It's not quite over, but 2013 has already piled up enough historic points to sit out the few days remaining to 2014. While the community has celebrated the long, wonderful lives of some who left us in 2013, and mourned the lives of those who left far too soon, marriage equality -- more than any single person or event -- could fairly be the big LGBT news of 2013. And that news, at least, has been good.
In whirlwind fashion, we're revisiting these 12 months to remind us of some points worth remembering, some we might just as soon forget, and to cherish the journey for its own sake.
JANUARY

Barney Frank
January was a big month on the 2013 calendar, starting the year off with marriage-equality in Maryland, secured at the ballot box the previous November -- as was the case in Maine and Washington, too. Those elections also had ramifications on Capitol Hill, of course, with important changes taking place in January. Among them, Democrat Barney Frank served his last day in office, retiring after more than three decades representing Massachusetts's 4th District and paving the way for other out gay candidates to follow. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) was one of them, moving from the House of Representatives to be sworn in Jan. 3 as the first out candidate to be elected to the U.S. Senate, as six fellow out legislators were sworn in to serve in the House for the 113th Congress.
Barack Obama was also sworn in for a second presidential term, delivering an inaugural address that repeated his signature ''Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall'' line, referring the suffrage, segregation and LGBT activism.
Coming a bit earlier than usual, the Centaur MC's 29th Mid-Atlantic Leather Weekend sidestepped Inauguration Day, but with nearly as much pomp and circumstance named Bryce Caine Mr. MAL 2013. Also securing his seat in January was Richmond General District Court Judge Tracy Thorne-Begland – Virginia's first out gay judge – a father and former Navy pilot who'd become a lightning rod for anti-gay ire in the General Assembly in 2012 and who'd been serving on the bench via temporary appointment since June 2012.

Mid-Atlantic Leather 2013
(Photo by Todd Franson)
While January realized some great gains, the losses were also great. Jeanne Manford, founder of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), died Jan. 8 at the age of 92. A month later, the White House announced Manford would receive the Presidential Citizen Medal. Dan Massey, a longtime activist in both D.C.'s and the nation's LGBT and sexual-freedom fronts, died Jan. 28 at the age of 70. A local life inarguably cut far too short, however, was that of Michael Triplett. At just 48, Triplett, who had served as the president of the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association (NLGJA), died of cancer.
FEBRUARY
While Virginians marked Valentine's Day with statewide protests calling for marriage equality, Gallup sent a Feb. 15 Valentine to D.C. in the form of poll results. According to Gallup, D.C. has the nation's highest percentage of LGBT residents.
With Virginians clamoring for equality and D.C. thick with LGBT residents, it's no wonder a Feb. 22 story from FarifaxTimes.com had locals steaming. The story centered on Centreville, Va.'s Spa World, which apparently asked a women to leave due to perceptions of her gender identity. While the back and forth that followed remains foggy to this day, the simmering controversy eventually settled.
Meanwhile, back in the District, LaShawn Carson was charged in the nonfatal shooting of a gay man at a Columbia Heights IHOP restaurant in March 2012. In October, a D.C. Superior Court jury found her guilty of aggravated assault while armed and other charges.
Looking at bigger-picture items, opponents of California's Proposition 8 ban on marriage equality filed their brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in February. The Senate voted 58-41 to confirm Chuck Hagel as secretary of defense, following Hagel's commitment to gay servicemembers in light of a poor record while serving as a senator. By month's end, Congress passed an LGBT-inclusive version of the Violence Against Women Act, which Obama signed into law in March.
MARCH
First, the bad news, during this month of mostly local news. In Annapolis, the state Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee managed to kill a bill to make antidiscrimination legislation inclusive of gender identity and expression a statewide law. ''The three Democratic senators who voted against the bill should be embarrassed,'' Sharon Brackett, board chair of Gender Rights Maryland, told Metro Weekly at the time. Meanwhile, Universal Gear went public with surveillance video following a March 23 robbery -- its third since December 2012 -- at the popular 14th Street retailer.
But the community rallied and made the best of March nonetheless. The Capital Area Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce, aka The Chamber, threw a successful 5th Annual Mega-Networking and Social Event at Town Danceboutique March 13. The DC Center, the city's LGBT community center, launched an ongoing Monday coffee hour for LGBT seniors, sponsored by Alpha People's Drugs; while more than 100 members of the local transgender community and allies rallied in Columbia Heights Plaza for equal health care treatment for transgender people.
