Raising Hell is a 2010 documentary film by Ed Webb-Ingall that explores the experiences of children of gay and lesbian parents. Webb-Ingall specifically sought to "create a safe space where kids [could] be seen to be speaking freely and openly about their experiences [with gay and lesbian parents] without having to be poster kids for the perfect family or the perfect childhood". The film also features interviews with sociologist and gay activist Jeffrey Weeks, psychologist Susan Golombok and family lawyer Gill Butler.
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, 30minutes OrigineAllemagne GenresDocumentaire ThèmesSexualité, Homosexualité, Documentaire sur l'homosexualité, Documentaire sur une personnalité, LGBT, LGBT, Lesbianisme Note54% Dans un petit village du Zimbabwe, deux femmes tombent amoureuses l'une de l'autre. Nongoma est célibataire, mais sa voisine Tsisti est mariée. De plus, l'homosexualité est taboue dans leur société. Quand leur relation est découverte, Nongoma part pour la ville. Deux ans après, elles se retrouvent par hasard. Elles décident alors de vivre ensemble dans un village où personne ne les connaît.
, 1h43 Réalisé parP. David Ebersole OrigineEtats-Unis GenresDocumentaire, Musical ThèmesLa musique, Sexualité, Homosexualité, Documentaire sur l'homosexualité, Documentaire sur la musique, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Musique, LGBT, LGBT, Lesbianisme ActeursCourtney Love, Melissa Auf der Maur, Sarah Vowell, Jenny Shimizu Note67% The film begins with discussion amidst Hole's 1994 and 1995 world tour, then works backwards to Schemel's childhood growing up in Marysville, Washington, and details her coming out to her family as a lesbian, as well as her immersion in Seattle's music scenes, where she would eventually cross paths with Kurt Cobain. Through contemporary interviews with Schemel's bandmates Courtney Love, Eric Erlandson, and Melissa Auf der Maur, her beginnings in Hole are detailed, including her audition with Love and Erlandson in Los Angeles amidst the Rodney King riots, as well as her time living with Love and husband Kurt Cobain, and the songwriting process between Love, Schemel, and Erlandson. Additional commentary from fellow female drummers, musicians, peers, and friends of Schemel's are provided throughout. After the death of Hole's bassist Kristen Pfaff in 1994 (only two months after the suicide of Kurt Cobain), the band embarked on a world tour with Auf der Maur as Pfaff's replacement, and Schemel, along with Love, began heavily using heroin. Schemel's drug use leads to a breakup with her girlfriend, who acted as Love's personal assistant on the tour, and Schemel reflects on her time in a rehabilitation facility she checked into with Love after the conclusion of the tour in 1995.