Chicago-born filmmaker Rose Troche got her start in directing with her debut feature “Go Fish,” a lesbian romance that was a ’90s indie milestone. After “Bedrooms and Hallways” and “The Safety of ...
Rose Troche is best known as the writer/director of the groundbreaking lesbian love story “Go Fish,” which premiered at Sundance in 1994. Since then, Troche has made another, little-seen feature, ...
1994’s Go Fish, Rose Troche’s smart, punked-out work of guerilla filmmaking, combined a playful take on lesbian dating with discursive dialogues around gender politics and the cultural history of gay ...
“It’s very much like having a kid out there in the world doing its own thing,” said writer/director Rose Troche last month as she was finishing the restoration of her debut feature Go Fish, which ...
Rose Troche is convinced filmmakers will start making money from virtual reality just as soon as there are enough platforms to distribute the content. In the meantime she is happy to spend her own ...
American independent filmmaker Rose Troche's film Go Fish, released almost a decade ago, signalled the start of the Lesbian romance genre. Go Fish was touching, funny and complex, and Troche has ...
When Rose Troche sweeps onstage at the Castro Theatre tonight to receive the 2004 Frameline Award for a career in film and television, she'll be closing a circle that started right here in San ...