Over at the Supreme Court, March closed out with the justices hearing the arguments on the two cases -- United States v. Windsor and Hollingsworth v. Perry -- focused, respectively, on the Defense of Marriage Act and California's Proposition 8. It was during the DOMA arguments, March 27, that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg offered her famous characterization of marriage inequality as creating ''skim milk marriage.''
APRIL

Youth Pride Day in Dupont Circle
(Photo by Ward Morrison)
April returned the familiar. With the Cherry blossoms, so came the Cherry Fund's annual fundraising party. Another old favorite to return to D.C. in April was Tracks, in the form of a reunion weekend for the storied gay nightclub that closed its doors in 1999. Sadly missing was beloved longtime bartender Jay Schmidt, who died in late 2012.
Sadder still was the April 3 murder of Kelly Young, a 29-year-old transgender woman in Baltimore. The community also feared killers of a microscopic sort in April, with Whitman-Walker Health erring on the side of caution and advising that men meeting certain criteria get vaccinated for bacterial meningitis following deaths in New York and Los Angeles.
In bad news that could've been prevented, the Republican National Committee on April 12 unanimously approved an anti-gay marriage resolution. ''This resolution was motivated by anti-gay bigotry and brought forward by RNC members who just don't like gay people," offered GOProud's Jimmy LaSalvia. Other Republicans, however, were seeing the light: Rob Portman of Ohio, a month prior, became the first GOP senator to come out for marriage equality, thanks in large part to his son coming out as gay.
The community got an April boost with the NBA's Jason Collins coming out in a Sports Illustrated exclusive. A more quantifiable boost -- $25,000 -- was made by Crew Club's D.C. Allen in support of The DC Center's effort to relocate to the Reeves Center. And as it usually does, weather permitting, the Youth Pride Alliance closed out the month with its annual Youth Pride celebration. In 2013, that celebration featured another out athlete, Wade Davis of football fame.
MAY

2013 Next Generation Awards cover
Come May, it was like January all over again, but with much nicer weather. The forecast was for nothing but rainbows as Rhode Island got the ball rolling May 2 as Gov. Lincoln Chafee (I) signed marriage equality into law, making Rhode Island the 10th state -- along with D.C. -- to join the cool kids, with the law taking effect Aug. 1. The Atlantic tide continued with Delaware Gov. Jack Markell (D) signing his seaside state's marriage-equality law May 7, effective July 1. Even Midwestern Minnesota got in on the act with Gov. Mark Dayton (D) signing his state's law May 14, effective Aug. 1.
Some institutions also took some big steps into the 21st century. The pioneering Peace Corps announced May 21 that it would begin allowing same-sex couples to serve together, as it has allowed married opposite-sex couples. ''I am proud that the agency is taking this important step forward to allow same-sex domestic partners to serve overseas together,'' said the corps' Carrie Hessler-Radelet, at the time deputy director, now acting director. Two days later, even the Boy Scouts of America made room for a timely move with an easy majority of the BSA's 1,400 councilmembers voting to allow gay youth to participate. According to the resolution passed in Dallas, effective Jan. 1, 2014, "No youth may be denied membership in the Boy Scouts of America on the basis of sexual orientation or preference alone.'' As for adults, the ban remains.
There was still more to celebrate in May as Metro Weekly named its four Next Generation awardees: AJ King, Michael Komo, Joseph Lewis and Je-Shawna Wholley. Capital Pride named its 2013 Heroes: Ed Bailey of Town Dancboutique and Number Nine lounge; Barbara Lewis of Whitman-Walker Health; Darren Phelps of Bethel Christian Church D.C.; Maryland state Sen. Jamie Raskin; and Margot Rosen of the Human Rights Campaign. Capital Pride also honored Consuella Lopez for work in the city's Transgender and Gender Identity Respect campaign, Hassan Naveed of Gays and Lesbians Opposing Violence, longtime volunteer Jennifer Hall, and Dignity/Washington.
Of course, May couldn't wrap up properly without a D.C. Black Pride celebration during the Memorial Day weekend. In 2013, the 23rd annual event honored Mayor Vincent Gray, Imani Woody, Courtney Williams, Theara Coleman, Christopher Watson and Donald Burch.
