Gay Women In Southern Music, which heralds the unsung lesbian songwriters behind the hits of many of country music’s biggest stars; and Reeling Documentary Centerpiece North By Current, in which trans filmmaker Angelo Madsen Minax’s returns to his rural Michigan family home following the death of his young niece.
Other documentary subjects include pioneering queer comic book cartoonists (No Straight Lines: The Rise Of Queer Comics); Microsoft’s Ric Weiland, who became one of America’s greatest philanthropists (Yes I Am–The Ric Weiland Story, narrated by Zachary Quinto); the aging drag queens who have been in the forefront of the movement for gay rights in Cuba (Queens Of The Revolution); celebrated Chilean playwright Ivan Ojeda whose immigration to the US led to becoming a sex worker in New York City (The Journey Of Monalisa); and the story of two people whose deaths led to the conviction of influential businessman Ed Buck (Gemmel & Tim).
Reeling presents nine Shorts Programs featuring 54 short films, organized in themes including Revolutions of the Heart: Sapphic Shorts; Getting Familiar: Gay Shorts; Seeking Connection; Keep Going: Stories of Queer Resilience; Global Trans Shorts; and Intimacies.
Harvey Weinstein indicted on additional sex crimes charges ahead of New York retrial
Disgraced ex-movie mogul Harvey Weinstein has been indicted on additional sex crimes charges in New York ahead of a retrial in his landmark #MeToo case, Manhattan prosecutors said at a court hearing Thursday. The indictment will remain under seal until Weinstein is arraigned on the new charges, which could happen as early as Sept. 18. Assistant District Attorney Nicole Blumberg disclosed in court that the indictment charges "Mr. Weinstein with additional crimes" and that multiple accusers are prepared to testify against him. Weinstein, 72, is recovering from emergency heart surgery Monday at a Manhattan hospital to remove fluid on his heart and lungs and was not at Thursday's hearing. Prosecutors retrying Weinstein's overturned rape conviction disclosed last week that they had begun presenting to a grand jury evidence of up to three additional allegations against Weinstein, dating as far back as the mid-2000s. They include alleged sexual assaults at the Tribeca Grand Hotel, now known as the Roxy Hotel, and in a Lower Manhattan residential building between late 2005 and mid-2006, and an alleged sexual assault at a Tribeca hotel in May 2016. Because the indictment is under seal, it was not known whether the new charges involved some or all of the additional allegations. "We don't know anything," Weinstein's lawyer, Arthur Aidala, said outside court. "We don't know what the exact accusations are, the exact locations are, what the timing is." In April, New York's highest court overturned Weinstein's 2020 conviction on rape and sexual assault charges involving two women and ordered a new trial. Weinstein's retrial is tentatively scheduled to begin Nov. 12. Prosecutors said they would seek to combine any new charges with ones previously brought... Read More