Contributors
Thursday, December 20
Feeding The Desire
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 1 opinions
Labels: art, nude, photography, women
Wednesday, December 19
Out at The Wedding - Movie Preview
This feature film is a romantic comedy cocktail with a splash of southern comfort and a twist. The film is directed by award-winning director Lee Friedlander and written by
Paula Goldberg. Principal cast includes: Andrea Marcellus, Desi Lydic, Charlie Schlatter, Mike Farrell, Mink Stole, Reginald VelJohnson, Cathy DeBuono and Mystro Clark.
Transplanted Southerner, Alex Houston (Andrea Marcellus), has found life as a successful wine importer in Manhattan to be a pretty fabulous life. Laughs come in spades from her best gay pal since childhood, Jonathan (Charlie Schlatter) and love is found in the package of Dana (Mystro Clark), a dreamy bi-racial airline pilot. When he unexpectedly proposes to her the day she’s to leave town for her sister’s wedding, life gets complicated. Having assumed her southern family would never accept her ethnic boyfriend, she’s never told them he exists. In turn, she’s led Dana to believe her entire family is dead. Now, don’t judge her too harshly, it was sort of a mix up that turned into genocide. Making an excuse to leave town, she takes Jonathan as her date to the wedding and figures once she gets through the weekend, she’ll come clean to everyone.
Once back in South Carolina, it’s a minefield of emotion as she deals with her distant father (Mike Farrell), her overly exuberant sister Jeannie (Desi Lydic) and all the relatives and friends of her past who can’t believe she’s still single. Especially curious is Alex’s dim high school sweetheart who misunderstands a conversation with Jonathan and starts spreading a rumor at the reception that she’s gay. When an inebriated Alex gives a thinly veiled speech about her interracial relationship at the wedding, everyone mistakenly thinks it’s a big coming out speech. After unsuccessfully trying to set everyone straight so to speak, her right wing family has a decidedly left wing response and the lie actually brings them all closer.
As the two sisters build a relationship they’ve never been able to cultivate before, Alex can’t bring herself to fess up she’s straight. When Jeannie comes back from her honeymoon and wants to come to New York and meet Alex’s lesbian love “Dana,” Jonathan comes up with an idea to “hire” a girlfriend. That’s when things really start to get complicated!
Out At The Wedding is about relationships. It’s about the thin line between trust and truth and the incredible comic lengths we go to avoid both. But essentially the film is a love story between two sisters, who desperately want to be friends, but only know how to be family.
Out At The Wedding Trailer
Upcoming Screenings:
Jan 11, 2008 7:30P
PALM SPRINGS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL Palm Springs, California5
Jan 12, 2008 1:00P
Palm Springs International Film Festival Palm Springs, California5
For more information, go to http://www.outatthewedding.com/.
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 0 opinions
Labels: award-winning, bi-racial, comedy, coming out, family, Gay, judging, Lee Friedlander, lesbian, N.Y., Out at The Wedding, romantic, sister, southern, trust
Saturday, December 15
Wanted - Coming in 2008
Angelina Jolie. What is left to say. Mmmmmm.
Based upon Mark Miller's explosive graphic novel series and helmed by stunning visualist director Timur Bekmambetov -- creator of the most successful Russian film franchise in history, the Night Watch series-- Wanted tells the tale of one apathetic nobody's transformation into an unparalleled enforcer of justice. In 2008, the world will be introduced to a hero for a new generation: Wesley Gibson. 25-year-old Wes (James McAvoy) was the most disaffected, cube-dwelling drone the planet had ever known. His boss chewed him out hourly, his girlfriend ignored him routinely and his life plodded on interminably. Everyone was certain this disengaged slacker would amount to nothing. There was little else for Wes to do but wile away the days and die in his slow, clock-punching rut. Until he met a woman named Fox (Angelina Jolie). After his estranged father is murdered, the deadly sexy Fox recruits him into the Fraternity, a secret society that trains Wes to avenge his father's death by unlocking his dormant powers. As she teaches him how to develop lightning-quick reflexes and phenomenal agility, Wes discovers this team lives by an ancient, unbreakable code: carry out the death orders given by fate itself. With wickedly brilliant tutors-- including the fraternity's enigmatic leader, Sloan (Morgan Freeman)-- Wes grows to enjoy all the strength he ever wanted. But slowly, he begins to realize there is more to his dangerous associates than meets the eye. And as he wavers between newfound heroism and vengeance, Wes will come to learn what no one can ever teach him: he alone controls his destiny. From www.imdb.com.
