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This Is What Love in Action Looks Like | |
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![]() Theatrical release cover | |
Directed by | Morgan Jon Fox |
Music by | Jonsi Alan Hayes Glorie |
Production companies | Sawed-Off Collaboratory Productions Live From Memphis |
Distributed by | TLA Releasing |
Release date |
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Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | Unknown |
This Is What Love in Action Looks Like is a 2011 American documentary film directed by Morgan Jon Fox about a Memphis teenager who was sent to a controversial Christian program after telling his parents that he was gay. The film premiered in 2011, and is distributed by TLA Releasing.
In June 2005, a 16-year-old Tennessee boy, Zach Stark, posted a blog entry on his MySpace page, part of which included the following: [2]
Somewhat recently, as many of you know, I told my parents I was gay... Well today, my mother, father, and I had a very long "talk" in my room where they let me know I am to apply for a fundamentalist christian program for gays. They tell me that there is something psychologically wrong with me, and they "raised me wrong." I'm a big screw up to them, who isn't on the path God wants me to be on. So I'm sitting here in tears, joing [ sic ] the rest of those kids who complain about their parents on blogs - and I can't help it.
Zach's parents were sending him to a controversial ex-gay program called Love In Action in Memphis. After friends of Zach, as well as several Memphis bloggers and activists became aware of his blog, an impassioned, nationwide protest began in support of the teen. [3] As daily protests were staged outside the Love In Action campus, the controversy quickly became international news as the world counted down the days until the teen's release. [4] The program's director, John Smid, believed that being gay was a choice, and that he himself was an ex-gay. The protestors outside, joined by former Love In Action clients, believed that the program was harmful. While Zach was still in the program, his father, Joe Stark, went on the Christian Broadcasting Network defending his decision. [5]
The film covers a six year span, and features in depth interviews with Zach, protestors, former Love In Action clients, as well as the organization's Executive director, John Smid.
This Is What Love In Action Looks Like premiered in June 2011 at Frameline, the 35th Annual San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. [6] A hit on the film festival circuit, it won Best Documentary awards at Indie Memphis, [7] and Birmingham Shout. It was also honored with the Derek Oyston CHE Film Award 2012 at the 26th BFI London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. [8] Fox, and Love In Action's former director John Smid appeared on the CNN to promote the film the morning of its release on DVD and Digital platforms. [9]
Title | Written by | Performed by | Label |
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Boy Lilikoi, Tornado (instrumental), Sinking Friendships (instrumental), Around Us (instrumental) | Jon Thor Birgisson | Jon Thor Birgisson (as Jonsi) | XL Recording/Universal Music Publishing |
Lazy Day, Gunshot City, Full Circle, Water Drops | Jason Paxton | Glorie | Makeshift Music |
Softy 1, Softy 2, Softy 3 | W.C. Bevan | W.C. Bevan | W.C. Bevan |
Baby Brother (Instrumental) | Brad Postlethwaite | Brad Postlethwaite | Makeshift Music |
Your Ambient Voice | Chris and Richard Adams | Hood | Domino Records |
Featherlands, Transcend, Precedent, Transition, Resolution | Alan Hayes | Alan Hayes | The House of Hayes |
On April 13, 2012, a follow-up based on the events in the documentary was featured in a story on This American Life titled Own Worst Enemy. [10] In the podcast the film's director, Morgan Jon Fox and Love In Action's now former director, John Smid, talk about meeting as enemies, and becoming friends over time.
The ex-gay movement consists of people and organizations that encourage people to refrain from entering or pursuing same-sex relationships, to eliminate homosexual desires and to develop heterosexual desires, or to enter into a heterosexual relationship. Beginning with the founding of Love In Action and Exodus International in the mid-1970s, the movement saw rapid growth in the 1980s and 1990s before declining in the 2000s.
Restoration Path, known as Love in Action (LIA) until March 2012, was an ex-gay Christian ministry founded in 1973.
Peterson Toscano is a playwright, actor, Bible scholar, blogger, podcaster, advocate against global warming, and gay rights activist. Toscano spent nearly two decades undergoing ex-gay treatment and conversion therapy before accepting his sexual orientation and coming out as a gay man. He has since shared his experiences internationally through various media outlets, especially plays. His talks and performances use comedy and storytelling to explore LGBTQ issues, religion, and climate change.
Ira Sachs is an American filmmaker. Sachs started his career directing short films such as Vaudeville (1991) and Lady (1993) before making his feature film debut with The Delta (1997). Sachs later won acclaim for his dramatic independent films Forty Shades of Blue (2005), Keep the Lights On (2012), Love Is Strange (2014), Little Men (2016), and Passages (2023).
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The 27th annual Sundance Film Festival took place from January 20, 2011 until January 30, 2011 in Park City, Utah, with screenings in Salt Lake City, Utah, Ogden, Utah, and Sundance, Utah.
Morgan Jon Fox is an American film director and screenwriter from Memphis, Tennessee.
Mike Manning is an American actor, producer, reality television personality and activist. Manning gained fame as a cast member on the MTV series The Real World: D.C. in 2009 at 22 years old. Before subsequently embarking on an acting career, he appeared in a number of films and television programs, such as the 2014 Disney Channel original movie Cloud 9, in which he played Nick Swift, Hawaii Five-0, Love Is All You Need? (2016), Teen Wolf, The Call, Son of the South and Days of Our Lives. As a producer, his work includes the documentary Kidnapped for Christ, and The Bay, which won the 2020 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Digital Daytime Drama Series. He won the 2021 Daytime Emmy Award Outstanding Performance By a Supporting Actor in a Daytime Fiction Program for his performance as Caleb McKinnon.
John J. Smid is the former director of the Memphis, Tennessee ex-gay ministry Love in Action, a group that claims to convert lesbians and gay men to heterosexuality.
Indie Memphis, located in Memphis, TN, is an arts organization that runs year-round programs that "inspire, encourage and promote independent films and filmmaking in Memphis."
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Šmíd is a Czech surname, Czechized form of German surname Schmidt. Notable people include: