Sad Mag is celebrating one year of publishing magic on October 9, 2010!

We are proud to be graduating to a paid publication model in the Fall. After a year of dwelling on shop floors we are moving on up—to a shelf, even! Sad Mag will be reliably and conveniently available at Vancouver’s favourite book, magazine, clothing and music retailers for $3.95 + tax.

To help kick off our new year, we want the Sad Mag friends and family to join us for another year of magazine mayhem by subscribing to the magazine for just $12. You can subscribe conveniently online here.

Vancouver, BC subscribers that sign on between now and October 5 will be entered to win a $100 gift certificate to Burcu’s Angels on Main and 16th Ave. The first 50 subscribers between now and October 5 will also receive a special Sad Mag gift with their first issue.

Thank you for your support!

Sad Mag is very proud to announce the winners of our Show Us Your Pride photo contest! Congratulations to REV and Tyler Bartoshyk, our first and second place finishers respectively. Check out their beautiful work:

First place winner. Photo by REV.
Second place winner. Photo by Tyler Bartoshyk.

And look! Sad Mag and its family was so busy this Pride season, and we received so many fantastic submissions for the contest, that we made this really gay slideshow! Share and enjoy.

Sad Mag does Pride 2010 from SAD MAG on Vimeo.

Thank you to the contributors to the slideshow:

Michelle Ricketts
Rev
Tyler Bartoshyk
Tina Krueger-Kulic
Chris J.
Jonah Fheonix
Shauna Nero
Terry Beaupre
Shane Oosterhoff
Charles Troster
Carter-Ethan Rankin

Thank you to the contest sponsors:

Sad Mag is proud to be counted among the Vancouver Queer Film Festival‘s community sponsors this year. With ninety films being screened at four major cinemas this year, the festival—now in its 22nd year—has grown to an impressive size. In a year of drastic cuts to government funding for the arts, a program of this  quality and diversity is to be admired.

The festival kicks off tonight and runs until August 22. Sad Mag has a pair of tickets to give away to the Friday, August 20 screening of Cheryl Dunye’s “The Owls.” To enter, copy and paste the following into Twitter:

RT to enter to win 2 tix to the @queerfilmfest’s screening of “The Owls” from @sadmag http://ow.ly/2oqE9

The contest is now closed. Congratulations to our winner, @onewetfoot!

From the program:

THE OWLS

Fri | Aug 20 | 5:00 | Granville 7 Theatre

“The Owls” reunites Guinevere Turner and VS Brodie, the leading actors of the lesbian cult hit “Go Fish.” This iconic queer cinema couple is cast alongside a slate of lesbian film mavericks, including Skyler Cooper, Deak Evgenikos and director Cheryl Dunye (“The Watermelon Woman”).

This film can boast being a truly experimental, collaboratively created thriller, murder mystery, dyke drama. Sound alluring, yet hard to picture? Imagine “Mulholland Drive” meets “I Know What You Did Last Summer” meets a lesbian feminist collective meeting, all set in the stark California deserts outside of Beverly Hills. Made by The Parliament Film Collective, co-founded by Dunye to help queer filmmakers produce exciting and original work, “The Owls” employs a hybrid of drama and auto-documentary filmmaking. The action hones in on four older dykes (Older Wiser Lesbians = Owls), who seem to have learned very little about healthy relationships and living drama-free. They are barely keeping it together while hiding a dark secret.

The Owls | Cheryl Dunye | USA | 2010 | 66 min

We’re coming out! To the Pride Parade, that is. Watch for us on Sunday, August 1 with our BFF, Zee Zee Theatre, in the Vancouver Pride Parade along Robson Street, Denman Street and Beach Avenue. We will have stickers and buttons and other goodies for all!

While you’re out there, be sure to document the magic and get in on some great prizes from the Sad Mag Show Us Your Pride photo contest! We have lovely things from Sephora and Bang-On t-shirts to give away.

Thank you to everyone who made it out to the screening of “Paris is Burning” at 1181 Tight Lounge last night. We had a great time!

Special thanks go out to Lindsey Fraser from the Vancouver Queer Film Festival, who partnered with Sad Mag to make the screening happen. Thank you also to 1181 Tight Lounge for offering up their classy digs, and to DJ ROBO SANTA for taking us into the night with great tunes.

For more fantastic films, don’t miss the VQFF taking place from August 12-22. Until then, make your own queer media with Sad Mag‘s Show Us Your Pride photo contest: you give us photos, we give you prizes!

Sad Mag and friends at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival and 1181 Tight Lounge are proud to present a screening of “Paris is Burning” to kick off the Vancouver 2010 Pride Season.

Jennie Livingston’s documentary has become a cult classic in the GLBT community for its intimate and touching look into drag and ball culture of New York City in the 1980s.

Vancouver is Burning
Tuesday July 27, 2010
1181-Tight Lounge
Doors at 6pm, screening at 7:30pm
FREE!
This is a 19+ event

View the Facebook event page.

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Sad Mag is pleased to partner with the DOXA festival, Vancouver’s documentary film festival, this year. We are a screening partner for Art in Action, a film directed by Magnus Isacsson. Isacsson, a former producer for the CBC, has been creating films about significant social and political issues since 1987. Art in Action is his look at the very personal and all-encompassing life of the full time artist-activist.

The film follows Annie Roy and Pierre Allard, founders of the artists collective ATSA, that stage “urban interventions,” including installations and performances that call attention to urban social issues. Isacsson’s camera followed the artist couple for four years, documenting their triumphs and difficulties along the way.