JUNE

Capital Pride Festival
(Photo by Ward Morrison)
The biggest month on the LGBT calendar arguably outdid itself in 2013, thanks to the Supreme Court's ruling that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) – that weighty bit that blocked the federal government from recognizing legal same-sex marriages – was unconstitutional, affecting everything from immigration to Army bases. And return marriage equality to California? What a great month!
Between the court and the Capital Pride Parade and Festival, June may have seemed like 30 days of bliss. Nothing, however, is ever that cut and dry. Following France's first official same-sex marriage in May, anti-equality protests continued through June. On June 6, A.J. Williams, who appeared as a Metro Weekly Coverboy in February, was killed in a car crash. An unnamed transgender woman survived being shot June 27 in Northeast D.C. On June 21, another transgender woman survived being stabbed 35 to 40 times in Southeast D.C. In October, Michael McBride pleaded guilty to a charge of aggravated assault while armed in that attack. Drag entertainer Miles DeNiro, who performs as Heidi Glüm, was attacked early June 23 at a 14th Street NW takeout spot following a performance at Black Cat in an incident recorded by an onlooker and which shortly after went viral. And Ali M. Jackson, chief assailant in a knife attack on a gay teen outside the Howard Theatre a year earlier, was sentenced June 28 to serve eight years for assault with intent to kill.
And on June 11, the members of the Russian Duma unanimously passed the now-infamous law banning ''propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations'' as gay-rights activists were attacked outside the legislative building. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the measure June 30.
JULY
While July is usually a quiet month for LGBT Washingtonians, the D.C. Council was nevertheless busy, on July 10 passing the JaParker Deoni Jones Birth Certificate Equality Amendment Act of 2013 on its second unanimous vote. The law, named for the young transgender woman fatally stabbed as she stood at a Northeast bus stop in February 2012, makes it easier for people to amend birth certificate information to accurately reflect gender. ''It's really significant,'' Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Coalition for Transgender Equality, told Metro Weekly at the time. ''Most people take for granted that all the IDs they have match, and most people don't have to show their birth certificate or other documents to prove their identity.''
Christmas may have come early for some, whose gift was the shadenfreude they could savor as Eugene Delgaudio (R-Sterling), Loudon County, Va., supervisor and head of the notoriously anti-gay Public Advocate, was censured by his Board of Supervisors peers following an investigation of his office's use of resources. At the other end of the political spectrum, Maryland state Del. Heather Mizeur formally declared her bid to become governor, which could give the state its first female governor and the country its first out lesbian governor.
Areas where progressive LGBT outreach has sought to build bridges was on display in July, too. D.C.'s annual ''DREAM Graduation,'' a symbolic event at which youth fighting for immigration rights under the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act banner, did double duty by hosting the wedding of immigration activist Prerna Lal and her wife Lindsay Schubiner. LGBT outreach also extended to the trial of George Zimmerman in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, with a coalition of 35 LGBT groups signing an open letter decrying the not-guilty verdict handed down July 13.
At the end of the month, Annie Kaylor, namesake of Annie's Paramount Steakhouse on the 17th Street NW strip of many LGBT venues, died at age 85, after cementing her reputation as a community ally while working at the restaurant through the dawn of the modern gay-rights movement, the AIDS epidemic and on.
AUGUST
August 2013 hardly looked like ''dog days.'' Things got rolling right away as the ACLU, ACLU of Virginia, law firm Jenner and Block, and Lambda Legal on Aug. 1 announced they would be filing a federal class action lawsuit on behalf of two lesbian couples to bring marriage equality to Virginia.
The legal front was already improving for LGBT youth, particularly in California, where Gov. Jerry Brown (D) on Aug. 12 approved the School Success and Opportunity Act to provide transgender youth equal access to all school programs. California's law protecting youth from ''ex-gay'' therapy was upheld in federal court Aug. 29, while New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) signed a similar ''ex-gay'' ban for his state Aug. 19.
In another legal arena, a military judge sentenced Chelsea Manning -- then recognized as Bradley Manning -- on Aug. 21 to 35 years in prison for her role in the ''Wikileaks'' leak of classified documents.
Another veteran, Darren Manzella, one of the best-known faces in the fight against ''Don't Ask, Don't Tell,'' died in a car accident Aug. 29. Just 36, Manzella had married his husband, Javier Lapeira-Soto, less than two months prior. Manzella's death wasn't the only one to shake the community in August. Stephen Sasser, longtime HIV/AIDS activist and the partner of Michael Kaplan, head of AIDS United, died in D.C. at 44.
