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Review of Mango Kiss
Kris Scott Marti, November 29, 2004

Mango Kiss on DVD

Mango Kiss (2004) is the story of friends and baby dykes Lou (Michelle Wolff) and Sass (Daniele Ferraro, who looks like a younger, hotter Sarah Jessica Parker), who move together to San Francisco after college. Once in the gay homeland, our heroes explore the voluptuous delights of the permissive lesbian culture and the pleasure and agony of that exploration.

Set in 1993, director Sascha Rice and writer Sarah Brown faithfully recreate a special era for queer women in San Francisco that is authentic and poignant. Lou and Sass show up on Sass’s mother’s doorstep to announce their arrival. Sass, who changed her name from Sandra, shares everything about her relationship and her newly realized queerness with her free-love-era, artist mother Emilia (played by the fantastic Sally Kirkland), who takes it all in stride.

Lou and Sass proceed to find a flat and land jobs together at a grocery in the Mission District of San Francisco, which at the time was a hotbed of lesbian grunge chic. They explore their new freedom as baby dykes like kids in a candy store, reveling in the multitude and variety of options available to ladies who like ladies. Everything from sadomasochism (SM) families to butch/femme monogamous relationships are skewered to great comic effect.

The only problem the women encounter is that everyone assumes they are a couple, even when they insist they are just friends. Eventually they succumb to their attraction to each other and develop a non-monogamous, daddy/princess relationship. Then all hell breaks loose as they both struggle through their feelings of jealousy and insecurity while trying to maintain an idealized union in a playground of attractive and available women.

I love the little touches in the production that made me nostalgic for a pre-dot-com San Francisco. Eating burritos in Dolores Park, riding bicycles through the muralled alleys of the Mission, eyebrow piercings and overalls, moving the futon up several flights of stairs, and getting coffee at Red Dora’s Truckstop Café are all part of the rich texture of that time that the writer and director have captured in a low-key but hilariously accurate way, right down to the use of “lipstick lesbian” to describe the not-so-high femme Sass and second-hand shopping at Community Thrift. The city seems to be as much a character in the story as the butch/femme neighbors or the local dominatrix hottie.

Some of the best scenes involve the scenery chewing work of Tina Marie Murray as Chelsea Chuwawa, the femme top object of Lou’s desire and smartass about town. She rolls off one of the best lines in the movie when Lou and Sass are sitting in the Café snidely commenting on how the cliquey nature of the dyke scene is like high school. Ms. Chuwawa calmly informs them that “dykes don’t get to have high school,” which sets the stage for the tumultuous and sometimes juvenile behavior, accurately depicted by the film, that is so often a part of being a queer woman in her twenties.

This film is extremely well-crafted and includes the theatrical introduction of scenes with a nautical theme, which gives a nod to its stage play origins. There is a charming “candy store” theme that is more about Lou’s perspective on the city and its dyke scene, and I really enjoyed the sugar daddy poem midway through the movie. There is the SM/role-playing/ leather theme that depicts the relationships in the film, and last but not least, an interesting cut technique is used in a few spots that I can only describe as the visual equivalent of a DJ scratching. It’s fun and interesting to watch.

If there is anything I can complain about in this movie it's that there are too many different themes and novelties that don’t work together seamlessly.

But overall, Mango Kiss is a funny and entertaining look at the struggle to be in a relationship while also being free to explore new things. There is a fair number of women of color in it, including a couple of African American women as tops in the SM scene, and there are many locally cast young women shown in a positive and sexy light who wouldn’t normally be shown as glamorous or desirable in mainstream films (or even a lot of independent ones).

The DVD has some great extras, like a behind-the-scenes short about making the movie that is interesting even for people who aren’t industry insiders; the trailer that was shown at numerous film festivals; deleted scenes; and, if you can’t get enough of one of the actresses, audition clips.

Get Mango Kiss on DVD

Please be aware that this movie shows some explicit SM scenes.

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