La Vida de un Latero
“Let’s go to the street and look to see what we can find,” says Pedro Moreno in La Vida de un Latero (The Life of a “Canner”), a short documentary screening at the Seattle Latino Film Festival (through Oct. 17; free online). The touching doc by journalist Madeline Gunderson, originally from the Pacific Northwest, follows Moreno and his wife, Josefa Marin, who make a living collecting and recycling New York’s emptied bottles and cans. The film also zooms in on Sure We Can, the couple’s beloved bottle redemption facility, which is facing eviction, but it is the duo's globe-spanning love story that ends up stealing the show.
More Latino Film Festival recs: It’s hard to choose from the festival’s more than 90 films from over 20 countries, but notable is the mysterious feature Window Boy Would Also Like to Have a Submarine (already getting critical praise), as well as documentaries about female graffiti artists, a young Indigenous artist from hidalguense Huasteca in Mexico and the first transgender woman in the Brazilian Armed Forces.
Seattle Latino Film Festival runs through Oct. 17. Films can be streamed from anywhere in the U.S. A festival pass costs $25, individual tickets start at $2, though various programs and films are free.
Surviving the Silence
“Cruel twist of fate” doesn’t even begin to describe what was asked of Col. Patsy Thompson in 1992. That’s when Thompson presided over a military hearing to discharge Col. Margarethe Cammermeyer, a highly decorated chief nurse from Washington state, who had admitted to being gay — at the time considered "incompatible with military service.” No one knew that Thompson was a lesbian herself, still closeted at that point. Surviving the Silence, a new documentary screening at the Seattle Queer Film Festival, traces the painful history of the military’s anti-gay policies — and the fight to undo them — through conversations with Thompson and her longtime partner, now-wife Barbara Brass, and Cammermeyer, who lives on Whidbey island.
More Seattle Queer Film Festival recs: Take it from a millennial: The Millennial Experience, by local director/choreographer Alex Crozier, is indeed an ... experience. Several Seattle cultural luminaries, including nonmillennials like choreographer Donald Byrd, make an appearance, along with Northwest sunsets and now-closed venues in this strange blend of dance film, documentary and reenactment. Other films worth streaming with a festival pass: opening night rom-com Breaking Fast, the friendship film Gossamer Folds and a documentary about the best-selling lesbian magazine Curve.
Seattle Queer Film Festival runs Oct. 15 - 25. Tickets start at $5, passes at $65. You can watch from anywhere in Washington, Oregon and Idaho.
The Paper Tigers
We could all use some feel-good vibes right now. And The Paper Tigers, a Seattle-made kung fu comedy filmed across the Puget Sound, surely delivers. In the film, directed by local Bao Tran, three former kung fu prodigies — now older, perhaps wiser and certainly less flexible — make a comeback to avenge the murder of their kung fu master. The Paper Tigers will screen nationwide during the San Diego Asian American Film Festival (Oct. 23 - 31) and the Boston Asian American Film Festival (Oct. 24 - 25), and opens the Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival on Nov. 5. It’ll also be on view during the Hawaii International Film Festival (Nov. 5 - 29)
Find these and other screenings for The Paper Tigers on the film’s website.
Pacific Northbest
The kids are not just all right — they’re artists. Take as evidence the short films in “Pacific Northbest,” a collection of movies made by local youth screening at the Seattle-based National Film Festival for Talented Youth. Among the best of the mix: a mumble-core-inspired, meandering teen drama with a surprising plot twist (Everything Bagel), a mature and slightly surreal take on the culture of self-improvement (Superbody), an entertaining parable about a pesty parakeet (No Fan of Andy) and a beautiful portrait of a friendship between two high school boys (The Days Are Just Packed). Also don’t miss the ambitious local indie fantasy flick Headless Into the Night by Seattle director Nifemi Madarikan.
The National Film Festival for Talented Youth runs Oct. 23- Nov. 1. Festival passes start at $60; pay-what-you-can tickets available for each program. The films can be screened from anywhere in the world.
Małni
Cinephiles love to call movies “meditations on” a certain topic: the ocean, motherhood, belonging, you name it. But the poetic, meandering documentary Małni — towards the ocean, towards the shore truly deserves the description. In his first feature-length work, renowned artist and filmmaker Sky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk Nation/Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians) allows Małni (pronounced: moth-nee) to breathe, giving main characters Sweetwater Sahme and Jordan Mercier space to tell their stories and contemplate life, death and rebirth. The film, spoken largely in chinuk wawa, a language indigenous to the Lower Columbia River Basin, screens through Oct. 25 at the Northwest Film Forum and from Nov. 6–12 at the Tacoma Film Festival.
Since I Been Down
A powerful new documentary by award-winning local filmmaker Gilda Sheppard, Since I Been Down is the centerpiece of the Tacoma Film Festival (Nov. 6 - 15). It’s a fitting venue, as the film tells the story of how Tacoma’s Hilltop and Eastside communities were swept up in the drug trade, violence and harsh carceral punishment of the 1990s. But it’s also, says Sheppard, “an American story, showcasing one city … as an example of ‘Every town, USA.’” Twelve years in the making, the story follows the Black and brown youth deemed irredeemable “super predators” and sent to prison for life with no chances of parole. One of them was Tacoman Kimonti Carter, who is still incarcerated. Sheppard zooms in on Carter and the power of the in-prison higher education program he started, in which prisoners teach prisoners and find a sense of understanding, healing and power.
'Since I Been Down' screens at the Tacoma Film Festival (Nov. 6 - 15, free), Bellingham’s Pickford Film Center’s annual doc-film fest, “Doctober” (see more picks below; through the end of the month, $8), and the Portland Film Festival (through Oct. 18, $9.99).
Other Tacoma Film Festival recs: The lengthy and impressive lineup includes two short docs with a local link that deserve a shoutout: Yai Nin, by local filmmaker Champ Ensminger (filmed in Chiang Mai), and Whale People: Protectors of the Sea, which highlights how Indigenous communities in the Pacific Northwest are sounding the alarm about the plight of the whales. We would be remiss not to also suggest watching (if you haven’t yet) the award-winning Crosscut documentary The Rising, by colleagues Sarah Hoffman and Ted Alvarez.
Other Doctober recs: Doctober offers a few local documentaries free of charge, including Keepers of the Dream, about the role women played in the Seattle chapter of the Black Panther Party (read more about that here), as well as the self-explanatory 24 Hours in the CHOP and the Portland-centric 100 Days of Protest.
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