Difference between revisions of "Femme Flicke"

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[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category: DIY Culture]] [[Category:Massachusetts Zines]] [[Category:Film Zines]][[Category:1990's publications]]
 
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category: DIY Culture]] [[Category:Massachusetts Zines]] [[Category:Film Zines]][[Category:1990's publications]]
 
[[Category:Sarah Wood Zine Collection]]
 
[[Category:Sarah Wood Zine Collection]]
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[[Category:Sophia Smith Zine Collection]]

Revision as of 00:52, 26 September 2009

Femme Flicke - Issue Five

Femme Flicke was a zine created by Tina Spangler and published in Cambridge, MA.

The first issue was published in the summer of 1993 and, as the title suggests, focused on women and film, with a special emphasis on independent, DIY filmmakers. Featured are interviews with Trinh T. Minh-Ha, Sarah Jacobson, Jim Spellman (of Velocity Girl), Rebecca Gates (of The Spinanes), Mary Timony (of Helium), G.B. Jones, Jim McKay, and Cheryl Dunne. Some of the better known directors whose work is discussed include Gillian Armstrong, Maya Deren, Dorothy Azner, Agnes Varda, Chantal Ackerman and others. Each issue included reviews of films, film books, and zines with a film focus, such as Flatbed, When She Was Good, Bad Lit, Cinema Revue, Planet Girl and others. Other topics include the death of River Phoenix, Clara Bow, music videos, animation, the Big Miss Movieola project by Miranda July (later known as Joanie4Jackie), and spotlights on movies such as "Girls Town", "Heavenly Creatures", "Kids", "Orlando' and others.

Seven issues of Femme Flicke were produced. Contributors included Jim McKay, Erica Cho, Carri Elizabeth (of Every Girl's Dream zine) Kevin Flansburg, Scott Hamrah (of Hermenaut zine), Nicke Forte, Lucy Thane, Jenny Rogers, Matthew Fauver, Lucie Chan, Lenn Keller, and many others. During its run, it offered support for many independent directors just starting out and offered a platform for their films to be read about, and was responsible in part for fostering the DIY film scene of the 90's.

Femme Flicke is included in the Sarah Wood Zine Collection at Duke University Library and in the Sophia Smith Collection at Smith College.

External links