SAT OCT 28, 2023 4:00 PM

Our Right to Gaze: Black Film Identities

$8.00 (member) ; $13.00 (general admission)

Los Feliz 3 | Q&A with filmmakers Gabriella Wiltz and Maria Warith-Wade

‘Here’s to Her’

Tickets are no longer on sale for this event.

ABOUT THE EVENT: 

Our Right to Gaze is a touring film anthology from Full Spectrum Features, featuring original narrative short films by emerging Black artists.

The theme for this year’s second edition of Our Right to Gaze is HEART OF THE MATTER. From the spark of an old flame to the embrace of intergenerational bonds to the heartbreak of systemic injustice, love can take many shapes and emotional valences. This collection is a tribute to Black love of all kinds, be it romantic, platonic, familial, or communal.

ABOUT THE FILMS:  

“Robyn Hood,” 2023, Shayla Racquel, 21 Minutes. 

A fresh, modern take on the succubus folklore merged with an inside joke in Black culture, “Robyn Hood” is a fun and frightful horror-comedy detailing the saga of a sensual and alluring Robyn, a dame who finds comfort in stealing men’s hoodies for something more sinister.

“The Funnel,” 2023, Charlene Carruthers, 17 Minutes.  

Trina, a young Black poet living on the South Side of Chicago, navigates an escalating housing crisis with her mother. After falling into an intimate recollection of her family history, she awakes in a world with people, sounds, and possibilities she’s never known.

“Ro & The Stardust,” 2023, Eunice Levis, 16 Minutes. 

A free-spirited teen and her terminally ill grandmother build a rocket ship they plan to launch into outer space.

“Maternity,” 2023, Maria Warith-Wade, 15 Minutes.

When a second-time mother gets an unexpected complication post-partum, she must fight to save her life in the fractured American healthcare system.

“RESPEK,” 2023, Kamari Bright, 3 Minutes. 

An animated dissection of the detriments of respectability politics from an African-American perspective.

“This Doesn’t Last Forever,” 2023, Gabriella Wiltz, 20 Minutes. 

Upon reluctantly moving back into her childhood home with her parents, Aziza struggles to find the love and connection being home has to offer.