The Aggressives
Directed byDaniel Peddle
Produced byDaniel Peddle
Jenny Tsai
Calvin Wilson
Distributed bySeventh Art Releasing
Release date
  • June 3, 2005 (2005-06-03)
Running time
75 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Aggressives is a 2005 documentary directed by Daniel Peddle. It is an exposé on the subculture of masculine presenting people of color and their "femme" counterparts. Filmed over five years in New York City, the featured subjects share their dreams, secrets, and deepest fears.[1]

Synopsis

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This documentary intimately follows the lives of six subjects for about five years starting in 1997.[2] Through their experiences, the documentary explores gender, sexuality, race, and class.[3] The aggressives are young, queer, masculine presenting and identifying people of color living in New York City, including: Marquise, Rjai, Tiffany, Flo, Octavia, and Kisha. The subjects' experiences reflect the challenges of marginalized existence as queer people of color: including jail time, hysterectomies, children, military service, prison sex, construction work, competing in “balls" within the LGBTQIA+ community, and achieving success despite disapproval by their families and society at large.[2] The subjects included within the documentary differ from each other in gender expression:

The subjects are asked, "What does being an Aggressive mean to you?" Their responses deal with masculine-presenting traits and identities and unstated rules about gender expression.[3]

The subjects' relationships with their mothers are explored. Some mothers accept them, others, including Octavia's mother, disapprove and/or hope that they will move past this "phase".[2] The subjects are unapologetic about their identity, expression, and presentation. The film also explores experiences with class as the subjects deal with financial hardship.[2]

While not explicitly addressed, race, specifically blackness, is tied to the "aggressive" identity. All of the people within the film except Flo are black. Their self-identification as "aggressive" develops a gender category for black masculine people in the context of the Queer Black and Latino ballroom. Even though Flo identifies as an Aggressive, the film questions whether this identity is one they can claim and inhabit. The film presents Flo as fetishizing blackness, made evident by their comments on black women and use of the n-word. The film finds Flo's identity to be a problematic attempt to perform and inhabit blackness.

Reception

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Karman Kregloe from the website OUTspoken praised the director for providing a platform for the women to define themselves and share the ways in which they "face marginalization with humor, bravado and courage".[2]

According to Ciara Healy, the documentary does not make clear the distinction between the label "aggressive" versus "butch", especially how race is significant in regards to either, leaving its audience wondering what is the difference.[3] "The Aggressives is highly recommended mainly because it is provocative; as a tool for generating discussion it can work really well. The subjects filmed provide thoughtful and insightful descriptions of their gendered experience which alone would make this documentary a good resource for gender studies classes that explore gender roles and identity."[3]

On Rotten Tomatoes it had a score of 92% based on reviews from 12 critics as of 2024.[4]

Awards

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Seventh Art Releasing. ""The Aggressives"". 7thart. Retrieved March 29, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e Kregloe, Karman (24 January 2011). ""The Aggressives"". OUTspoken. Retrieved March 29, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e Healy, Ciara. ""The Aggressives"". Educational media reviews online. University of Buffalo Libraries.
  4. ^ "Aggressives (2004)". Rotten Tomatoes.
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