Picture This /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Montreal : National Film Board of Canada, 2017.
©2017
Description:1 streaming video (33 min., 32 sec.) : sound
Language:English
Series:NFB online collection.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Video Streaming Video
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13677341
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Osborne, Jari, film director.
Marin, Lea, film producer.
Lee, Anita, film producer.
National Film Board of Canada (Montreal), film producer.
Digital file characteristics:video file MPEG-4
Notes:Agency - English program:.Ontario Studio.
Writer, Jari Osborne ; director, Jari Osborne ; producer, Lea Marin ; executive producer, Anita Lee ; director of photography, David Cain ; editor, Steve Weslak ; sound recordist, Brent Haliskie ; original music composer, Robert Carli ; graphics, null Cain Creative ; sound editor, Claire Dobson ; foley, Andy Malcolm, Goro Koyama ; re-recording mixer, Matt Chan.
Featuring, Andrew Gurza, Stella Palikorova, Sher St. Kitts, Tinashe Dune, Aaron Purdie.
Recorded 2017.
described video.
Description based on online resource; title from title screen (National Film Board of Canada, viewed 2020-04-09).
Summary:What does it mean to be disabled and desirable? In Picture This, a new documentary by Jari Osborne, we meet Andrew Gurza, a self-described "queer cripple" who has made it his mission to make sex and disability part of the public discourse. Andrew embraces his role as a poster boy for the cause with an honesty that is, in itself, a kind of striptease. We follow Andrew as he plans the second edition of Justify My Love, a sex-positive play party that the international media was quick to call a "handicapped orgy" when it launched in Toronto the year before. Throughout the film, Andrew discusses desire with a candour that cuts through the polite and often hypocritical discourse surrounding disability. "I own all of it. All of the crippled parts of me." At the heart of the film is the uneasy dichotomy that disabled people face of feeling either invisible or like a freak show, especially with regards to their sexuality. With its insistent and unflinching gaze, Picture This invites us to see them for who they are.
Awards:Audience Award for Best Short Film, 2017
Best Short Film, 2017
Best Canadian Short, 2017
Best Canadian Short Film, 2017
Jury Award for Best Documentary Short, 2018