Through the good and bad of August, one event helped provide perspective – the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom – with special emphasis finally going to Bayard Rustin, a gay man and critical architect of the 1963 event.
SEPTEMBER
While falling short of calling for a boycott or new venue for the 2014 Winter Olympics to be held in Russia, President Obama followed up his condemnation of Russia's new anti-LGBT law by meeting with LGBT activists Sept. 6 during his visit to St. Petersburg for the G-20 summit.
Back in D.C., Floyd Lee Corkins, the 29-year-old gay Virginian who pleaded guilty to the nonfatal shooting of a security guard at the headquarters of the anti-LGBT Family Research Council, was sentenced Sept. 19 to 25 years in jail. For HOPE DC, aka HOPE Foundation (Health Options and Positive Energy Foundation), 25 years held a different significance as the organization marked its 25th anniversary with a Sept. 21 celebration. ''We celebrate the dramatic medical breakthroughs that have turned HIV into a manageable condition, but we are deeply aware of the social challenges of living well and responsibly with HIV,'' said Jim Garza, vice president of the HOPE Foundation, in announcing the anniversary. Marking its first-ever celebration, local bisexuals launched Bisexual Pride Day on Sept. 23.
There was also far more somber celebration -- a celebration of Barrett Brick's life -- following the longtime activist's death on Sept. 22, survived by his husband, Antonio Ruffini, of South Africa. With interests in a variety of fields, Brick, who died of cancer at age 59, had served as president of the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance of Washington, D.C.; president of D.C. Bet Mishpachah congregation for LGBT Jews; and was recognized by the Rainbow History Project aa a ''Community Pioneer,'' along with many other distinctions.
September also gave the LGBT community a powerful first, as the Senate on Sept. 24 confirmed Todd Hughes as the nation's first openly gay federal appeals court judge.
OCTOBER
The resonance of ''25'' continued into October, beyond Corkins and HOPE DC, and straight – so to speak – to Equality Maryland as the state's primary LGBT organization marked its quarter century. Enjoying another anniversary was the Wanda Alston House, open five years as D.C.'s only dedicated transitional housing for LGBT youth. The five-year mark also came with a new structure including a foundation and Casa Ruby serving as fiscal agent.
There was less celebration and more scramble for Ford's Theatre, set to begin October with a month of Lincoln Legacy Project programming centered on The Laramie Project and the murder of Matthew Shepard. Capitol Hill peevishness, however, stood in the way with the government shutdown hitting the theater, which is operated in association with the federal National Park Service. The nearby First Congregational United Church of Christ, however, was able to pick up the congressional slack and offer space for Ford's to salvage the showings.
By mid-month, the New Jersey Supreme Court forced the wheels of gubernatorial governance and ordered that marriage equality come to the Garden State. Another court, D.C. Superior, found March 2012's IHOP shooter, Lashawn Carson, guilty on seven charges, Oct. 11.
While courts exercised their authority in October, former GOP Pennsylvania governor and former head of Homeland Security Tom Ridge, exercised his own authority at the Log Cabin Republicans' annual dinner and threw the book at his party's tea-party bloc. Americans, Ridge told attendees of LCR's Spirit of Lincoln Dinner, ''are not attracted to a party that imposes an even more severe litmus test on its own members, projects an unacceptable rigidity and self-righteousness on social issues, and spends more time and energy objecting to bad law rather than proposing alternatives.''
The month closed with Whitman-Walker Health's 27th annual AIDS Walk Washington, honoring Sean Sasser, and the 27th annual High Heel Race down 17th Street.
NOVEMBER
There was plenty to be thankful for in November 2013. First up, Illinois and Hawaii joined the marriage-equality club. Hawaii's law took effect in December, while the Illinois law should be fully implemented in June 2014.
Metro Weekly was thankful to be honored with a Prism Award from Rayceen Pendarvis at a Nov. 4 ceremony, and everyone could be grateful Nov. 9 when the Capital Area Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce showcased the area's LGBT community with its annual ''g.life'' expo. Anyone opposing discrimination would've certainly been thankful Nov. 7 when the Senate passed the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) -- even if not thankful for the hurdles the legislation faces in the House.
