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Outfest Los Angeles celebrates its 40th LGBTQ+ film festival with over 200 screenings and other special events

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Since 1982, Outfest has screened thousands of LGBTQ+ films and television shows at its annual Outfest Los Angeles film festival.

To celebrate its 40th anniversary, Outfest will showcase over 200 films in multiple locations throughout Los Angeles from July 14-24. The lineup of films includes narratives, documentaries, short films, episodics, festival favorites and a total of 42 world premieres spanning every genre and representing 29 countries. There are also discussion panels, drag and comedy shows, screenwriting labs and live readings.

“When you hit your 40th anniversary, whether you’re a person or an organization, I think the knee-jerk reaction is to look back and say, ‘How did we get here,’” Outfest Executive Director Damien S. Navarro said during a recent video interview.

The 40th annual Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival will kick off with Grammy, Emmy and Tony Award-winning artist Billy Porter’s directorial debut, “Anything’s Possible,” on July 14 at The Orpheum Theatre. Porter will also be honored with the Outfest Achievement Award on opening night. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

“Stay on Board: The Leo Baker Story” will screen at the Directors Guild of America, Theater 1 on July 21 as part of the 40th annual Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival. The film follows the story of the non-binary professional skateboarder from Covina who withdrew from the U.S. Women’s Olympic Skateboarding team in 2020 to continue transitioning as a non-binary athlete. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

The 40th annual Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival will celebrate the 20th anniversary of director and screenwriter Todd Haynes’ “Far From Heaven.” The screening will take place at the Directors Guild of America, Theater 1 in Los Angeles on July 17 and feature an in-person panel discussion with Haynes, producer Christine Vachon and actress Julianne Moore. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

The horror-comedy “HeBGB TV” will be screened at Roy and Edna Disney CalArts Theater in Los Angeles on July 16 during the 40th annual Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival. It will also be available for streaming July 17-19. A late night host takes over a retro-horror TV cable box and curates nostalgic queer killer content with scares and cheap laughs. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

Fans attending the 40th annual Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival will be the first to see two episodes of the all-new “A League of Their Own” TV series, which will be available on Amazon Prime starting Aug. 12. The screening is free and will take place at the Directors Guild of America, Theater 1 on July 19. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

The documentary “Mama Bears” will screen on July 22 at the Directors Guild of America, Theater 1 as part of the Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival. The documentary focuses on Christian women who actively work to make the world a kinder and safer place for LGBTQ children of all ages though they come from strict religious upbringings. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

The 40th annual Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival will close with a screening of director and screenwriter John Logan’s queer slasher, “They/Them,” at The Theatre at Ace Hotel in Los Angeles on June 24. The film stars Kevin Bacon, Anna Chlumsky and Theo Germaine and is set in a conversion therapy camp. (Image courtesy of Outfest Los Angeles)

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He said that he and his crew dug deep into the history of Outfest. They wanted to be sure that the 40th anniversary put a spotlight on everyone that helped get them to this place and provided wide-ranging representation.

“We were diving deep into those films and those stories where we’d traditionally say, ‘We didn’t get them to submit,’” he said. “Instead, we were much more proactive in going out into the filmmaker community and into those communities where we haven’t seen those submissions to make sure those films are reflected.”

The festival kicks off with its opening night gala at the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles on July 14 with the world premiere of Billy Porter’s directorial debut, the romantic comedy, “Anything’s Possible.” The film will be available for streaming on July 22 on Amazon Prime and follows the story of a trans girl and a cisgender boy navigating their teenage relationship.

The Tony-, Grammy- and Emmy Award-winning Porter will also be honored with the 2022 Outfest Achievement Award. Navarro said that Porter has been a supporter for many years, but that it was more than his work as a performer that earned him the trophy.

“You have to be a filmmaker or a storyteller, you can’t just be in front of the camera talent,” he said. “So when you see someone like Billy Porter or Elliot Page or Octavia Spencer get the award, it’s because they’re investing in independent filmmaking, whether it’s skills or money or time. In Billy’s case, it feels like we’ve been waiting for each other and it just came together with his directorial debut. It’s been so nice for all of that to come together because he has been such a vocal activist in our community for so many years.”

