Marjorie Sturm’s The Cult of JT Leroy was the first film I saw at the new MLFF, and with its quirky, mind-blowing subject matter it set the tone for the rest of this filmfest. Sturm’s fascinating film, which is chock full of cameos by notables, is, on the surface, about a purported son of a truck stop prostitute who followed in his mother’s footsteps, became drug addicted and HIV-infected and wrote tell-all books about his misadventures at a very tender age.  |
A scene from The Cult of JT Leroy. |
In doing so, a cult of celebrity surrounding the young, troubled author mushroomed that attracted numerous high profile personalities from the music, movie, TV and literary worlds. Using the rationale that he/ she was too shy to read at his/her own public readings, a variety of stars such as celebs Jeremy Renner, Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia also wrote tattle tales about her substance abuse), Sandra Bernhard, Susan Dey, Lou Reed, the Village Voice’s Michael Musto, etc., turned out to read passages from the books and fawn over the media darling.
As the author’s fame spread, actress Asia Argento adapted for the big screen his/her’s short story collection, The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things, co-starring Argento, Peter Fonda and Renner. However, as it turns out, all of the journalists who ballyhooed the purported young writer and stars who flocked to his/her public events should have paid closer attention to the name of this book and movie. At first, having never heard of the title character, I thought The Cult of JT Leroy was going to be about a troubled artiste tormented by an unhappy childhood. Then I believed it would become a cautionary tale about how that bitch goddess fame, fortune and celebrityhood spoil an innocent artiste. (Paging Mssrs. Capote and Williams!)
But then, proving truth is stranger than fiction, Sturm takes us into an entirely different direction: The problem is that JT Leroy was a ruse who did not actually exist. JT was a concoction of a 39-or-so-year-old wannabe writer -- who shall deliberately remain nameless here in order not to feed her fame addiction -- who conjured up this persona in order to break on through to the other side of the rarified world of major market publishing. Celebs and the “news” media fell for it, hook(er), line and s(t)inker.
For these reasons and more, Marjorie Sturm’s feature-length documentary debut should definitely be widely seen and the 91-minute The Cult of JT Leroy deserves a distribution deal. In the end, it actually is a cautionary tale, a meditation upon media manipulation.
And now for the winners of the inaugural Mammath Lakes Film Festival:
Audience Award for Narrative Feature: They Look Like People, directed by Perry Blackshear;
Audience Award for Documentary Feature: Omo Child, directed by John Rowe;
Jury Award for Narrative Feature: Diamond Tongues, directed by Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson;
Jury Award for Documentary Feature: Autism in Love, directed by Matt Fuller;
Jury Bravery Award for Documentary Feature: Cartel Land, directed by Matthew Heineman;
Jury Award for Narrative Short: Una Nit, directed by Marta Bayarri;
Jury Honorable Mention for Narrative Short: Tourist Trap, directed by Alana Purcell;
Jury Award for Animation or Documentary Short: Upon the Rock, directed by James Bascara;
Jury Honorable Mention for Animation or Documentary Short: The Tide Keeper, directed by Alyx Duncan.