Gratitude aside, there was also plenty to ponder and act upon, like the Transgender Day of Remembrance, Nov. 20, and the Transgender Day of Action, Nov. 22. The November dedication of the ''Pillar of Fire'' sculpture to Whitman-Walker Clinic (now Whitman-Walker Health) and the health workers who provided care to patients during the early years of the HIV/AIDS pandemic will give passersby plenty to think about for years to come. Typhoon Haiyan grabbed the world's attention at it tore through Southeast Asia, and at least one local went above and beyond as Andrei Smith organized a Nov. 22 fundraiser for victims at Cobalt.
Also certainly worthy of LGBT reflection was Obama's posthumously awarding the late astronaut Sally Ride and civil rights hero Bayard Rustin with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Rustin's partner, Walter Naegle, and Ride's partner, Tam O'Shaughnessy, accepted on behalf of their late loved ones. Another notable moment on Obama's November agenda was signing the HIV Organ Policy Equity Act, aka the HOPE Act, allowing HIV-positive patients to receive HIV-positive organs.
DECEMBER
Still in the midst of December, it's difficult to assess beyond another World AIDS Day, India's Supreme Court re-criminalizing homosexual conduct and the death of an icon of social justice, Nelson Mandela.
In the words of Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin: "Nelson Mandela tore down oppression, united a rainbow nation, and always walked arm-in-arm with his LGBT brothers and sisters – and with all people – toward freedom. Though every man, woman and child who seeks justice around the world mourns this loss, his vision of an equal future lives on undimmed.''
...moreThe religious right is fighting to turn America's religious freedom from a shield into a sword against public policies and groups they dislike. Posing as victims, they demand a religious trump card that would nullify civil rights protections and allow the redlining of public commerce and health care along lines of gender, class and sexual orientation. Their most prominent targets are gay marriage and birth control; but with each success, their appetite can be counted on to grow.
The U.S. Supreme Court this term will hear another challenge to the Affordable Care Act. At issue in Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (linked with Conestoga Wood Specialties Corp. v. Sebelius and Autocam Corp. v. Sebelius) is whether a for-profit corporation can deny contraceptives in health coverage to its employees based on the owners' religious beliefs. The case touches on the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), which states that the government "shall not substantially burden a person's exercise of religion" without a compelling government interest, and unless the burden is the least restrictive means of furthering it.
Can a corporation, as distinct from its owners, hold religious beliefs? Is a corporation a person for religious purposes? Does the religious freedom of a company's owners trump that of its employees? Are some "persons" more equal than others?
Advocates in the marriage-equality movement have navigated the church-state boundary. In 2009, as the D.C. Council was considering the Religious Freedom and Civil Marriage Equality Amendment Act, the Catholic Archdiocese of Washington sought an exemption to the D.C. Human Rights Act so it could discriminate against gay employees and clients as a government contractor for foster-care services. That not only went beyond First Amendment protections, it twisted the Gospel by rendering everything to the Archdiocese's God and nothing to Caesar, the public square that people of all faiths must share. Fortified by decades of gay-rights advocacy, District officials refused to be bullied.
The "freedom for me, but not for thee" stance, pushed through the prism of corporate rights, advances the prospect of a new feudalism in which workers enjoy fewer protections and opportunities, while business owners are free to run roughshod.
Those of us in cities with many merchant options risk falsely generalizing from our circumstances. As Sarah Warbelow of the Human Rights Campaign said at the Center for American Progress on Dec. 12, the clustering of religious groups in different areas means there are many towns where professionals could be rendered unemployable if a few employers in their field imposed a religious test. The same for customers facing "unwelcome" signs at the local bakeries or pharmacies they rely upon.
If discrimination is wrong, as most voters believe, then carving out overly broad exceptions, in which "micro churches" can opportunistically pop up and impose their will anywhere at any time, undermines the respect and tolerance that cement our pluralistic democracy. It takes us closer to (or worsens) an age of robber barons who are a law unto themselves; a day when only corporations are people; a return to a time when only the lord of the manor had any rights that anyone need respect.
There is cause for hope. In 2011, Mississippi voters rejected a measure to grant personhood to fertilized eggs. In 2012, North Dakota voters rejected a "religious freedom" measure that would have made it harder to crack down on child neglect and domestic violence. This month, an anti-gay baker in Colorado was found guilty of discrimination. Yet concerns remain over the breadth of the religious exemption in the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, pending in Congress.
