Gendernauts

Gendernauts: A Journey Through Shifting Identities is a 1999 film by Monika Treut featuring Sandy Stone, Texas Tomboy, Susan Stryker, and Hida Viloria. It shows us a group of artists in San Francisco who live between the poles of conventional gender identities.

Gendernauts: A Journey Through Shifting Identities
Directed by Monika Treut
Produced by Monika Treut
Starring Susan Stryker, Texas Tomboy, Annie Sprinkle, Max Wolf Valerio, Hida Viloria
Music by Georg Kajanus, Veronika Klaus
Edited by Eric Schefter
Running time
86 minutes
Country United States, Germany
Language English

Release Dates

The film was first screened at the Berlin International Film Festival in February 1999. The film opened in Germany on March 10, 1999. The opening date for the film in the United States was February 4, 2000.[1]

Film Locations

Gendernauts was filmed on location, in San Francisco, California.

Synopsis

Told through the narration of Sandy Stone, who acts as a sort of tour guide, the film documents the lives of a group of transgender individuals, and one intersex individual, living in San Francisco, California. The narration provided by Stone is cut with interviews that develop and illustrate the ideas and themes she discusses in her vignettes. The film is shot on location in San Francisco, with the interviews of the subjects taking place in their natural settings and surroundings including their homes, offices, and the streets of San Francisco. The film explains, through the lives of its subjects, both the social and practical changes and decisions necessary for them to endure in order to live their lives as they see fit on the edge of traditional gender roles. The idea of gender neutrality is promoted throughout the film. Gender is not a characteristic that should be used to define a person. The film also shows how the subjects all interact with one another in the transgender subculture of San Francisco.

Cast

Festiva

Gendernauts was shown at the following film festivals: Barcelona, Berlin, Bologna, Brisbane, Copenhagen, Helsinki, Lisbon, London, Los Angeles, Madrid, Montreal, Munich, New York, Paris, São Paulo, San Francisco, The Hamptons, Turin, and Vancouver.[2]

Awards

Gendernauts has been internationally recognized with the following awards:[3]

Quotes

"I've never felt male and I've never felt female and I don't really concern myself with gender. I just let people go the way they will with it and if they're confused then I let them be confused." - Stafford

"Gender confusion is a small price to pay for social progress. They can learn to work around gender. I don't have to learn how to work around them to be comfortable." - Stafford

References

  1. "Release Info". Retrieved 26 December 2011.
  2. "Festivals". Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  3. "Awards". Retrieved 24 December 2011.

External links