Wednesday, December 12
Moment of Silence for a Literary Pioneer
Jane Rule, a prominent Canadian writer whose first novel, "Desert of the Heart," is considered a landmark work of lesbian fiction, died Nov. 27 at her home on Galiano Island in British Columbia. She was 76.
The cause was complications of liver cancer, said Deborah Windsor, executive director of the Writers' Union of Canada.
A major literary figure in Canada, Ms. Rule wrote seven novels as well as short stories and nonfiction. But it was for "Desert of the Heart" that she remained best known. Published by Macmillan in 1964, the book appeared five years before the Stonewall uprising, at a time when lesbians were all but invisible in mainstream letters. It told the story of a woman who goes to Reno, Nev., for a divorce and there finds love with a dynamic younger woman.
Ms. Rule's other books, some of which also centered on lesbian themes, include the novels "This Is Not for You," "Against the Season" and "After the Fire"; the story collection "Theme for Diverse Instruments"; and a volume of criticism, "Lesbian Images."
Jane Vance Rule was born March 28, 1931, in Plainfield, N.J., and grew up in the Midwest and California. She earned a bachelor's degree in English from Mills College in 1952. In 1954 she joined the faculty of the Concord Academy, a private school in Massachusetts. There she met Helen Sonthoff, a fellow faculty member who became her life partner. They settled in Vancouver in 1956.
Sonthoff died in 2000, at 83. Information on other survivors could not be confirmed.
Ms. Rule, who became a Canadian citizen in the 1960s, was awarded the Order of British Columbia in 1998 and the Order of Canada last year.
Over the years, her opposition to government censorship of gay and lesbian books made her highly visible in Canada. She did not, however, support same-sex marriage, which was legalized there in 2005.
"To be forced back into the heterosexual cage of coupledom is not a step forward but a step back into state-imposed definitions of relationship," she wrote in BC Bookworld, a Canadian trade periodical, in 2001.
****This article appeared on page C - 5 of the San Francisco Chronicle****
--Moment of silence--But... we have to say something at the loss of one of the first lesbian authors.
Desert of the Heart was one of the first books Web read as a teenager and it gave her something tangible to relate to, at a difficult time for her as it is for most teens. We are saddened at the loss of such a great writer for our community. Thank you Jane Rule for your creativity and persistence. R.I.P.
Reading lesbian novels and short stories have always been a source of "normalcy" in an unaccepting world. TV and movies have come a long way in adding to that feeling of belonging. However, a recent search of our public library, which happens to be only 2 blocks from the High school, has a minimal assortment of lesbian fiction. Its very distressing to consider that to acquire a book of that genre you need to alert the staff and have your selection sent from the Phoenix library. Not something a teenage girl is apt to do. There just aren't enough books and not enough access for our young people. Those stories might be the only way they can quietly escape, feel normal and not feel alone. Going to have to write a letter to that library and bring it to their attention I think.
Please continue to read, encouraging new authors to get their stories out there for us to share and appreciate.
And again.. we mourn the loss...
Contributed by Denmother 2 opinions
Labels: After the Fire, Against the Season, censorship, Desert of the Heart, fiction novelist, Jane Rule, Lesbian images, libraries, normal, teens
Tuesday, December 11
Arizona considers offering domestic partner benefits to state employees
An Arizona paper reports that the state may start offering benefits to the partners of its employees. Arizona is close to offering health and other benefits to domestic partners of state employees, both gay and straight, according to a story in The Arizona Republic.
The change in policy, supported by Governor Janet Napolitano, would apply to about 65,000 current employees of the state government and public universities, as well as about 9,000 retirees covered by the state's health plan."It's something that most of the other private corporations and large cities are doing, and it's time state government started doing it," Tim Nelson, general counsel to the governor, told The Arizona Republic. "It's something the governor believes strongly is the right thing to do."State Department of Administration Director Bill Bell filed the proposal for domestic partner benefits on November 7 with the Secretary of State's Office. It was published Friday along with the secretary of state's registry of proposed rules.
