by chris carpenter –
This month’s 37th annual Outfest, the Los Angeles LGBTQ Film Festival, promises to be a total scream. Among the approximately 200 short and feature-length films from around the world to be screened, is an eye opening documentary exploring the gay/anti-gay history of one of the most notorious horror films of all time.
Outfest 2019 runs Thursday, July 18 through Sunday, July 28 at various venues in and around Los Angeles. It is the largest LGBTQ film fest in the world, and the largest of the many film festivals that take place in Southern California each year. More than 40,000 attendees, filmmakers, community leaders and others participate in Outfest’s plentiful screenings, panels and parties.
Things will kick off Opening Night on Thursday, July 18 at the Orpheum Theater in Downtown Los Angeles, with Rachel Mason’s intimate and absorbing documentary, Circus of Books, about L.A.’s legendary gay pornography emporium, run by her parents Karen and Barry Mason. The film was recently picked up by Netflix.
Additional gala screenings include Outfest’s U.S. Centerpiece, Adam, an adaptation of Ariel Schrag’s YA novel directed by festival alum and Transparent producer Rhys Ernst; Outfest’s International Centerpiece and Sundance hit This Is Not Berlin is set within the 1980s queer music scene in Mexico City. Changing the Game, the Documentary Centerpiece directed by Michael Barnett, is an acclaimed film that focuses on three resilient transgender high school athletes fighting to compete amid national scrutiny. And finally, festival Breakthrough Centerpiece, Straight Up, is a sharp and witty Los Angeles-set comedy written and directed by newcomer James Sweeney, who also stars in the film.
Closing Night Gala for the festival will end in festive fashion on Sunday, July 28 at The Theatre at the Ace Hotel with Hannah Pearl Utt’s Before You Know It, a quirky comedy about two sisters who discover the mother they’d been told was long dead is actually a famous soap star. In addition to Utt, the film’s cast features Judith Light, Alec Baldwin, Tim Daly, Mike Colter and Mandy Patinkin.
In a major change, the majority of screenings are moving this summer from the fest’s longtime home at the Director’s Guild of America building to the classic TCL Chinese Six Theater complex at Hollywood and Highland. This easily-accessible location is sure to heighten the Outfest experience for many.
I can’t recommend highly enough the special sneak previews on Saturday and Sunday, July 20 and 21, of Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street. When the horror sequel A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge was released in 1985, fans thirsting for more Freddy Krueger slasher mayhem weren’t prepared for what would be dubbed “the gayest horror movie ever made,” many of whom consider it the gayest movie ever made, period.
The film has more recently been reappraised by scholars, as well as documentarians Tyler Jensen and Roman Chimienti. While its original reception derailed the acting career of its gay star, Mark Patton, he is now recognized as the horror genre’s first male “scream queen.”
Patton and fellow cast members from the infamous sequel, including Freddy Krueger himself, Robert Englund, will gather following the Outfest screenings to discuss its legacy and queer aesthetic. The documentary also unapologetically confronts the Hollywood homophobia that ended opportunities for Patton and other gay actors during the height of AIDS hysteria in the mid-1980s.
Scream, Queen! reveals much about Patton’s personal life, including his own HIV+ status, his longtime self-imposed exile in Puerto Vallarta, and his enduring friendship with singer/actress/goddess Cher.
During a recent interview, Patton shared more with The Rage Monthly readers.
Have you seen Scream, Queen!? If so, what was your reaction?
Oh yes, I love it. Though it’s been cut eight or nine times over the years, it’s what I intended it to be. We started working on it five years ago, so I’m very happy with the final version. We’re really hoping for a theatrical release, but it will definitely be available for streaming. I really want to protect young people nowadays, and I think the movie raises awareness of a lot of issues affecting LGBTQ youth then and now.
Were you satisfied by your meeting with Freddy’s Revenge screenwriter David Chaskin (shown during the documentary’s climax)? Do you have any follow-up thoughts or insights?
Well, I knew he really wasn’t apologizing (he blamed Patton over the years for the film’s gay interpretation). Sometimes it’s all you really get from people. But my desire to confront David ultimately wasn’t about him, it was about me.
I often ask audiences after viewing the film, “How many of you have had therapy?” My main thought watching Freddy’s Revenge for the first time, which was horrible, was “Could people tell I was gay?” Now, I’m completely comfortable with myself. I also realize none of this (the documentary and its positive reception) is happening by accident.
How does it feel to be back in the public eye for the first time in 30 years?
Well, I’ve had a gentle slide back in, you know. I flew into Los Angeles the day after they talked to me about the documentary, then I started the convention thing with Comic-Con and what not. People want to see me, and that feels great. I do have some moments when I’ve been overwhelmed, including in Toronto (Toronto Film Festival). It’s one thing when people know you but another as the ripples get bigger and people don’t know you. I’ve learned not to look at social media, but I’ve also heard from people that they consider me a gay icon, which I’m really humbled by.
Speaking of gay icons, here a question some of our readers will consider the most important: Do you still speak with Cher?
I do. (Laughs) I used to live near Chaz (Bono, Cher’s son) in West Hollywood. Cher lives in a particular world, surrounded by people at her level of success, but she’s always been kind to me. We met when we did the play Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean on Broadway in 1982. We were very close and are still friends and we would go out to Studio 54 after the show. At the time, she always had a dark-haired young man she would be interested in and a blonde young man at her side, so I was her blonde “wing man” at the time. (Laughs) She remains very supportive and I really hope she comes to see the film at some point.
More personally, how is married life in Mexico treating you?
Good! I’ve been married for 14 years to a man I never thought I would be with (Hector Morales Mondragon). We met in a club when he started dancing around me and I thought, “Leave me alone!” (Laughs) Being in a married relationship takes work, you have to really want it. We have our fights sometimes, as all couples do, but it’s great.
Finally, do you think you might act more or get otherwise involved in the film industry?
I was literally testing the waters with the two little films I made recently (Family Possessions and Amityville: Evil Never Dies). I know I can do it now. This movie I’m making now in Portland, Black Butee, is a really professional gig, it’s about a serial killer but is a great part. It’s my announcement that the store is open for business! (Laughs)
For a full festival schedule with locations, to purchase tickets and passes or for more information, go to outfest.org.