San Francisco's
international lesbian and gay film festival was
interrupted by protesters on Saturday night at the
screening of an Israeli film depicting a love affair
between two members of that country's armed forces. As
credits rolled at the end of the Castro Theater
screening of the film, Yossi & Jagger,
several people who identified themselves as members of a
group called QUIT!--Queers Undermining Israeli
Terrorism--went up onto the stage uninvited to unfurl
protest signs.
The following
account of the incident was described in an E-mail
newsletter from Frameline, the nonprofit that sponsors
the festival:
"While
protesters held two banners that read '17,000
Palestinian and Lebanese civilians killed by Israeli
forces in Lebanon' and 'No animals [were] harmed by the
making of this film,' organization representatives
handed out fliers pushing their cause. As the house
lights came up, Castro house managers asked the
banner-holders to leave the stage while people in the
theater both booed and cheered (and hurled a few
epithets).
"Yossi
Amrani, the San Francisco-based Israeli consul general,
took the stage and requested those who left upset to
return to rejoin the festival program in the spirit of
understanding and tolerance. He described the film as
'not about politics, it is about love,' to which the
audience responded with applause. When a protester spoke
out and another audience member shouted her down, Amrani
asked the audience member to express tolerance of what
the protesters have to say.
"Nearly the
entire audience of this sold-out film remained for the
fascinating and politically charged Q&A session
[with the film's producer, Gil Uchovsky, which the
protest had delayed]. Finally, Uchovsky took the stage
and discussed the film's impact. Astonishingly, when the
script was run by the Israeli military for approval,
they had no objections to the film's gay content.
Instead, they were more concerned that, in the original
script, a commander sleeps with a person of lower rank.
So that aspect was changed to appease their needs.
"Outside
the theater, QUIT! members handed out fliers questioning
Frameline's intent in programming the film, and
encouraging festivalgoers to check out two programs that
represent views sympathetic to QUIT!'s mission: the
Algerian film Path to Love (Monday, June 16) and Queer
Documentary in Wartime: A New View of the
Israeli-Palestinian Crisis (Tuesday, June 17), a
presentation by acclaimed documentarian Ellen
Flanders."
The film Yossi
& Jagger, which won top honors in an Israeli
film awards competition and also at the 2003 TriBeCa
Film Festival in New York City, will be released
theatrically in the United States by Strand Releasing
later this year.