Christine Vachon on New Queer Cinema

Producer behind Boys Don't Cry talks about her latest work

Lesbian Christine Vachon is behind such classic gay films as Swoon, Poison and Go Fish.

Vachon sat down with Xtra‘s Matthew Hays at the Toronto International Film Festival following her participation in the industry program panel The Social Network: Marketing Indie Films Online.

The prolific producer talks about the early days of queer film and the heyday of the New Queer Cinema movement of the 1990s. She says she thinks many people ignore or underestimate the impact of HIV and AIDS on cinema.

“For me, the fact that we were living through such an extraordinarily devastating epidemic drove so many of those filmmakers with a sense of urgency, in the sense of, ‘If I don’t tell this story now I may not get to,’” she says. “And in a lot of ways it fuelled that sense of ‘I can’t ask for permission, and I just need to take matters into my own hands.’”

Post-New Queer Cinema era, Vachon has produced Boys Don’t Cry, Hedwig and the Angry Inch and Far from Heaven. This year, she was at TIFF with At Any Price and Inescapable.

Below are video clips from Vachon’s interview with Xtra.

On occasion, the number of editors and other staff who contribute to a story gets a little unwieldy to give a byline to everyone. That’s when we use “Xtra Staff” in place of the usual contributor info. If you would like more information on who contributed to a particular story, please contact us here.

Read More About:
Video, Culture, TV & Film, News, Arts, Canada

Keep Reading

A nonbinary person injects hormones with a syringe

What HRT Cafe’s shutdown means for DIY care

HRT Cafe was the largest access point for DIY transition care in the U.K. before it suddenly vanished
Urania, a feminist journal from the 20th century that challenged the gender binary.

The 20th-century journal that challenged the gender binary

From 1916 to 1940, “Urania” imagined a world beyond gender—and documented feminist movements around the globe

U.S. Supreme Court blocks California policy protecting students from forced outing

The ruling is the latest case to tackle parental rights and religion in public schools

What the Barry Neufeld tribunal ruling means for trans rights in Canada

A former Chilliwack school trustee has been ordered to pay $750,000 after years of anti-LGBTQ2S+ posts