| Me, Myself & I | ![]() |
Date: Wednesday, 10/19/2005
Time: 9:15 pm
Venue: DCJCC
Tickets: $6 
Type: Collection of short films
Metro Weekly Rating: 


(4 out of 5)
by Nancy Legato
ME, MYSELF & I delivers a heady mix of the oddball and the earnest as it follows a variety of quests for identity.
Three
former acquaintances meet up unexpectedly in Desert Motel (

).
One of the old friends, Connor (Max Madrigal), has begun transitioning to male,
much to the surprise and discomfort of his old buddies Leslie and Kara (Candice
Hussein and Kara Lipson). The conflict erupts unexpectedly in a poolside showdown,
but ultimately Desert Hotel leaves you thirsty for more substance.
Daniel
Lamberts' Gender (

) is an eccentric and racy farce about
getting a little push to becoming who you're meant to be. A pre-op
MTF person named Desiree (Manou Kersting) hesitating on the precipice
gets help from an unexpected source: the adult daughter (Janka
Fleerackers) Desiree never knew about. Something Else (



)
by Shannon Olliffe brings transgender themes to the world of
claymation with some interesting results.
Kylie
Eddy turns in an amusing turn of virtual stand-up comedy in Coming
out at Work is Hard to Do (


). Eddy tells the story of how
pictures of her in compromising Mardi Gras regalia almost forced her
out at work. Magically transmogrified by Eddy's sense of the absurd,
her pain becomes our hysterically funny anecdote.
In
Puszta Cowboy (


), a young cowboy undertakes a mission to
save her girlfriend from her ex while simultaneously challenging
gender and sex expectations. Crystal Mason's Aliens: We've Come
for Your Children (

) documents snapshots of friction between
different societal groups, including immigrants, queers and
conservative religious.
Mark
Kenneth Woods delivers a quickie polemic on the nature of White(ness)
(


).
It's the most direct film of the lot, and delivers a pivot point for the shorts
to turn from oddball and wild to more earnestly artistic. Sum Total (A Matrimonial)
(



)
poses an eloquent sonnet on multiple layers of identity, with poetry and photography
by Sonali and music by Sheila Chandra. Brief but beautiful.In Small Town
Secrets (


),
Katherine Leggett shares the incredible, yet apparently true, story of a proliferating
closet that engulfs mom, dad and daughter. Leggett's story doesn't have much
filmmaking to it, but it also doesn't require it: The unusual circumstances
of a family with not one but three closeted members is enough to captivate your
attention.
In Search for Her (

),
Dawn Khoo narrates the story of her own life as she cycles through phases of
hiding and exploring her sexuality and her gender. The narrative overlays a
series of relatively static images -- ocean waves, keys swirling around a woman's
fingers -- but no image actually captures forward movement. By contrast, A
Girl Named Kai (



)
pairs more narrative with much more dynamic photography and music that shares
its rhythm and meter in a way that carries Kai's story further along.
| More information |
Film Links:
· Reel Affirmations details
Festival Venue:
Cecile Goldman Theater at the
DCJCC
1529 16th Street, NW; Washington, DC 20009. (202) 518-9400. (map)
3 blocks east of Red Line Metro / Dupont Circle station.
Tickets:
You may buy your tickets or passes in advance: Online at BoxOfficeTickets.com
or by phone at (800) 494-TIXS (494-8497). Or you may visit the Lincoln
Theatre (1215 U Street, NW, WDC); the DCJCC (1529 16th Street, NW,
WDC); Lambda Rising (1625 Connecticut Avenue, NW, WDC); or Universal
Gear (1601 17th Street, NW, WDC).
|
For more info visit the official Reel Affirmations website. |







