When Ben Cotner and Ryan White first began shooting The Case Against 8, they weren’t entirely sure they had a film on their hands. Charting the lawsuit challenging California’s Proposition 8, the pair’s project began with a basic desire to record history.
“For the first year, there wasn’t any real conversation about the final product,” Cotner says. “It was about documenting the process in case the lawsuit snowballed into something historic. It wasn’t really until the Supreme Court took the case four years in that we definitely knew we had a film.”
“It’s not fun shooting 600 hours of footage without knowing if you really have a movie,” White adds. “But that comes with the territory when you’re making a film about a court case.”
The story begins on the eve of Nov 4, 2008, the same day Americans elected Barack Obama. This is also, of course, the day Proposition 8 passed, reversing the California Supreme Court’s decision from May that year and halting marriages for same-sex couples in the state. The Case Against 8 follows the process in forensic detail, from the first musings about a lawsuit in a Los Angeles restaurant, through finding plaintiffs, selecting a legal team and, ultimately, through the SCOTUS decision to uphold a lower court’s ruling and return the right for marriage equality to the state.
Both the film and the lawsuit hinge on the odd-couple partnership of Ted Olson and David Boies, previous adversaries in the Bush versus Gore political battle in 2000, which ultimately saw George W Bush become president. As articulated in the film, the choice to bring together counsel from both parties in the case was seen as a means to make marriage equality a non-partisan issue.
Though the film serves as an in-depth look at the legal process and the five-year record of one group of people’s lives, for the filmmakers it’s ultimately something bigger.
“It’s about taking bold, sometimes risky moves to stand up for your rights,” Cotner says. “We think that’s a message that’s universal and that will hopefully resonate, even in countries like Canada that are beyond the marriage-equality debate.”
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The Case Against 8 screens Wed, April 30, 10:30am at the Isabel Bader Theatre, 93 Charles St W. hotdocs.ca