Stonewall | |
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Directed by | Nigel Finch |
Screenplay by | Rikki Beadle-Blair |
Based on | Stonewall by Martin Duberman |
Produced by | Christine Vachon |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Chris Seager |
Edited by | John Richards |
Music by | Michael Kamen |
Production companies | |
Distributed by |
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Release dates |
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Running time | 99 minutes[1] |
Countries |
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Language | English |
Box office | $692,400[2] |
Stonewall is a 1995 British-American historical comedy-drama film directed by Nigel Finch, his final film before his AIDS-related death shortly after filming ended. Inspired by the memoir of the same title by gay historian Martin Duberman, Stonewall is a fictionalized account of the weeks leading up to the Stonewall riots, a seminal event in the modern American gay rights movement. The film stars Guillermo Díaz, Frederick Weller, Brendan Corbalis, and Duane Boutte.
While the film is a work of fiction, Finch makes the unusual directorial choice of including documentary-style interview footage with several people who were at the Stonewall Inn during the uprising. Finch also intersperses lip synch numbers performed by the actors throughout the film to function as something of a Greek chorus.
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