Go Fish (film)
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Go Fish | |
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Movie poster |
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Directed by | Rose Troche |
Produced by | Rose Troche Guinevere Turner |
Written by | Rose Troche Guinevere Turner |
Starring | Guinevere Turner V.S. Brodie |
Music by | Scott Aldrich Brendan Dolan Jennifer Sharpe |
Cinematography | Ann T. Rossetti |
Editing by | Rose Troche |
Distributed by | Samuel Goldwyn Company |
Release date(s) | June 10, 1994 |
Running time | 84 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $15,000 (estimated) |
Gross revenue | $2,408,311 (USA sub-total) |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Go Fish is a 1994 lesbian-themed independent drama film. Directed and co-written (with her then-girlfriend Guinevere Turner) by Rose Troche, the film tells the story of the interrelationships of a small group of lesbian friends in Chicago. The narrative is broken up by a number of discussions on lesbian issues, dream sequences, commentary that breaks the fourth wall and moments of free verse poetry. Go Fish was part of a wave of LGBT-themed films that appeared in the mid-1990s.
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[edit] Plot summary
Max (Turner) is a young lesbian student in Chicago who's gone ten months without having sex. She and her roommate Kia (McMillan) are in a coffee shop when they run into Ely (Brodie), a hippieish woman with long braided hair, whom Max initially dismisses. Max and Ely do end up going to a movie together. After the movie they return to Ely's place and, after some flirtatious conversation, they kiss. Suddenly a call comes in from Ely's (unseen on-screen) partner Kate, with whom Ely has been in a long-distance relationship for more than two years, which puts a bit of a damper on things.
Ely decides to cut off all her hair, ending up with a very short butch style. She runs into Max in a bookstore and Max almost doesn't recognize her.
Kia's girlfriend Evy (Melendez) returns home. Her ex-boyfriend Junior is there. Evy's mother confronts her, saying that Junior told her that he had spotted Evy at a gay bar. Evy's mother kicks her out and Evy flees to Kia's place and Max invites her to live with them.
Ely and her roommate Daria (Sharp) throw a dinner party and, after a spirited game of I Never, Max and Ely reconnect. They make plans to go out again and then begin making out. They have several phone conversations, in the course of which Ely reveals that she's "sort of broken up" with Kate. They get together for a second date but they never make it out of the apartment. Max ends up trimming Ely's fingernails. This turns into foreplay and they have sex. Intercut with the closing credits are shots and short scenes of Max and Ely's burgeoning relationship.
[edit] Cast
- Guinevere Turner as Camille 'Max' West
- V.S. Brodie as Ely
- T. Wendy McMillan as Kia
- Anastasia Sharp as Daria
- Migdalia Melendez as Evy
[edit] The issues
- Kia teaches a Women's studies class and has her students list off lesbians from history. Mixed in with the serious answers (e.g. Sappho) are humorous examples like Marilyn Quayle, Peppermint Patty and "the entire cast of Roseanne." When a student asks why they're even making the list, Kia replies that throughout lesbian history there's been a lack of evidence about what women's lives were about, and that lesbian lives and relationships barely exist on paper at all. It's by keeping that in mind and understanding the power of history that "we" (presumably meaning lesbians) will want to start to change history.
- Following a movie, Max and Ely (played by the film's co-writer and associate producer) have something of a meta-conversation about the responsibility of queer filmmakers to represent the community.
- Max and Ely talk about the butch/femme dichotomy and gender roles and expectations.
- Daria has sex with a man and on her way home is challenged by a "jury," who question whether a woman who has sex with a man can call herself a lesbian. She contrasts how a gay man who has sex with a woman is characterized as being "bored, drunk [or] lonely" but if a lesbian has sex with a man "her whole life choice becomes suspect."
- On a lighter note, several of the characters debate their favorite term for vagina. Suggestions include "honeypot," "love mound," "girlpatch," "cunt" and "bearded clam."
[edit] Awards and nominations
- Berlin International Film Festival Teddy Award winner for Best Feature Film (1994)
- Deauville Film Festival Audience Award winner and Critics Award nomination for Rose Troche (1994)
- GLAAD Media Awards winner for Best Feature (1994)
- Gotham Awards Open Palm Award for Rose Troche (1994)
- Independent Spirit Awards nomination for Best Supporting Female for V. S. Brodie (1995)
- Political Film Society Award for Human Rights nomination (1995)
- Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize nomination (1994)
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Go Fish took three years to complete because of financial difficulties.
- Rose Troche's telephone was disconnected twice for non-payment during filming.
- Cast and crew shot 18 hours per day on weekends.
- According to the Internet Movie Database, most of the lead actors in this film boast no other credits on their CV, the exception being Guinevere Turner.
[edit] External links
- Go Fish at the Internet Movie Database