"Religious freedom" is a vague and slippery term. Casting a keen eye on its misuse is essential if we are to preserve the real thing.
Richard J. Rosendall is a writer and activist. He can be reached at rrosendall@starpower.net.
...moreThis was a strange, strange year for movies. Every big summer release fell short of expectations -- I'm looking at you Pacific Rim, Man of Steel and The Great Gatsby -- while theaters were positively stuffed with great movies once autumn began. It's not unusual to see the year's best during awards season, of course, but 2013 has been backlogged like no other. What follows are my favorites from a lopsided, yet still excellent, year in film.

Short Term 12
The Best
1. Short Term 12 -- Destin Cretton's Short Term 12 is the best movie of the year. A daring, devastating story about a group of young supervisors at a foster-care facility, it's a reminder of what talented filmmakers can accomplish when they dedicate themselves to ambitious, nuanced, delicate stories about ordinary people. Brie Larson turns in the finest performance of her fledging career -- she'll be a star, just wait -- while newcomer Keith Stanfield marks his acting debut with raw, remarkable aggression. Short Term 12 is a gift. Don't miss it.
2. 12 Years a Slave -- What else needs to be said about Steve McQueen's masterpiece? It's the greatest, most challenging movie ever made about slavery. Based on the memoirs of Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free black man who was kidnapped in 1841 and forced into slavery, 12 Years a Slave stands alone for its an unblinking, absolute focus on the cruelties of an American genocide. It is an utterly important movie. It matters. McQueen brings to life our worst history, in all of its terror.
3. Her -- Although it won't open in D.C. until Christmas day, no discussion of the year in movies is complete without Spike Jonze's Her. An earnest love story about a man (Joaquin Phoenix) and the artificially intelligent "person" in his electronic device (voiced by Scarlett Johansson), Her is as heartfelt as it is surreal. Jonze has little patience for techno-phobia, thankfully, so the movie is a kinder sort of philosophical romance. What do we look for in our partners? When do we ask for too much? What does it mean to control our love, and be controlled by it? Don't be deceived by the science-fiction premise, Her has a gentle heartbeat.'
4. Inside Llewyn Davis -- Inside Llewyn Davis is a rare piece of work for Joel and Ethan Coen. Unlike their dramas and thrillers -- which tend to rely on external conflicts driven by eclectic ensembles -- Llewyn Davis fits into a quieter, internally taxing class for the Coen brothers. It's a character study of a failure. The title character is a musician perpetually trapped on the cusp of success in 1960s New York. He's doomed to a cycle of promise, self-sabotage and struggle, as if Sisyphus were trapped in a folk song. This is a somber story built from a hundred tiny mysteries -- and fortunately, they don't need to be solved to be appreciated.
5. Stories We Tell -- Sarah Polley's documentary is not what it appears to be. I don't want to reveal too much about the twists and turns of her family's incredible history -- or how she chooses to reveal them -- but know this: Stories We Tell is the year's most deliberate movie, skillfully blending style and substance together in a way that amplifies Polley's message. The stories we tell have stories of their own. And those are the ones we need to know.
6. Gravity -- Yes, it has a terrible script. And, yes, the metaphors are as overt as they come. Yet Gravity is still a visual masterpiece made by the most technically gifted director in the world. It still uses the grandeur of Earth and the limitlessness of outer space as a three-dimensional canvas for an audacious story about life, rebirth and evolution. It's still a remarkably kinetic movie, dedicated to a physical sort of storytelling that's rarely seen outside of heartless blockbusters. Weaknesses be damned, Gravity is a beautiful movie.
7. Nebraska -- Alexander Payne's black-and-white comedy isn't a love letter to the state where he was raised. It's a snapshot of then and now, an artful collision between America's proud past and its sluggish present. (And it's also very, very funny.) Payne's best work has always come from that curious place between humor and truth, and Nebraska plumbs the sad-sack lives of David Grant (Will Forte) and his father Woody (Bruce Dern, inimitably) for deliciously grim laughs.
8. The Act of Killing -- I can't think of a word strong enough to describe Joshua Oppenheimer's documentary about the former leaders of an Indonesian death squad. Surreal? Unnerving? Horrific? Oppenheimer invited his subjects to recreate their war crimes on camera. They choose to do so by producing homages to their favorite genres: the Western, the noir gangster flick, and the musical. The Act of Killing is an essential movie about evil humans.
