There are approximately 807 film festivals in Portland every
year, but there’s only one—one—dedicated to women
filmmakers, and we haven’t seen a full-fledged festival lineup from
them since 2003. But the Portland Women’s Film Festival is back, and
after five years of fundraising, networking, building a fancy website,
and making friends with folks like this year’s guest of honor, indie
film legend Allison Anders, it looks to be a diverse, polished, and
broadly appealing affair.

The new and improved POW Fest (no, it’s not really an acronym, so
don’t try) goes down at the Hollywood this weekend, featuring
independent work from women across the globe, as well as workshops and
panel discussions. Lay any fears of a four-day cinematic interpretation
of My Angry Vagina to rest: This festival isn’t about who women
are, it’s about what women make. “We didn’t want to make a festival
about ‘women’s issues,'” says fest organizer Tara Johnson-Medinger,
“but about the filmmaking process itself. It’s really cool to see the
diversity [of voices represented].”

Offerings ranging from a doc on mandatory minimum sentencing to a
lesbian buddy romp to The Cake Eaters, a Mary Stuart
Masterson-directed “small town ensemble drama.” There are also several
shorts programs, including one called “Don’t Bring the Kids,” for
reasons that are immediately apparent from a list of titles that
include Succubus and Size Matters.

One of the festival’s aims is to “foster women becoming filmmakers.”
To that end, Sunday is POW Fest Family Day, which features a showcase
of shorts from filmmakers 19 and under, and a performance from the Rock
‘n’ Roll Camp for Girls band Teeath.

If all goes well this year, Johnson-Medinger hopes the festival will
become an indie film-circuit destination. “I want it to grow every
year. It has the potential. We’re on a roll. Things are looking really
positive for years and years to come.”

For more info, see Film Shorts on pg. 44, Movie Times on pg. 47,
and powfest.com. Admission is $7 per
screening, or $100 for a festival pass.

The Portland Women’s Film Festival

dirs. Various
Thurs May 15-Sun May 18
Hollywood Theatre

Alison Hallett served nobly as the Mercury's arts editor from 2008-2014. Her proud legacy lives on.