£7.99 – £12.99
Caden Mark Gardner is a freelance trans film critic and researcher on trans film images. He has written for the Criterion Collection, MUBI, Film Comment, Reverse Shot, and other film outlets in the United States.
Willow Catelyn Maclay is a freelance film essayist and critic. She has written for the Village Voice, MUBI, Vulture and Roger Ebert.com. She contributed to the film anthologies Laura’s Ghost: Women Speak About Twin Peaks and She Found it at the Movies: Women Writers on Sex, Desire and Cinema.
“A sorely-needed and comprehensive audit of twentieth-century trans film history… a deeply engrossing, thoughtful, and often recuperative examination of transness in film.”
“A thoughtful, revelatory, and rewarding read from two of the most essential critics working today.”
“As timely as it is vigorous, brave, and intelligent… Gardner and Maclay have written one of the most important – and exciting – works of long-form film criticism of this century thus far.”
“Gardner and Maclay reach into the guts of the trans film image, into the disreputable world of mondo movies, into unfortunate prestige pictures and forgotten radical Cinéma vérité and bring all of it to a present moment teeming with possibilities. This is an untold history treated with wit and intelligence and a humane, searching tone.”
“A superb work of film history… lively and thoroughly researched, a treasury of astute film criticism, and a portrayal of the highways and byways of trans (legal; medical; political) that is both engaged and dispassionate. A definitive treatment of the subject.”
“An invaluable tour through the history of trans images on film, ranging from international and underground landmarks, to Oscar winners and beyond. The perfect gift for your well-meaning cis cinephile friends who have a lot to learn.”
“An instant classic in the field of queer film studies… Gardner and Maclay illuminate the diverse and complex ways that the medium has charted the history of their community over the past century, carefully analyzing a wide range of Hollywood movies as well as films that deserve to be much more widely known.”