Event Listing - Movies, Gay

Thu May 8

Frameline at The Center presents

Trained In The Ways Of Men


Website

Location
Date and Time
1800 Market St
San Francisco, CA 94102 map
cross street: Octavia
district: Castro/Upper Market


Thu May 8 (7:30pm)

Description
Frameline at The Center: Free Screenings for the Community

presents

Trained in the Ways of Men

Please arrive early as seating is limited!
Screening followed by panel discussion.

Co-presented by: Community United Against Violence and Transgender Law Center.

The fourth season of Frameline at the Center continues with Shelly Prevost's powerful documentary Trained in the Ways of Men.

In 2002, transgendered Alameda County teen Gwen Araujo was severely beaten, tied up and strangled to death in the company of four male friends after it was revealed that Araujo — who identified and lived as a woman and had engaged in sexual acts with at least one of the men who killed her — was, in fact, a biological male.

Unlike the story of Brandon Teena (fictionalized in the 1999 feature film Boys Don’t Cry) that unraveled in the conservative Midwest, Gwen Araujo’s tragic trajectory became a hot-button issue in and around the Bay Area, where transgender rights are protected under California state law—to a degree.

This eye-opening documentary combines interviews with Araujo family members and legal experts and footage from both trials (the first resulted in a hung jury) to delve into the heart of the Araujo case, examining the so-called “gay/trans panic strategy” employed by the defense to procure lighter sentencing. Would Araujo’s heterosexual-identified male aggressors have acted differently had they not discovered her transgendered status? Was Araujo putting herself at risk by not disclosing her biology to sexual partners? Was transphobia at play in the courtroom when defense lawyers pursued a “manslaughter in the heat of passion” charge so as to avoid first-degree murder charges?

Trained in the Ways of Men poses as many questions as it answers. Justice may have been served in the second Araujo trial, but ambiguities remain for the prosecution as much as the defense— and for the future of transgender rights in California.

Filmmaker Shelly Prevost and Sylvia Guerrero (Gwen Araujo's mother) will be present and participate in a post-screening panel discussion.

Kindly arrive early as seating is limited. Don't miss this FREE screening of this powerful film!

With generous support from Folsom Street Events, Frameline proudly presents admission-free screenings at the San Francisco Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center at 7:30pm on the second Thursday of every month throughout 2008.