A real dialogue on trans issues
Intolerant film "The Gendercator" brought out the best in community response

OPINION What I love about the queers in this town is just how messy and offensive we allow one another to be in our unified goal of relentlessly trying to strengthen our community. In some circles, the evolution of dyke space into a multigender population of transsexuals, genderqueers, femmes, tg-butches, bisexuals, lesbians, and men of all birth sexes has led to tension about queer visibility and discussions about misogyny, privilege, and appropriation. I am frequently pissed but never lacking for a group of people who will continue to engage the issues and attempt imperfect solutions no matter how hurt they have become in the process.

And yet, during Pride season there will be countless potentially offensive voices we will not hear. The ex-gay and right-wing Christian movements — arguably homosexual communities in their own right — will not be given unchallenged space at our events, and there won't be an uproar that these views should be included for the purpose of "fostering dialogue." As many journalists and artists can attest, ensuring the free exchange of ideas often means knowing what to leave out.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


Still, it was predictable that supporters of lesbian director Catherine Crouch's film The Gendercator would claim censorship and blame transgender community allies for "silencing dialogue" when the Frameline International LGBT Film Festival decided last month to pull this film from its June schedule. It was a setup; victims could either remain silent during an attack or speak up and "prove" that they have malicious intentions to take over the world.

For those unfamiliar with The Gendercator, a quick look at Crouch's film summary and deliberately defamatory director's note says it all: Trans people are the product of "distorted cultural norms" who uphold antigay values and change their sex "instead of working to change the world." Male-identified trans people are altered lesbians, despite the fact that many have never held that identity. And not even the femme dykes are safe, considering Crouch's tomboy-or-else definition of acceptable queerdom.

Crouch says the film comes from her anxiety about what she perceives as the loss of gender-variant women and the rise of binary gender norms. But the film itself strikes a different note, depicting trans bodies as sci-fi horrors and trans characters as coercive perpetrators of nonconsensual body invasions — all the familiar rhetoric used to justify antitrans violence and deny basic civil rights.

If there's a dialogue to be had about our community's valid anxieties surrounding the spike in sexual reassignment surgeries, it certainly wasn't raised in Crouch's The Gendercator. Unlike the creators of other films that have been controversial in the trans community, Crouch is disinterested in the lives of the people she portrays in this work. Imagine making a film alleging an inherent pedophilia in gay people to "spark dialogue" about gay culture's obsession with eternal youth. As Rae Greiner, a queer woman who launched the Frameline letter-writing campaign, points out, "You can't foster genuine discussion when you demonize your subjects or when you intentionally forego nuance in favor of stereotypes, false accusations, and outdated perceptions."

In fact, The Gendercator ...

Read more... Page: 1 | 2

( 5 comments | Comment on this article )
Katra1 on Friday, June 22, 2007 at 11:37 AM
Based on the Director's statements and vision of this film, I was one of those who opposed this film being shown at the Frameline Film Festival. I have not seen this film. I also think that the film has some merits and should not be banned outright. My problem with it being shown at the Frameline Festivle was simply that it did not fit in the stated purpose of the festival. When the director shouts censorship, she needs to open her eyes and mind to the reality that what she produced is not something that can be included in that festival. It does not preculde it from being shown elsewhere, at perhaps a more Trans-Hostile environment, like so many other festivals in the world. I wish her luck and more than tha to be at peace and lose the anger she embraces. Afterall, Anger leads to the dark side.....(Damned, I've outted myself as a Star Wars fan)....

Katra
jasonpaul85 on Friday, June 22, 2007 at 02:24 PM
The opinion stated by the director and movie has some merit and should be made known to young gay people who might be tempted to become transgenderedd themselves by offers of money and sex by purportedly straight guys who want to enjoy gay sex without thinking of themselves as gay. The fact is that deciding to be trans means leaving a world behind and entering a new one and those considering it should be aware of the arguments/risks etc. The recent ruckus at Power Exchange shows how some trans people can side with a homophobic management to exclude gay men. People should not become trans umless there is no hope for them of living contently in their birth gender, they shouldn't do it to get sex. money or avoiding the stigma of being gay.
r_jay72 on Friday, June 22, 2007 at 04:02 PM
This movie is about the f2m and trans, but it is the m2f type that is most significant in understanding the collusion or not of trans in trying to heterosexualise homosexuality. It would be interesting to see a movie about the need of trans women to Barbize themselves to get sex & money out of guys and how this affecrts the gay community and our relationship with the 'straight' world. Basically when either transwomen or gay men are looking to hookup with a bi or str8 guy, they don't want the other around, it causes tension and resentment. Some transwomen because they have success with these men they think they are accepted by strauight society and superior to gay men, hence the contempt you sometimes see in their behavior and attitudes.
Lizboo on Monday, June 25, 2007 at 08:55 PM
Maybe next year the festival can include a short film about jasonpaul85's decision to become homosexual after being tempted with money by an older gay guy who wants to enjoy gay sex with a new convert. The fact is that deciding to be gay means leaving a world behind and entering a new one and those considering it should be aware of the arguments/risks etc.

It would also be interesting to see a movie about the need of gay men to nellie it up and sashay their femmy lil selves around the town square, unfairly affecting the trans community and our relationship with the nontrans world.

Ooh! Even better! A movie distilling all the weird irrational self-hatred some gay men have that they choose to project onto trans people, inventing bizarre fantasies about people choosing to transition for sex and money! Now THAT would spark a dialogue.
Karen_S on Monday, June 25, 2007 at 09:45 PM
Another wonderful movie would be about those transwomen who transitionin order to also be lesbians, for sex and money. Of course, I work in retail and haven't had sex since my surgery (I'm sorry about the TMI) but why let real life get in the way of a foolish theory, eh?

Precious few MtF's "Barbize" (Barbie-ize, I assume?) themselves. What feminisation we do for ourselves is to avoid getting targeted for violence, even killed. Yes, killed.

At least, please have a clue before posting. Or better yet, talk to someone trans, rather than to your own voices. We know more about our lives than you do.

Comment on: A real dialogue on trans issues

In order to comment on an article, you must Log In.

SFBG Classifieds