Citizens are likely to have less than 30 days to comment on the proposed change, after which a hearing will be scheduled. The governor's six-member Regulatory Review Council will make the final decision on the plan.Arizona Senate majority leader Thayer Verschoor, a Republican, described the plan as a "slippery slope" toward government acceptance on variations of traditional marriage."I think it's going to be met with a lot of resistance," he told The Arizona Republic.
--We LOVE Janet Napolitano! Why shouldn't we have benefits?? Its still ends up being money in the pocket of the insurance companies. Where some aren't even carrying insurance because of the expense. And why do they even care?? Really! The way things are now there are probably a lot of people on Government funded insurance programs that wouldn't be if they were on their partner's insurance. So, see? Better all around. You go Janet!
Contributed by Denmother 0 opinions
Labels: Arizona, Arizona Republic, domestic partner benefits, Governor, Napolitano, proposal
Great! Now they will think a drug will FIX us.. I don't wanna be fixed.
Study Finds Gay Gene in Fruit Flies.
Researchers in Chicago have discovered a gene that identifies homosexuality in fruit flies, which can be turned on and off with drugs. David Featherstone, a biologist at University of Illinois, said that while humans have a similar gene, it has yet to be determined whether that gene has any effect on same-sex attractions in humans.
Researchers have found that fruit flies with a mutated "gender-blind" gene are bisexual. The flies cannot tell the difference between male and female pheromones, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. The mutation strengthens synapses, causing the flies to overreact to the pheromones. This causes the fruit flies to be attracted to both males and females.
"The [gender-blind] mutant males treated other males exactly the same way normal male flies would treat a female," Featherstone said in the article. "They even attempted copulation."
The study tested the hypothesis by giving the bisexual fruit flies drugs that weakened their synapses. Within hours the flies engaged exclusively in heterosexual activity. The group also gave heterosexual flies drugs that strengthened their synapses, causing them to be attracted to both male and female flies. (The Advocate)
--Ok, I don't how you feel about this tidbit of scientific info, but I am not thrilled. Imagining teenagers taken to a Dr. to have them "fixed" is not an appealing visual. Regardless of a "mutated gene" as they put it, (I prefer to think of it as an "enlightened gene") you still don't choose who you fall in love with.
And before they get too carried away with this discovery...let me just ask this: What kind of scientist spends his days staring endlessly through a camera (probably attachd to a microscope) to catch fruit flies "doing the dirty"??? AND... we already know that some animals engage in bi-sexual behavior and now even the insects are doing it! So, maybe they should realize we arent as "abnormal" as they would like to think. Next, they could decide that the gene that is responsible for red hair is abnormal and eliminate it from the "gene pool" too. AND--I hope our tax dollars aren't paying for this insane research! It would be time and money better spent if they were looking for the gene responsible for being a slob or laziness or chauvanism! Then the world really would be a better place. Just my two cents.
Contributed by Denmother 1 opinions
Labels: Advocate, Chicago Sun Times, Featherstone, gender-blind, gene, gene pool, mutated, pheramones, same-sex
Monday, December 10
Mad Money - Coming Jan. 18th 2008
Mad Money - Trailer
Video sent by moviemax1
The official trailer for Mad Money, a comedy about three ordinary women who form an unlikely friendship and decide to do something extraordinary—rob one of the most secure banks in the world! The three female employees have the crime of their lives when they devise a master scheme to steal money about to be destroyed! Starring Katie Holmes, Queen Latifah, Diane Keaton, and Ted Danson. Written by Oscar winner Callie Khouri, who also wrote Thelma and Louise. For more info, visit: Mad Money Movie Site .
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 0 opinions
Labels: comedy, Diane Keaton, friendship, investment banker, Katie Holmes, mad money, Queen Latifah, scheme, Ted Danson, thelma and louise
Saturday, December 1
Movie Review - The Gymnast
When life turns upside down. Look up.
A film about hanging on... and letting go.
The two leading stars (Dreya Weber and Addie Yungmee) are aerial artists, who find an unexpected attraction within the fabric of the art. Beautifully directed and very well written. Believable and fun to watch these two make it look easy because "its what they do". A story of self realization, on more than one level and finding your own happiness...with a few twists.
