News and Events => Calendar of events => Topic started by: Jaynatopia on October 01, 2007, 02:49:22 PM Return to Full Version

Title: Sacramento Gay & Lesbian Film Festival
Post by: Jaynatopia on October 01, 2007, 02:49:22 PM
I got this regarding the upcoming film festival  (Oct. 13) since we are doing a promo on trans-ponder podcast



My name is Michael Dennis and I am with the Sacramento International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival. This year we are showing the films listed below as well as a local film called "Being Lisa". These films will be shown at The Crest Theatre on Sat Oct 13th at 2:00 pm. It would be great if you could spread the word about these excellent films. Or let me know who else I should contact. Go to www.siglff.org for more information.

thanks, hope to hear from you.
Michael Dennis

FILMS
Casting Pearls
Director Andrea James, 2006, USA, 7min

Calpernia Adams stars as a transsexual actress who endures a series of Hollywood auditions, each humorously spotlighting adifferent prejudice or misconception that transwomen encounter.


Another Woman (Un Autre Femme)
Director Jerome Foulon, 2002, France
French with English Subtitles, 106min

French actress Nathalie Mann is captivating as a woman with the ovarios and heart to reconnect with the family she abandoned a decade ago when she was a miserable man. Can this MTF doctor heal old emotional scars without causing new ones? And what does she do with her own relentless paternal love?
Desperately unhappy, Nicolas left his wife and kids to discover his true nature and never returned. Living under the radar in Geneva, he painstakingly transformed into Léa. Three years after her final surgery, this new woman has the chance to return home to Paris on a work assignment. Reluctant and terrified to face her past, she is nonetheless drawn into the lives of her children.
After concocting a ruse to befriend her daughter Emmy, a budding classical pianist, Léa is suddenly back in her old home meeting her son Lucas, her "widow" Anne and the new man of the house, Pierre.
Overwhelmed trying to juggle the truth, Léa eventually comes out to a shocked Anne and declares her intention to claim her paternal rights. Tenuous new connections break as the confused and scared family closes ranks against the intruder.
Legal hassles force Léa to start a more authentic life in Paris, but young Lucas stays curious about her, hoping to find the father he never knew. This inspiring film is a must see for anyone seeking a whole and integrated life.