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Word Is Out

  • 1977
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
512
YOUR RATING
Nathaniel Dorsky, Tom Fitzpatrick, Elsa Gidlow, Tede Mathews, David Gillon, and Pat Bond in Word Is Out (1977)
DocumentaryBiographyHistory

26 diverse lesbian and gay people are interviewed about their lives and the challenges they experience in a homophobic culture. A groundbreaking documentary is now an artefact of a different... Read all26 diverse lesbian and gay people are interviewed about their lives and the challenges they experience in a homophobic culture. A groundbreaking documentary is now an artefact of a different time.26 diverse lesbian and gay people are interviewed about their lives and the challenges they experience in a homophobic culture. A groundbreaking documentary is now an artefact of a different time.

  • Directors
    • Nancy Adair
    • Andrew Brown
    • Rob Epstein
  • Stars
    • Pat Bond
    • John Burnside
    • Sally M. Gearhart
  • See production, box office & company info
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    512
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Nancy Adair
      • Andrew Brown
      • Rob Epstein
    • Stars
      • Pat Bond
      • John Burnside
      • Sally M. Gearhart
    • 9User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production, box office & company info
  • See more at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win

    Photos15

    Tom Fitzpatrick, Sally M. Gearhart, Elsa Gidlow, Tede Mathews, David Gillon, Betty Powell, Michael Mintz, Pam Jackson, Dennis Chiu, Pat Bond, Donald Hackett, Linda Marco, and Rick Stokes in Word Is Out (1977)
    Pat Bond in Word Is Out (1977)
    Sally M. Gearhart in Word Is Out (1977)
    Bernice 'Whitey' Fladden in Word Is Out (1977)
    Harry Hay and John Burnside in Word Is Out (1977)
    Michael Mintz in Word Is Out (1977)
    Dennis Chiu in Word Is Out (1977)
    David Gillon in Word Is Out (1977)
    Nathaniel Dorsky in Word Is Out (1977)
    Tom Fitzpatrick in Word Is Out (1977)
    Tede Mathews in Word Is Out (1977)
    Tede Mathews in Word Is Out (1977)

    Top cast

    Edit
    Pat Bond
    Pat Bond
    • Self
    John Burnside
    • Self
    Sally M. Gearhart
    • Self
    • (as Sally Gearhart)
    Elsa Gidlow
    • Self
    Donald Hackett
    • Self
    Tom Fitzpatrick
    Tom Fitzpatrick
    • Self
    • (as Roger Harkenrider)
    Harry Hay
    • Self
    Pam Jackson
    • Self
    Rusty Millington
    • Self
    Trish Nugent
    • Self
    Mark Pinney
    • Self
    Rick Stokes
    • Self
    George Mendenhall
    • Self
    Bernice 'Whitey' Fladden
    • Self
    • (as Whitey)
    Nadine Armijo
    • Self
    Dennis Chiu
    • Self
    Cynthia Gair
    • Self
    Nathaniel Dorsky
    Nathaniel Dorsky
    • Self
    • Directors
      • Nancy Adair
      • Andrew Brown
      • Rob Epstein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Available to stream on the Criterion Channel as part of Pride and Protest: The Films of Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman.
    • Quotes

      Danny: It's really scary standing in isolation from everybody else and that's what I've feared most of my life. The fact that I wasn't part of, part of a group.

    • Connections
      Featured in No Secret Anymore: The Times of Del Martin & Phyllis Lyon (2003)

    User reviews9

    Review
    Review
    Featured review
    8/10
    How things have changed
    I saw this 1977 pre-AIDS documentary on TCM this week. I had never heard of it and found it remarkable.

    So many positive things stick out: The fact that none of the participants are angry or overly resentful; the fact that they are all candid, non-delusional and totally open to the questions; the fact that they are at their ease; the fact that they can tell everything about their past experience and still have hope in the future in spite of some occasional twangs of nostalgia for their "underground" life and of pain at what they have endured. I can't imagine (in a SF alternate universe), straight people being so forgiving if heterosexuality had been persecuted for thousands of years.

    But the thing I found the most remarkable is that all the participants are so lucid and very articulate. Even the ones that are not scholarly (like the two women living as a farming couple in the country) express themselves in a clear, concise and honest manner. The same can be said of the few "flamboyant" gays. What they say ultimately makes sense, in spite of their expressiveness and their love of hyperbole. This kind of faculty for expressing the truth or simply communicating in a direct manner has totally disappeared from most of the gays I know today. It's as if these troubled times on the cusp of new era made people more intelligent and perceptive. Now that homosexuality is "more or less" accepted (except by inbred small-town Republicans), gay people seem to have lost some of that lucidity and that is very sad. Or maybe Americans have just gotten dumber as a whole with the influence of movies, television and video games and the loss of basic literacy due to a degrading education system. I'm just saying... It's interesting to note in that respect that the IMDb user ratings show that this film doesn't "connect" as much with the younger generations as it does with older viewers.

    On the other hand, there is absolutely no reference by any of the participants to any concept, reality or news from outside the U.S. (except for a few insights on growing up Asian and gay or Black and gay), which to a non-American of today like myself, may seem strange. There are also very few references to the influence of the media. Even the most inarticulate, delusional, and misinformed gays of today know they live in a global media-controlled universe and can compare themselves to other parts of the world. But that is just another sign of the times, I guess. Today's young people take the global village for granted and that may not necessarily make them more intelligent, more self-aware or more informed about anything. And gay liberation was perhaps (arguably) first and foremost a North-American phenomenon, made possible by relative prosperity, democracy and the access to higher education.

    The only things that can bring a smile or a wince today are the conscious and/or unconscious role-playing of some of the lesbian couples and the few mentions of "lesbian separatism" by some of the participants. But that is - and has always been - something for the feminists to analyze. And who's to say the male-male couples wouldn't have exhibited just as much butch-femme role-playing if they had actually been shown more?

    In conclusion, I like the way the participants - despite all the rhetoric - mostly come off as thinking individuals first and gays second.
    helpful•13
    4
    • benoit-3
    • Jun 25, 2010

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 31, 1979 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives
    • Filming locations
      • San Francisco, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Mariposa Film Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Technical specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 4 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Nathaniel Dorsky, Tom Fitzpatrick, Elsa Gidlow, Tede Mathews, David Gillon, and Pat Bond in Word Is Out (1977)
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