9. Gimme the Loot -- A small movie that came and went with little fanfare, Gimme the Loot is the hidden gem of the year. Rookie director Adam Leon tells the story of two teenage graffiti artists, Malcolm (Ty Hickson) and Sophia (Tashiana Washington), who spend a day scheming to tag the "Home Run Apple" at Shea Stadium in Queens. Leon has a crafty eye for New York -- a city full of vivid contradictions, as he sees it -- and a lot of lighthearted respect for his hustling heroes. Malcolm and Sophia are noisy outlaws, but they're not criminals.
10. All Is Lost -- J.C. Chandor's bold, ambitious examination of mortality and the self is most notable for what it doesn't do. It has no dialogue. Robert Redford is the only actor who appears on screen. The entire story takes place at sea. Yes, this is a survival movie -- it'd make an excellent double-feature paired with Gravity -- but it's concerned with an untraditional question for the genre: How does a person mourn his own death? Chandor won't deliver the answer, though. He knows you must answer yourself.
The Worst
1. R.I.P.D. -- Dead on arrival.
2. Movie 43 -- Every year, this list always includes a movie that needs no justification. Its mere existence is a stronger indictment than anything I could ever write. It's a movie that's so crude and idiotic, it's best to simply mark it as one of the year's worst, pause a moment to consider its terribleness one last time, and then forget about it forever. Good riddance.
3. Live Free or Die Hard -- Please don't make another Die Hard movie. Please don't make another Die Hard movie. Please don't make another Die Hard movie.
4. Runner Runner -- Boring, boring. What kind of gambling movie doesn't have a stomach for risk? Runner Runner is the most forgettable movie of 2013, a by-the-numbers crime caper that's even duller than its title suggests.
5. Salinger -- A manipulative, pseudo-intellectual biography filled with the sort of Psych 101 babble that would be laughed out of a dorm room, Shane Salerno's documentary claims to offer an "unprecedented" look into J.D. Salinger's inner life. Instead, it just trots out a gaggle of celebrities who drone on and on about how much they loved The Catcher in the Rye. (Guess what? Everybody else does, too.) To borrow a favorite phrase of Holden Caulfield, this thing is a goddam phony.
...moreOur selection of entertainment offers serial killers, beloved sleuths, LGBT-friendly toons, and more.
Pro footballer turned minister Ken Hutcherson was one of Washington State's most fervent campaigners against marriage equality.
The season 4 champion of the History Channel reality show Top Shot opened up about his sexual orientation and acceptance among fellow marksmen.

This is the debut of GaySocialites.com‘s new talk show, The Buzz. On this special edition Charles Winters, Jason Beck and Robbyne Kaamil take you behind the scenes of the 2013 Glam Awards, New York City’s longest running nightlife awards show. Introducing The Buzz by GaySocialites.com: The Buzz will be back with its first season in […]
The post The Buzz: 2013 Glam Awards Special [VIDEO] appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
President Barack Obama and Vice-President Joe Biden will not be attending the Winter Olympics in Sochi as the United States’ top two leaders plan to sit-out of this year’s games The United States will not be boycotting the Olympics despite Russia’s anti-gay laws. Instead, President Obama has decided to include some openly gay members in […]
The post Obama names openly gay athletes to Winter Olympic delegation appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
The Advocate has named Pope Francis their “Person of the Year” for 2013 noting the pontiff’s push for the Catholic Church to be more accepting of the LGBT community. Pope Francis is leader of 1.2 billion Roman Catholics all over the world. There are three times as many Catholics in the world than there are […]
The post The Advocate names Pope Francis Person of the Year appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
This surprisingly sentimental Godot owes its uniqueness to the decades-long friendship of Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart (which dates back to the 1970s). For the first time I believe that Estragon/Gogo (McKellen) and Vladimir/Didi (Stewart) truly have known each other for the endless lengths of time that playwright Samuel Beckett suggests. Waiting for Godot revolves […]
The post Theatre Review: “Waiting for Godot” appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
It’s a Pinter laugh riot! I’m not a big fan of Pinter, but I thoroughly enjoyed No Man’s Land. It’s the most engaging and comic play of his I’ve come across, even the most humane. And the current Broadway production, starring an ideally cast Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart, is easily the most lucid rendition […]
The post Theatre Review: “No Man’s Land” appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
![]() | This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active. |
No comments:
Post a Comment