The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT FILMS TO SEE AT UPCOMING LGBTQ FEST

Annual LGBTQ event will be the biggest yet, with over 120 entries.

- By Curt Holman For the AJC

At a time when Hollywood has suffered its weakest summer box office returns since 2006 and is losing some of its best talents to the small screen, a festival like Out on Film can renew the excitement of cinema as a communal event.

“Out on Film is very much a place for shared, public experience­s,” festival director Jim Farmer says. “It’s possible to see a film pretty much anywhere these days, but we offer the opportunit­y to see films for, by and about our community and our allies in a safe, welcoming environmen­t. And some of our patrons outside of metro Atlanta don’t have that on a regular basis.”

For its 30th anniversar­y year, Out on Film presents its biggest festival to date of films for the LGBTQ community. More than 120 narrative and documentar­y shorts and feature films will screen at three venues across the city.

The film festival opens Sept. 28 with “Happy,” an upbeat documentar­y about a Georgiabas­ed artist, and closes Oct. 8 with “Saturday Church,” a drama about a 14-year-old boy struggling with religion and gender identity issues. Star Luka Kain is scheduled to attend the screening. Other highlights include the following features.

‘Happy’

Out on Film’s opening night presentati­on stays close to home with this documentar­y, subtitled “A Small Film With a Big Heart,” that profiles Leonard “Porkchop” Zimmerman, an Augusta-based artist and former Atlantan. Director Michael Patrick McKinley portrays

Zimmerman as a beloved mainstay of the city’s laid-back but lively folk scene. “Happy” digs into the tragic underpinni­ngs of Zimmerman’s art, frequently inspired by the memory of his husband, who gave him the pet name “Porkchop” and died following a debilitati­ng illness. The film conveys the therapeuti­c aspects of art, and Zimmerman’s signature images — often wryly smiling robots — provide accessible symbols of accentuati­ng the positive in the face of sorrow. Zimmerman and McKinley are scheduled to attend.

7 p.m. Sept. 28, Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.

‘God’s Own Country’

Winner of a World Cinema Directing Award at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival, this drama from writer/director Francis Lee evokes the rustic romance of “Brokeback Mountain” while feeling at once harsher and more hopeful. Josh O’Connor plays Johnny Saxby, who feels trapped on his family’s Yorkshire farm yet bound to help his ailing father (Ian Hart). Bitter and prone to binge drinking and anonymous sex, Johnny unwittingl­y embarks on a new path with the arrival of a Romanian hired hand (Alec Secareanu). Unsparing in its depiction of the realities of farm life, the tenderness in “God’s Own Country” is hard-earned but affecting.

7:05 p.m. Sept. 30, Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.

‘Hello Again’

With classic musicals making comebacks on live TV, moviegoers may be receptive to this odd but unique musical film. Tom Gustafson directs an adaptation of Michael John LaChiusa’s 1993 musical “La Ronde” (itself based on a German play from 1897). The action consists of vignettes that pair up characters daisy chain-

style across decades: In 1944, a soldier woos a nurse before shipping out; then in 1967, the nurse (who may be another person) seduces the young man she’s hired to treat, and so on. At times, the film offers clever connection­s across time, with a soft solo of the title song followed later by a swinging Ella Fitzgerald­style interpreta­tion. “Hello Again” can be hard to warm up to — once you invest in one pair of characters, you’re whisked off to another — but it features a game cast that includes Martha Plimpton, Audra McDonald and T.R. Knight.

9:05 p.m. Sept. 30, Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.

‘Signature Move’

One of the pleasures of film festivals is their ability to showcase subculture­s often neglected by mainstream movies. In this lowbudget romantic comedy, a Pakistani lawyer (Fawzia Mirza) living in Chicago finds herself torn between pleasing her traditiona­l, matchmakin­g mother (Shabana Azmi) and her attraction to a Mexican bookstore owner (Sari Sanchez). Director Jennifer Reeder shows more confidence with the mother’s quiet scenes than the more overt comedy involving female wrestlers, or “luchadoras.” Neverthele­ss, “Signature Move” deserves credit for its willingnes­s to find multiple sides of the issue of whether gay people should be out to their families. Actor/co-writer Mirza is scheduled to attend.

7 p.m. Oct. 6, OutFront Theatre.

‘The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin’

As author of the acclaimed “Tales of the City” novels of life and love in San Francisco, Armistead Maupin has been so long in the public eye, you may think all of his stories have been already shared. Instead, director Jennifer Kroot reveals in this frank, fast-paced documentar­y that the Southern-born writer was at the scene of American cultural flashpoint­s across decades. A closeted teenage conservati­ve, he served in Vietnam and subsequent­ly met President Richard Nixon in the Oval Office. Maupin moved to San Francisco in the 1970s and not only became involved with Rock Hudson, but was at the center of the movie star’s outing controvers­y during the 1980s AIDS crisis. Interspers­ed with clips from the PBS “Tales of the City” adaptation (which set off criticism over government arts funding in the 1990s) and interviews with such celebritie­s as Amy Tan and Ian McKellen, Maupin comes across as a gentle raconteur, both nostalgic for the old days yet capable of appreciati­ng the gains the culture has made. 11 a.m. Oct. 7, OutFront Theatre.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY OUT ON FILM ?? Augusta-based artist Leonard “Porkchop” Zimmerman loves a parade in the documentar­y profile “Happy: A Small Film With a Big Smile,” screening at the Out on Film festival at 7 p.m. Sept. 28 at Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY OUT ON FILM Augusta-based artist Leonard “Porkchop” Zimmerman loves a parade in the documentar­y profile “Happy: A Small Film With a Big Smile,” screening at the Out on Film festival at 7 p.m. Sept. 28 at Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.
 ??  ?? The musical “Hello Again” follows 10 people along a series of interconne­cted romantic encounters at the Out on Film festival at 9:05 p.m. Sept. 30 at Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.
The musical “Hello Again” follows 10 people along a series of interconne­cted romantic encounters at the Out on Film festival at 9:05 p.m. Sept. 30 at Landmark Midtown Art Cinema.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY OUT ON FILM ?? Actress Laura Linney and author Armistead Maupin ride in the San Francisco Pride Parade in the documentar­y “The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin,” screening at the Out on Film festival at 11 a.m. Oct. 7 at OutFront Theatre Company.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY OUT ON FILM Actress Laura Linney and author Armistead Maupin ride in the San Francisco Pride Parade in the documentar­y “The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin,” screening at the Out on Film festival at 11 a.m. Oct. 7 at OutFront Theatre Company.

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