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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
The Gits (Kerri O'Kane)
“When Jessy and I first heard The Gits,
we both knew that this band was truly unique and
innately talented,” says documentary filmmaker,
Kerri O’Kane.
And the Jessie she refers to is Jessica
Bender, a friend and film colleague that
would go on to produce her film, which chronicles
the life of a Seattle band that was on the rise
until the fateful day when they lost their leading
lady, Mia Zapata.
As the weeks closed in on the beginning of SXSW,
I had been getting a number of mailers from publicists
and independent filmmakers to promote the screenings
of their works of celluloid art. But my eyes popped
when I saw “The Gits” on a hand written
card.
I carried that card with me to Austin.
It has been over a decade since I first learned
of the death of Mia Zapata in 1993, since my friends
and I had traveled to Seattle for Bumpershoot
in 1994 and heard the remaining members of The
Gits perform under a new moniker, Dancing French
Liberals of '48. And a few years later while DJing
at a college station, when I came across a compilation
to promote a new organization to teach women self-defense
called Home Alive.
The night of July 7, 1993, Mia had been hanging
with her friends at a bar one night and on her
walk home, was brutally raped and killed. Home
Alive was born from that tragedy, and the programs
of self-defense for women have spread from Seattle
to cities across the country.
It was the discovery of this organization that
sparked the idea in Kerri’s mind to find
out more about who the woman was that inspired
this nonprofit.
Taken from The Gits website, Kerri explains,
”After surfing the net and finding dozens
of sites about her it was clear that Mia was the
singer of The Gits, and sadly, no longer with
us. A flood of emotions streamed through me as
I read the articles and dedications and learned
about what happened to Mia Zapata.
The information I read ripped my heart out yet,
having not heard The Gits, I pined the rest of
the night anticipating my journey to Tower Records.
Finally, 9:00 am approached and I blazed up to
the store. There in the back of the store, sort
of obscured by the latest music hype, I found
it, Seafish Louisville: The Gits.
My heart palpitated as the CD revolved in the
player of my car. I sat there silently as a slowly
building riff echoed out of the speakers, then,
there was a voice, a beautiful incomparable voice,
‘I woke up this morning, dizzy in my brain
. . .’
That was all I needed to hear to know that I
was about to go on a journey of a lifetime. From
that point on, it has indeed become a remarkable
journey that I will never forget.”
It was a packed house on the Wednesday when the
movie screened. One of many “small world”
moments happened, as I stood behind Keith Garcia
from the Denver Film Society.
Jessica Bender was beaming as she scoped out
the line outside, handing out The Gits merch and
taking to fans of the band.
As the film unfolded the story of how the group
got started in Ohio, made their way to their new
home in Seattle, and began to really carve a place
for themselves and their music, you couldn’t
help but think of where they could have gone.
Even more than that, the film shows other sides
of Mia that no one could have known from afar,
from in front of a stage or in a car listening
to their music. The songwriter, the daughter,
the friend with no boundaries.

Kerri O'Kane, Lorena
David, Jessica Bender |
She was undeniably the Janis Joplin of our generation.
Kerri and the crew did an amazing job and pulling
the story together, and actually screened the
film in 2005. But that ending would change, as
a new way of using DNA evidence from saliva was
used to finally capture and convict Mia’s
murderer.
Their cameras were there in the courtroom as
the guilty verdict was read, and you couldn’t
help but weep with all of Mia’s friends
and family who knew they could finally put it
all to rest.
When the lights came up and the tears were wiped
dry, Kerri invited everyone to an Irish pub down
the street, where she humbly talked about the
years of making the film and the difficulties
she had overcome. But this night was one of celebration,
a dedication to the people behind the film and
the people of the film.
www.thegitsmovie.com
-Kim Owens, March 23, 2007
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