Rarely has a film garnered such high levels of critical praise as
SOUTHERN COMFORT a breakout hit and winner at nearly 20 major
film festivals including the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance. From
Seattle to Florida from San Francisco to Berlin SOUTHERN COMFORT
has mesmerized audiences and critics alike with its rare blend of
humor tragedy and romance. At the heart of SOUTHERN COMFORT is a
beautiful and remarkable love story more touching and captivating
than anything fiction could ever create. With a masterful eye for
emotional detail award-winning filmmaker Kate Davis takes us to
the back hills of Georgia and into the world of Robert Eads a
52-year-old wise-cracking cowboy warm and gregarious who was born
female and later transitioned into living as a man after bearing
two sons. The film finds Robert fifteen years later during the
extraordinary last year of his life as he falls headlong into a
passionate romance with Lola a vivacious and magnetic woman who
was born male. One of the most remarkable documentaries of our
time about gender family and love relationships SOUTHERN COMFORT
is an illuminating and deeply moving film--a world of
contradictions where good old boys who drive pick-up trucks and
shoot the breeze around the barbecue double as 21st century
pioneers courageously forging a new world for themselves and for
us. DVD Features: Deleted Scenes; Cast Interviews; Exclusive
Photo Gallery; Filmmaker and Additional Crew Biographies;
Filmmaker Statement; Interactive Menus; Scene Selection
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As Robert Eads puts it in one of the first scenes of
this remarkable documentary, he lives in "Bubba-land"--which
wouldn't be unusual if Robert weren't a female-to-male
transsexual. Southern Comfort chronicles the last year of
Robert's life, as he succumbed to, ironically, cervical cancer;
over that year, documentarian Kate Davis developed an amazing
intimacy with Robert and his adopted family of other transsexuals
living in the depths of Georgia, including his vivacious
male-to-female transsexual girlfriend Lola. The film's title
comes from an annual gathering that Robert describes as "the
cotillion of the trans community, the coming-out party"--an event
part convention, part high school prom. Every scene testifies to
both the enormous difficulties they face and the grace, humor,
and sheer will with which they take it all on. It's not
surprising Southern Comfort has won numerous awards, including
the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. --Bret Fetzer
Special Message from Kate Davis, Director of Southern Comfort.
This June marks the 40th Anniversary of the Stonewall riots. In
June of 1969, for the first time, transgendered and gay youth
fought back against the because they were fed up with
oppression, and many felt they had nothing to lose by risking
their lives and throwing bricks at the establishment. To the
amazement of many during those violent nights, they found they
had a collective voice. This grew into the annual Gay Pride
parades which continue across the world, all testaments to the
power of speaking out.
These themes of courage and stepping out of the closet were also
the back of Southern Comfort. When I met Robert Eads at a
conference for transgendered men, I found myself living with a
very hidden minority, hidden because they pass so well as men,
and hidden to protect themselves against the daily perils of
living as a transperson in a world which still persecutes them
and makes every day a dangerous prospect.
The men in Southern Comfort were fine living their regular
lives, and hardly jumped at the chance to be part of a
documentary. In fact, Robert himself resisted for months, and one
day called to tell me that he was up for it. That he would be
dead by the time the film would be finished. And so we all
started to help tell Robert's extraordinary tale of being a
transman, a parent, a -toting guy who can pass for a
classic Redneck from rural Georgia, and as someone who was
falling in love during the final year of his life. During the
filming, I began to hear one recurring idea: the importance of
accepting oneself. From that comes the strength to live a more
honest life, and from that comes the chance to open up the hearts
and minds of others.
And so the six main people in Southern Comfort, most of whom had
survived rejection from their families, friends, employers, and
the medical world, decided it was time to speak out and let
others know how that feels. That they are human too. Many times
at the end of a shoot, I would fly back from Atlanta feeling
inspired by their strength - wouldn't it be great if we all could
simply accept ourselves? - but also I felt outraged that such
prejudice still exists and continues to kill.
Southern Comfort has, since then, reached millions of people
around the world. There was even a town in rural Japan which
celebrated "Robert Eads Day." Those in the film now know they did
a lot to help break down stereotypes about those society condemns
for being different. In a quieter way, the film reflects the
spirit which was needed to ignite the Stonewall riots. Enough
hiding. Time to be on an equal footing with everyone else. In the
end, this isn't a story of GLBT rights or transgendered rights,
but of human rights.
- Kate Davis, Director, Southern Comfort
Stills from Southern Comfort (Click for larger image)
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