Virginia Madsen

Official Website
25 Apr 2018

Virginia Madsen: “We Still Need AIDS Movies”

The new film 1985 revisits a dark time in gay history, when the AIDS crisis ended so many promising lives. But actress Virginia Madsen, who plays a mother losing her son to the still-mysterious “gay cancer,” sees the film as surprisingly optimistic.

“There is a hopeful message,” she says. “It’s all right, you can be who you are. You can be questioning. You can be nonbinary. Whatever your identity is, you can stand strong in those shoes.” That may seem a buoyant takeaway from a movie built on so tragic a premise. The film, directed by Yen Tan and starring the recently out Cory Michael Smith in the lead role of Adrian, follows a closeted young man returning home to Texas from New York to share with his family that he’s dying. The film premiered at South by Southwest, has since screened at the Sarasota Film Festival, and will play at the Dallas International Film Festival in May.

The period in which the film takes place corresponds to Madsen’s days as a young actress in Hollywood. And while she enjoyed fame from roles in films like Dune, she also remembers the tragedy of the era, losing friends and family to an ailment no one yet understood. “It was terrifying, just because nobody knew anything,” she says. “If you had a friend who had those marks on his skin, it was like, ‘It’s going to happen,’ and there was nothing I could do but put my arms around them.”

Madsen lost family to the disease as well. Her uncle Chicky, who moved to San Francisco when Madsen was a child and become largely estranged from the family, died in 1989. The official line to the world was cancer, but it fell on Madsen to explain the truth to Chicky’s mother. “She didn’t know,” Madsen recalls. “She wondered, ‘Did I do something wrong?’ I just talked to her a long time and told her what I knew. I’m sure she would have loved to have been there.”

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18 Apr 2018

The OUTshine Film Festival In Miami!

 

This year the OUTshine Film Festival in Miami is celebrating 20 years of inspiration, education, escape and community in queer filmmaking. What began several names (more on that here) and two decades ago is a must on the queer film fest circuit with screening venues in and around South Beach, TK films over TK days, and events and parties for the Opening Night film, Centerpiece Film, producers and filmmakers, Ladies’ Spotlight Film, Men’s Spotlight film, young people, filmmakers and lovers of Flash Gordon.

The OUTshine Film Festival’s 20th anniversary season will include over 50 films, multiple panel discussions with filmmakers and talent, and more than 15 parties and events throughout the week-long festival. Festival program in its entirety is available here and as a download. For all the information, go to OUTshineFilm.com.

1985

Director: Yen Tan, USA
Closing Night Film, East Coast Premiere
Inspired by the award-winning short of the same name, 1985follows Adrian (Cory Michael Smith, Gotham), a closeted young man returning to his Texas hometown for Christmas during the first wave of the AIDS crisis. Burdened with an unspeakable tragedy in New York, Adrian reconnects with his younger brother and estranged childhood friend as he struggles to divulge his dire circumstances to his religious parents played by Virginia Madsen and Michael Chiklis. Shot in luscious black & white, 1985 is a beautiful, powerful film both in story
and style.

12 Mar 2018

2018 SXSW: “1985” Portrait Studio by Pizza Hut!

Virginia Madsen and her co-stars from the film ‘1985’ poses for a portrait powered by Pizza Hut at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival on March 10, 2018 in Austin, Texas. All photos are in the photo gallery, enjoy!