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Anti-Trump Artists’ Group Rides Again

On Wednesday night, Nov. 8, 2017, the exact one year anniversary of Trump's Electoral College theft of the presidency, Artists Rise Up Los Angeles held its third event. ARULA was co-created by director Sue Hamilton the day after Trump’s ascension to the throne in order to rally artists to fight the pig who lost the popular vote by 3 million-plus ballots and his regime.

 

Previously, Artists Rise Up L.A., staged two (mostly) live theatrical events targeting Trump with skits, comedy, songs, etc., featuring comics such as "Liberal Redneck" Trae Crowder, "Naughty Muslim" Pakistani-American comedienne Mona Shaikh; parody song performer/composer Cliff Tasner; etc. Funds raised through the shows' ticket sales, etc., are then donated to lefty groups, such as ACLU, CAIR, NARAL Pro-Choice, NRDC, HRC & SPLC. (For my stories about the Jan. 31 and Tax Day ARULA shows see: https://thisstage.la/2017/04/arula-encourages-audiences-to-resist-rise-up/ and http://progressive.org/dispatches/enter-stage-left-arula%E2%80%99s-stand-up-skits-and-songs-take-on-tr/ .)

 

This time, however, on Nov. 8 ARULA moved to the film front, with a Short Film Festival at L.A. Downtown Independent, an outpost of indie cinema. 10 politically-minded shorts, ranging from 3-22 minutes in length. They focused on: universal healthcare in Tasner’s animated Piece of Legislation (healthycaliforniaact.org); torture and imprisonment in Jenn Liu’s Electric Room (previously performed live onstage during a prior ARULA show); Larry LaFond and Terry Ray’s wry Cost of Living depicts a dystopian future where three total strangers win a government lottery allowing them to share a one room apartment with water rationed due to global warming (available on YouTube); lesbianism and Trump's Secret Service detail are wittily lampooned in Noel Orput and Michael Lopez’s The Secret Office - Conversion Therapy (available at funnyordie.com); and marijuana legalization is cooked up in A State of Cannabis, directed by Greg Gardner (www.asocmovie.wordpress.com).

 

Refugees, undocumented immigrants and domestic abuse are the subject of 2500KM, written/directed by Daniela Arguello (available on HBO and at www.24-films.com). American Girl, written/directed by Rebecca Murga, also deals with immigration issues as a woman crosses the border, joins the U.S. military and is maimed overseas in combat. The film laments the poor treatment of non-U.S. citizens who are discriminated against by the U.S. military, even after they are wounded.

 

Of course, this is unjust - but if you joined the Defense Department’s murder incorporated expecting fairness I’d like to sell you a bridge in Brooklyn or swampland in Florida. Here’s a tip - if you don’t want to be victimized by Pentagon racism and get your leg blown off abroad (or worse), don’t voluntarily join the armed forces and become a mercenary and lackey of Yankee imperialism. Invading and attacking other Third World peoples in order to advance one’s own immigration status and career prospects at the expense of nonwhites in Iraq, Afghanistan, Niger, etc., is extremely morally dubious. Just say no and don’t volunteer to become the empire’s cannon fodder. (See: www.rebeccamurga.com.)

 

(BTW, there also shouldn’t be any gays, transgenders, Muslims or women in the U.S. military, either. For that matter, there should be no straight white males or anybody else whatsoever serving in one of the most murderous institutions ever created in world history, endlessly attacking and invading countries around the world from its 700 overseas bases. Suppose they gave a war and nobody - documented or undocumented, citizen or non-citizen, straight or LGBT, Christian or Jewish, Muslim, et al, male or female, Black, white, brown, etc. - came? Let the Trumps of the world fight their own battles, instead of ordinary people doing their dirty work for them.)

 

Meanwhile, back at the review:

 

Composer/filmmaker Judith Lynn Stillman's I Cherish Women was among the most powerful shorts. In it, a soprano alto tenor bass chorus performed Stillman's classical composition, with lyrics by that world renowned librettist - NO, not Gilbert or Sullivan, but Donald J. Trump. Although there are some men in the chorus, every one of the solo parts is sung by multi-culti women, who all sing actual words re: women uttered by the grabber-in-chief. During a post-screening Q&A moderated by LA talk radio host Sheena Metal, Stillman cleverly explained she found the "antidote to fake news - we use Trump's own words." (See: icherishwomen.com.)

 

All of the funds raised by ARULA’s filmfest were earmarked to benefit Planned Parenthood. An L.A. PP spokeswoman, Amalia Shifriss, spoke before the shorts rolled, saying that in Los Angeles, "250,000 women are served by Planned Parenthood... [including] at two L.A. high schools... We need to build support so that when attacks come we have our defenses."

 

The short R.V. envisioned a time in the near future when reproductive rights are outlawed and a back alley abortion is carried out in a R.V. in the middle of nowhere under very crude conditions, in devastating detail. Unlocked also creatively uses the cinematic device of reverse motion to show how unwanted pregnancies and the spread of STD are avoided by going back in time and showing the victimized women being counseled by Planned Parenthood instead, resulting in alternative, happier endings.

 

L.A. has a long tradition of mobilizing artists for causes, such as the 1930s-era Hollywood Anti-Nazi League, and Hollywood Independent Citizens Committee of the Arts, Sciences and Professions in the 1940s. ARULA is in that cutting edge tradition of using art to fight the good fight, by raising conscience, consciousness and funds. ARULA, which has had branches in NY and Chicago, is the latest incarnation of tapping talents to rally against the powers that be - in this case the Trump junta. For as long as that abomination lasts, one can expect ARULA to periodically rage against the regime.

 

For more info see: https://www.artistsriseupla.com/.

 

L.A.-based critic and film historian Ed Rampell wrote, co-produced and co-presented the 70th Anniversary Commemoration of the Hollywood Blacklist which is airing on C-SPAN 3 American History TV at these times: Nov. 19, 2017, 4:00 am EST; Nov. 22, 2017, 8:00 pm EST; Nov. 23, 2017, 12:15 am EST; Nov. 23, 2017, 8:15 am EST on C-SPAN 3. After the program airs, this historic remembrance of the Hollywood Blacklist can be seen on C-SPAN’s website at:

https://www.c-span.org/video/?436033-1/hollywood-blacklist-70th-year-commemoration