The 16th OUT IN AFRICA South African Gay & Lesbian Film Festival takes place in Johannesburg from 3-13 September and in Cape Town from 10-20 September 2009 and features 17 international feature films and 9 South African productions, five of which are world premieres.
The festival has a wide range of films to appeal to all with subjects that run the gamut of human experience. Themes range and include, amongst others: high school hilarities, forbidden love, coming out, the desire for children and ageing gigolos. Moviegoers can look forward to comedies, tragedies, dramas and thought provoking documentaries. Every genre of filmmaking is covered including homage to celebrated gay icons. Award winning international directors and actors will attend as guests of the festival.
The festival opens with Spinnin' (6 Billion Different People) a film made by Spanish director Eusebio Pastrana in 2007. This is the Spaniards at their wacky best – an exuberant award winning film set in Madrid in 1995 and follows lovers Garate and Omar as they seek to have a child.
Included in the line up is Fig Trees. Directed by John Greyson, this Canadian production is a contemporary opera based on the lives of
Angel, directed by Giorgios Katakouzinos is an award winning film that when it debuted at
Anyone who has seen Cabaret will be fascinated by Chris and Don, directed by Guido Santi and Tina Mascara this amazing documentary is about Christopher Isherwood whose short stories “Goodbye to
Courtesy of the British Council, the festival welcomes in attendance director Simon Pearce and producer Christian Martin whose film Shank follows the story of working class Cal who hides the fact that he is gay to his fellow gang members. Trouble erupts when he rescues a French boy his gang beats up. This explicit, shocking, largely hand-held film has already picked an international award and breathes new life into British alternative cinema.
Probably the most controversial film of the festival is the recently unbanned by the South African Film & Publications Board, XXY. This multi-award winning film is a complex tale of gender, identity and sexual orientation. Beautifully shot with stellar performances, the festival is proud to welcome the director, Lucía Puenzo and lead actor Inés Efron
Director Faith Trimel from the
The South African films in the festival include a re-release of Zackie Achmat’s 1999 Apostles of Civilised Vice, an important film which unpacks the tangled, tragic and often ironic queer history of
Directed by Jacque Oldfield and Adelheid Reinecke, the 16th OUT IN AFRICA film festival will also be the world premiere for
Opening the festival in both
Sponsors of the Festival include:
Atlantic Philanthropies, The National Lottery Board, Avis, Nu Metro, British Council,
French Embassy, Canadian High Commission, US Embassy, Argentine Embassy
La Scala Montecasino, and The Glen Cape Town
For more information go to: www.oia.co.za

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