Isacsson took a moment to answer some of our questions about the film via email this week, and this is what he had to say:

Sad Mag: What was your first introduction to ATSA, and what motivated the creation of this film?

Magnus Isacsson: I had been aware of their work for several years because they get a lot of media coverage in Montreal, but at first I didn’t have time, I was busy with other projects. It was five years ago that I had the time to go and hear Annie speak at an arts conference, and found their approach fascinating.

I contacted them and lent them a couple of my previous films. They liked them. Even though I told them that I was not interested in putting them on a pedestal or doing PR for ATSA, but that I wanted to be in on the difficult moments, they generously accepted to be the subjects of a film.

I asked my friend Simon the be the Director of Photography, and we started shooting. Because of Simon’s very considerable investment in the project and his key role, I later asked him to also be an associate director.

SM: You followed Annie Roy and Pierre Allard and their family for four years to make this film. What sort of relationship formed between you and your crew, and the subjects of your film? With a lengthy time in the field, did you struggle to represent them fairly?

MI: For me, shooting for several years is the key both to forming real relationships of complicity and trust, for having enough dramatically interesting material to make a good film. The crew was just Simon on camera and myself doing sound, plus sometimes an intern or student helper.

We became very close to Annie and Pierre, which wasn’t hard because we share a lot of interests, we live in the same neighborhood, and although I’m quite a bit older we have children the same age.

One difficulty was how to capture their creative process, because they don’t have scheduled meetings to make creative decisions, their key discussions can take place while they do the laundry, or walk to the corner store, whatever. Another one of the big challenges was that their often conflictual working relationship was of interest to us, and we did film many heated arguments.

After a while this became a source of many worries for them, especially Annie, and they sometimes didn’t want us to film when things were too tense. We were very much aware of these concerns and we had to respect them – with all their generosity, giving us access to both their creative process and their personal life, we couldn’t let them down by making a film they wouldn’t like.

But I insisted on including some scenes where they argue, and several interview clips where they talk about their fights. They didn’t like it at the first screening or two, but they got used to it, and saw that it didn’t take away from other people’s appreciation of their work.

SM: The film’s synopsis reads that you focus the film on the domestic life and demands of the artists. How does this contribute to the film’s message? To the audience’s understanding of the artists?

MI: The main emphasis [of the film] is on ATSA’s public installations and the way they are received by the public, and on their intense investment of energy and creativity in what they do.

But they are a couple, and their work is tightly interwoven with their role as residents of a neighborhood, as lovers and as parents. I feel any time you can get behind the façade of things and see the real people, you are winning. I also found it important to show that the intense artistic activism they practise, like any intense involvement, doesn’t come without a price.

It does have an impact on their relationship and their parenting, and I find it very touching when they talk about these difficulties.

SM: Funding for the arts operates quite differently in Quebec as compared to British Columbia. I see that the artists are supported by Counseil des arts de Montreal, Counseil des arts et des lettres de Quebec, and the Canada Council for the Arts. How do you think this contributes to their success? Is funding essential for groups with a political mission, such as ATSA, to operate?

MI: I am no expert on arts funding, but I would say that Quebec does take arts very seriously, and Montreal is an incredibly creative place. (I see it of course in the domain of cinema – just look at how many Quebec-made films get the top nominations in Canadian film awards.)

I think for Pierre and Annie the arts council funding is essential, and it comes from all three levels of government. But because their work is so inspiring, and because it’s both creatively excellent and socially relevant, they get an awful lot of donations and as you see in the film the recruit huge numbers of volunteers.

Don’t miss DOXA’s screening of Art in Action on Wednesday, March 12 at 3:00 p.m.

She wants you to be her bitch, Crystal Precious. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel
She wants you to be her bitch, Crystal Precious. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel

Sad Mag brings you sneak peeks into issue three, launching Friday, March 19 at the ANZA Club.

“When I’m onstage, I’m thinking ‘Everyone in the audience is gonna be my bitch right now. You’re-gonna-be-my-bitch,'” she says, pointing out a new imaginary audience member with each word.

“It’s all about the entrance and the exit. It has to be slow and deliberate. Before I open my mouth or make any sort of dramatic movement, it’s all about drawing people in and creating energy around me.”

—Crystal Precious, as told to Jeff Lawrence

Spring 2010, ISSUE THREE

Photograph by Christine McCavoy
Photograph by Christine McAvoy

Sad Mag brings you sneak peeks into issue three, launching Friday, March 19 at the ANZA Club.

“The pedals fell apart beneath my feet. Instinctively, I leaned on my front brake, causing the whole bike to shudder and wobble. In my haste to get on the road, I hadn’t tuned it properly.

I managed to slow down enough to avoid losing my life in a back alley near Trout Lake, but the bicycle was in rough shape. My twenty-block walk home gave me plenty of time to think.”
— Will Graham

Spring 2010, ISSUE THREE

IMG_9385
Photograph by Jimmy Hsu

Sad Mag brings you sneak peeks into issue three, launching  Friday, March 19 at the ANZA Club.

I’ve seen kids go from preschool, to kindergarten, to being graduated. They’re so adorable when they first go to kindergarten. If they look really good, I tell them—especially the young girls. I’ll say, ‘Boy, you’re sure looking good today,’ and they say, ‘Oh, thank you.'”

—Sharole Taylor, as told to Justin Mah

Spring 2010, ISSUE THREE