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass)
Labels: Addie Yungmee, aerial artistry, award winner, beautiful, Dreya Weber, funny, lesbian
Tuesday, November 27
The Thomas Chronicals
PING (pĭng) v. - an abrupt shift in long-held attitudes and beliefs, the result of which is usually contradictory to a person’s history, which also suggests an instability of mind, characterized by hysteria and wild accusations.
I believe I have been Pinged.
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 0 opinions
Labels: accusations, attitude, games, ping, unusual
Sunday, November 25
Lesbian Sex Scenes
Gemma Atkinson needed a stiff drink before filming lesbian sex scenes
Gemma has been casted alongside Ray Winstone’s daughter Jaime.
Atikson said that she had to perform a full on lesbian sex scene with Jaime. “I had to do a scene with Jaime - a full-on lesbian session - and we’d literally met an hour earlier, the Daily Mail quoted her, as saying.
“In the film we meet in a club and go home and have sex. So we had a few shots of vodka, closed the set and just did it. We did it in one take with two cameras. “I asked to keep my bottoms on and the director let me so that was cool. When it came to the kissing, he basically said: ‘I just want you to go for it because the more you do it the more happy it’s going to be’ she added. However, Jaime said she was more at ease doing the scene with Gemma than she was with her male co-stars. As both the stars had met for the first time they were comfortable filming the intimate scenes. “We’d only met about an hour earlier but we both said that if we knew each other already it wouldn’t be right, she added. When I got home I felt a bit abused - I got straight into a bath,” she added. (ANI)
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 0 opinions
New to ABC, Cashmere Mafia - Coming in January
Four ambitious, sexy women who have been best friends since business school, Mia, Zoe, Juliet and Caitlin, try to have it all. They aren't just powerful and intelligent as singular executive sensations in a man's world; they've bonded into a formidable unit A female "boys' club" -- to support and counsel each other through good times and bad. How better to climb up the corporate ladder than with your buddies at your side? Set in glamorous New York City, where titans of media, finance, advertising and publishing reside, these driven women, who daily share their relatable and relevant problems dealing with both the boardroom and bedroom, combine their smarts, wit and humor to deal with personal and professional misfortunes and stunning triumphs. Whether it's coping with rocky marriages, fending off scheming colleagues or just trying to find themselves in the midst of chaotic lives, these compelling women use their valuable friendship to keep centered.
Ever since Mia Mason (Lucy Liu) was a young girl, all she ever wanted to do was win. Now as a sexy, competitive woman in the publishing field, that drive to be first has intensified, even pitting her against her fiancé for a key position. What price will she have to pay to stay on top of the mountain?
Zoe Burden (Frances O'Connor), an investment banker with a handsome, loving, work-at-home architect husband, Eric (Julian Ovenden), and two small children, seems to be the prototype for the woman who has it all. The couple face their 24-7 waltz of balancing full-time work and the challenge of being good parents with good humor, but the wheels may be coming off the cart, forcing Zoe to re-evaluate her life.
For Juliet Draper (Miranda Otto), the Chief Operating Officer of a major hotel chain, appearances come first -- no matter what's going on behind closed doors. And she will have to work overtime to keep up the façade of a perfect life with her philandering husband, Davis (Peter Hermann), and her rebellious 14-year-old daughter. Juliet decides on a unique method of payback for Davis' indiscretions and simultaneously, in a bold move, must decide to drop her public image to step out in the world.
Caitlin Dowd (Bonnie Somerville) is a top marketing executive for a cosmetics firm. Like the other women, she is excelling professionally, but she's still discovering who she is personally and sexually. She's worked hard to get ahead, but still counts on her street smarts to keep her there, while her sense of humor and a sweet wackiness makes her all the more attractive. In the pilot, Somerville's character, Caitlin Dowd, a cosmetics industry VP (pictured above on the far left), unexpectedly finds herself falling for — and getting involved with — another woman at work.
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 0 opinions
Labels: ABC, Cashmere Mafia, city, cosmetics firm, gorgeous, hotel, investment banker, lesbian, Lucy Liu, publisher, sexuality, strong, successful, women
Friday, November 23
Quotes
YOU SURE AS HELL DON'T DESERVE ME AT MY BEST
-Marilyn Monroe
Contributed by Websketch (Web Sass) 0 opinions
Labels: deserving, honest, marilyn, self worth