A rainy day in New York - as seen from the HBO headquarters |
It’s been a long while since I’ve blogged, and for good
reason I guess: I’ve been working
my tail off finishing the film, BIG JOY: The Adventures of James Broughton.
And we’re almost there – what a triumph and a relief. It will be released next year, just in
time for Broughton’s Centennial! At
the same time, how sad. You work
on a film for four years, molding and shaping it, creating and then “killing
your children” as you edit out scenes.
And once it’s “in the can” (one of many gloriously outdated expressions
in filmmaking), you can’t change anything.
We ritually gave birth to the film last month, all 82
minutes of it, at the annual Summer Gathering of Radical Faeries at Breitenbush
Hot Springs in Detroit, Oregon. It
was apt and poetic that we staged a sneak preview of our work-in-progress
there. For it was there that I met
James Broughton in 1989, at a winter gathering of Radical Faeries; we were
assigned to the same cabin.
I had seen a few of his films 10 years earlier when I
stumbled into them at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. There, I was transfixed by his visions
of a world where things are perfect after the fuddy-duddies get overturned,
nudity is natural, humor hugged and contradictions embraced.
Now, it seems, all but a small number of experimental film
freaks and poetry aficionados have forgotten about Broughton. Hence, this film.
Here’s how we described it in some 24 meetings we had during
Independent Film Week September 16-20 in New York: “Big Joy is a documentary about living your passions and
becoming the person of your dreams, disguised as an inspiring biopic about the
wild and crazy California filmmaker and poet James Broughton.”
On September 17, people got to see 20 minutes of BIG JOY |
Independent Film Week, organized by our favorite filmmaker
support organization, the IFP (Independent Filmmaker Project), is an annual
marketplace where emerging filmmakers get to pitch their works-in-progress to
various industry executives and festival programmers. I also went there last year with the multimedia Big Joy
Project, when the film was still in “rough assembly” stage. This year, we had an almost-finished
film to show, and the response was encouraging.
We met with HBO in their beautiful headquarters in midtown
Manhattan, and were able to hand our film to Sheila Nevins, known as the
Goddess of Documentaries at HBO.
We also met with American Documentary/POV, Strand Releasing, Motto
Films, and with many fine festivals including Sundance, Tribeca, Frameline, NewFest and
Hot Docs.
It really helps to have a finished piece of the film to
show. In our case, we showed a 20-minute preview and for the Labs Showcase we showed the
first three and a half minutes.
Readers of this blog can watch it via a sneak preview here:
http://vimeo.com/ericslade/bigjoyopen
the password is: james
the password is: james
We were astounded when each of the 20 films in the IFP 2012
Labs (10 documentaries and 10 narrative films) got to show 4 minutes, and our
film got a rousing response. One
filmmaker even told me, “This inspires me to go back tonight and edit my film
with even more creativity than I thought possible.”
A scene from Big Joy (from Broughton's film Erogeny) - as seen on the big screen outside at the IFP Labs Showcase presented by Rooftop Films |
A reporter from the Daily Mail of London posted a blog report saying she loved being “seduced by the silly” in the Big Joy clip.
We’re now in a waiting period to see which festivals accept
the film, while we continue raising money for finishing, marketing, and
distribution.
Eric Slade's film about Harry Hay, Hope Along the Wind, showed at the Radically Gay conference |
Co-director/producer Eric Slade and I also participated in a conference the following week at City University of New York, NYU, and the Gay & Lesbian Center called “Radically Gay: The Life and Visionary Legacy of Harry Hay.” It was an interesting mixture of academic, fun, and faerie events celebrating the founder of the first national gay organization in the U.S., the Mattachine Society, who also “co-founded” the Radical Faeries.
The view from Alan and Andrea's house on Martha's Vineyard |
That, plus a marvelous visit to Martha’s Vineyard, where I
was hosted by my friends Alan and Andrea Rabinowitz, made for an exciting and
exhausting three weeks on the East Coast.
At last, a bit of a rest! |