Navarro said one of the most exciting aspects of Outfest is the discovery process. He said festival goers tend to be open to experiencing new kinds of cinema with unique storylines.

“The festival gives you the opportunity to be a little curious,” he said. “If you love romcoms, maybe pick one with a trans lead. Or pick a horror movie or a musical. If you just want to get outdoors, we have shows at The Ford Theatre, too. There really is something here for everyone.”

While some of the events are free, most of the screenings are $14 at the Directors Guild of America (DGA); other events, including the opening and closing galas, are $18-$175. The official Outfest Los Angeles website makes it easy to navigate the events by date, time or genre and purchase tickets.

Some of the highlights include the film “Sirens,” about a female thrash metal band from Lebanon; “Mars One,” a family drama from Brazil; an advance look at Shudder’s forthcoming docuseries “Queer for Fear,” which explores LGBTQIA+ influence in horror cinema; the world premiere of “Stay on Board: The Leo Baker Story,” which follows the story of a non-binary pro skater; and a screening of Todd Haynes’ 2002 film “Far From Heaven,” followed by a Q&A session with Haynes, producer Christine Vachon and actress Julianne Moore.

The virtual tab also breaks down which of the films will be available to stream for a limited time.

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For its closing gala, Outfest will offer the world premiere of screenwriter John Logan’s directorial debut, the queer slasher “They/Them” on July 24 at The Theatre at Ace Hotel. Logan, who also wrote the screenplays for “The Aviator,” “Skyfall” and the Showtime series “Penny Dreadful: City of Angels,” said that “They/Them” was written during the pandemic lockdowns in early 2020. It was a passion project he’d thought about for a long time; he wanted to write an inclusive slasher film.

“I grew up on horror movies,” Logan said during a recent phone interview. He’d race home after school to watch the TV series “Dark Shadows” and was obsessed with the Universal Monster films.

“When I was a teenager, the slasher films came about and I became aware that the gay characters were either victims or they were jokes or even worse, they were non-existent,” he continued. “As a gay kid myself, I had to do the transference thing that you do, which is suddenly I was imagining myself as Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘Halloween.’ That transference is what queer people have to do to see themselves represented. I knew how much it would have meant to me to see a gay hero in a horror film, in my favorite genre.”

In “They/Them,” which will be available for streaming on Peacock starting Aug. 5, seven queer and transgender teenage campers are sent to a therapy conversion camp led by Owen Whistler who is played by Kevin Bacon. In casting each of the campers, Logan said he wanted to ensure that they hired LGBTQ+ actors for the roles. The film also stars actress Anna Chlumsky, non-binary actor Theo Germaine, trans actress Quei Tann and gay actor Austin Crute.

“I can only speak from my own experience, but the representation of queer characters has been so limited in cinema, particularly within the horror genre,” he said. “So I figured if we had the opportunity to represent every color in the rainbow flag, we should boldly, heroically and justly do so. I wrote characters that covered every part of that spectrum.”

But it was the cast on set that taught him the most.

“I’m not transgender and I’m not non-binary, so working with people like Theo Jermaine and Quei Tann, they were able to help me learn the language and learn the sensitivity and help form the characters so there was a sense of authenticity,” he said. “It’s those seven actors that are bringing so much of themselves to those roles. It’s not overstating it to say that all of those actors felt a real sense of ownership in the movie because in a way they were telling their story.

“It’s a story of queer people coming together, being brave and triumphing,” he added. “And that’s not a story you get to tell very often or one you get to see very often. You look at movies like ‘Get Out’ that are in the horror wheelhouse, but speak to a larger issue and that’s the great thing about horror for me is that it’s the ultimate metaphor. You’re dealing in very specific tropes and our movie is unapologetically a very entertaining slasher movie, but within that there’s — I hope — meaning and empathy and especially in this day and age, a chance to declaim the glory of queer people.”

Outfest Los Angeles LGBTQ+ Film Festival

When: Various times July 14-24

Where: Various locations throughout Los Angeles

Tickets: Free-$14 per screening; $18-$175 for select in-person events; Streaming options also available at outfestla.org.

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