Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Sisterhood
  • Y
  • Tell Me That You Love Me
  • Last Exit Gran Canaria
  • Come See Me in the Good Light
  • 3000 km by Bike
  • Aurora
  • Saving Etting Street
  • Good Child (A)
  • Pawesome!
  • My Brother
  • Girls Like Us
  • Summer School, 2001
  • Wolf Among the Swans (A)
  • Secret of Me (The)
  • Camp
  • Explode São Paulo, Gil
  • French Italian (The)
  • Fuck My Son!
  • La 42
  • Wild Foxes
  • We're So Dead
  • Fraternity
  • Pillion
  • Strike (The)
  • Four Stars
  • Children of Silver Street (The)
  • Spying Stars
  • Weightless
  • Foreign Lands
  • Dinner with Friends
  • Other 300: Army of Lovers (The)
  • All There Is
  • Last Night I Conquered the City of Thebes
  • Until the Silence
  • Sun Ra: Do the Impossible
  • Revelations of Divine Love
  • Red Mask (The)
  • Queer as Punk
  • Skiff

Under the Southern Cross: The Art and Legacy of Henry L. Faulkner

Country: United States, Language: English, 100 mins

  • Director: Jean L Donohue

CGiii Comment

UNDER THE SOUTHERN CROSS is an unflinching portrayal of Appalachian queer painter and poet Henry L. Faulkner from Egypt, Kentucky (1924 – 1981). The most documented queer man in the history of Kentucky and possibly the country, Faulkner documented his life and lovers as an adolescent in the 1930s til the day he died. This film tells a raucous, unapologetic and unfiltered story told with Faulkner’s photographs, painting, poetry, rare film and audio recordings, and interviews with people who knew him.

This film describes a boy and a man who was unwilling to hide who he was and was willing to face the consequences for his authenticity. Through his national reputation as a painter, Faulkner befriended many well-known LGBTQ+ artists, including Edward Melcarth, Tennessee Williams, James Herlihy and actors Bette Davis, Marlena Dietrict, and Vincent Price, Bertoldt Brecht and Stefan Brecht.

Faulkner was unashamedly gay in a time when many LGBTQ people lived closeted lives. Self-proclaimed a ‘radical homosexual,’ Henry’s art was a fusion of life experience, an acute sense of color and his sexuality. For him there was no separation. Faulkner’s openess cost him dearly, including incarceration in insane asylums and frequent police raids of his house. His homes became refuges for many young people in Lexington, Kentucky and Key West Florida, both gay and straight, in search of a freer way of life.


Trailer...