Marc Huestis Trailers
Impresario TrailerZeitgeist 1977: The First Festival TrailerQueer Icon: The Cult of Bette Davis Trailer
Impresario TrailerZeitgeist 1977: The First Festival TrailerQueer Icon: The Cult of Bette Davis Trailer
Total trailers found: 12
01 May 1981
This 1981 short film was a collaboration between Factrix and SF filmmaker Marc Huestis. Starring Erich Brogger.
21 June 2022
With vintage footage, interviews, and Marc Huestis' own energy and humor at the center, Impresario is an homage to a San Francisco icon and one of the founders of Frameline.
01 October 1982
Marcie, a suburban housewife, dissatisfied with her bouffant-and-barbecue lifestyle, is hot on the trail of an old high school chum, Susan Jane.
01 January 1977
A short film "dedicated and/or with apologies to my love life, Joseph von Sternberg, Swept Away, and"
01 January 1977
A campy abbreviated remake of Sunset Boulevard.
01 January 1978
The Wizard of Oz meets Carrie on the streets of San Francisco.
23 June 1978
An elegiac memory piece on the persecution of gays in Nazi Germany.
27 May 1993
Marc Huestis edits interviews with 15 men, including himself, around a set of topics starting with "what is sex?" The men are gay, living in or near San Francisco.
11 September 2009
This documentary examines the many aspects of the gay fascination with Bette Davis, featuring film clips of Bette's most iconic moments, juxtaposed with camp burlesques of her by San Francisco actor Matthew Martin and others, including Charles Pierce and Arthur Blake; a profile of Martin highlighting his long identification with Davis; and interviews with fans, entertainers, and gay cultural historians.
26 May 1990
Mark Huestis' low-budget, shot-on-video feature casts Doug Self as Steven, a young San Francisco man whose lover Victor has just died of AIDS.
12 September 1987
Profile of Chuck Solomon, one of the principles behind Theatre Rhinoceros. Actor, Director, gay man and now HIV + man Chuck brings a fresh, life affirming aspect to all that he does.
19 June 2016
Participants in the very first "Gay Film Festival of Super-8 Films" (what ultimately became Frameline) share their recollections in these excerpts.