The Watermelon Woman

"Funky screwball comedy in the key of queer" is how critic B. Ruby Rich characterized The Watermelon Woman, the first feature of video artist/comedienne Cheryl Dunye. In it, Dunye plays a lesbian video-store clerk and would-be filmmaker who becomes obsessed with uncovering the history of a star of the early "race" films, the so-called Watermelon Woman. It develops that this "mammy" was a sister, as Cheryl's research uncovers an affair with a white woman filmmaker à la Dorothy Arzner. The plot allows Dunye to incorporate a pastiche of footage-from fabulous black-and-white "plantation" melodramas to interviews with real-life notables (including Camille Paglia) who bite the bait-into her very intelligent unraveling of cultural icons. Meanwhile, video-clerk Cheryl takes up her own interracial romance, with a white customer (Guin Turner, from Go Fish). Dunye has been compared to Yvonne Rainer in her style of personable self-referential disjunction, to Isaac Julien for her cultural irreverence and absolute relevance.

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