23.10.08

"A COUNTRY TEACHER" ΚΑΙ "SHE'S A BOY I KNEW". ΟΙ ΒΡΑΒΕΥΜΕΝΕΣ ΤΑΙΝΙΕΣ ΤΟΥ REYKJAVIK QUEER FILM FESTIVAL 2008

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Reykjavik Queer Film Festival has just ended and at the closing party two films were awarded. The film 'A Country Teacher' (Venkovský ucitel) by the Czech director Bohdan Sláma received this year´s Queer Film Award. The film tells the story of a talented and intelligent teacher who is hired at a school in the countryside, a brilliant film about secret desire, rejection and the search for love.
A special mention was given to the documentary 'She's a Boy I Knew' by the Canadian director Gwen Haworth. In this documentary film Gwen turns the camera on herself and her loved ones to tell the story of her transition from male to female. (5/10/2008)
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Διαβάστε περισσότερα για τις δυο ταινίες στα σχόλια 1 και 2.
Διαβάστε περισσότερα για την Ισλανδία στο ιστολόγιο Πάμε Ισλανδία

4 σχόλια:

erva_cidreira είπε...

The Country Teacher

Bohdan Sláma's exquisite film follows the tender ties that form between a young, gay teacher, a lonely widow and her teenaged son in a small Czech town riddled with homophobia.
When a young natural sciences teacher (Pavel Liška) turns down a prestigious school in Prague to work in the backwaters of a remote Czech village, it seems like an odd choice, but he's looking for the space and quiet that he thinks only the country can afford. Once settled, he meets Marie (Zuzana Bydžovská), a local widow whose husband left her to work their farm and raise an adolescent son (Ladislav Šedivý). They form a firm friendship – one she'd like to take further. What Marie does not realize is that the teacher has actually left Prague to escape both a former lover and the confusion he feels about his own sexuality. It is a reality he is forced to confront, however, when his ex-boyfriend arrives in town, upsetting the tenuous love triangle that has formed between Marie, the teacher and her insolent son.
The Country Teacher is about people who long for love but are too afraid to seek it out or give in to it. It is a simple premise, and the uniqueness of Sláma's treatment – the rural Czech setting, the bucolic mood and the unnerving proposition that his character is a self-hating homosexual – breathe real intrigue and compassion into the story. Sláma does not shy away from uncomfortable facts, and his characters are not the rowdy fellows usually found in Czech cinema. He fills his frames instead with melancholy folk who drown their boredom in bottomless bottles. Liška is one of the Czech Republic's finest working actors and Bydžovská is a renowned theatre performer. Crafted through Sláma's keenly naturalistic eye, The Country Teacher is a poignant and thoughtful work of cinema.

Dimitri Eipides



Bohdan Sláma was born in Opava, Czech Republic. He studied at the Film and Television School of the Academy of Performing Arts (FAMU) in Prague, where he directed the short film Garden of Eden (94) and the feature White Accacias (96). He has also directed the features Wild Bees (01), Something Like Happiness (05), which screened at the Festival, and The Country Teacher (08).

erva_cidreira είπε...

She's a Boy I Knew

Documentary 70 Minutes
Canada, 2007


They say that when someone comes out of the closet, they can't stop talking about it. Vancouver filmmaker Gwen Haworth not only talked... she made a movie.
Using archival family footage, interviews, phone messages, and animation, Haworth's documentary She's a Boy I Knew begins in 2000 with Steven Haworth's decision to come out to his family about his life-long female gender identity.
The resulting auto-ethnography is not only an exploration into the filmmaker's process of transition from biological male to female, from Steven to Gwen, but also an emotionally charged account of the individual experiences, struggles, and stakes that her two sisters, mother, father, best friend and wife brought to Gwen's transition.
Under Haworth's sensitive eye, each stepping stone in the process of transitioning becomes an opportunity to explore her community's and our own underlying assumptions about gender and sexuality.
When Steven starts to wear his wife Malgosia's clothing, she struggles with whether Steve "wants to be with me or to be me;" when Steven changes her name to Gwen, her father comments, that's "when I realized I lost my son;" Haworth's gender reassignment surgery forces her sister Kim to grapple with her own experiences in the medical establishment and raises questions about the implications of the medicalization of gender.
In these tender and difficult moments, She's a Boy I Knew forces us to question our own assumptions about the role that names, clothing, and anatomy play in our constructions of gender identity.
As her transition progresses, Gwen is forced to reckon with the end of her marriage and the loss of her status as son and brother. But in doing so, she also discovers that while the nature of personal relationships may change, the love and support present within those relationships can remain just as powerful and sometimes even more so.
At turns painful, funny, and awkward, She's A Boy I Knew explores the frustrations, fears, questions, and hopes experienced by Gwen and her family as they struggle to understand and embrace her newly revealed identity.

Synopsis as written by the Palm Springs International Film Festival

Parents lost a son, sisters lost a brother, and perhaps most sadly of all, a wife lost her husband after Steven Haworth answered the nagging inner voice of his true gender identity and undertook the long process that saw him become Gwen, the director of this film. In this brave retelling of her own story, Haworth displays real film-making talent, employing archive footage and even animation to embellish what is ultimately a transgender success story - but the trump card she plays is in eliciting some of the most fully considered and deeply self-examining interviews ever filmed on the subject, which range in nature from the suppressed heartbreak of her former football-playing police-officer father, to the unwavering support of life-long friend Roari, and radical younger sister Nicole. Necessarily more complex is the relationship with wife Malgosia, who loves the person who is Gwen but physically misses the man she married - while Gwen's feelings for Malgosia have not changed along with her external transformation. Refreshingly in its candor, She's a Boy I Knew goes way beyond the mere recounting of the stages of the transformation to become a deeply moving story of loss and unconditional love.

Synopsis as written by Montreal's image+nation Film Festival

Gwen Haworth, a filmmaker who makes her home in Vancouver, turns her camera at herself for this simple, down-to-earth documentary that follows her transition from male to female over the course of several years. This thoughtful film is less a detailing of surgeries and more a meditation on family ties - a mapping of the transitions that take place within Gwen's blood relationships, friendships and love over a time of great personal transformation. Through one-on-one interviews as well as photographs, letters and phone messages, she gives plenty of space for her mother, father, sisters, wife and best friend to tell their stories and share their reactions to the ongoing process of her transition. Their words are at times painful to hear, but the sheer honesty of Gwen's family in recounting their fear, anger, understanding and support provides an exceptional snapshot of one family's journey in coping with change and learning to love Gwen as she is - much as she learns to do the same. - AZ

Michalis είπε...

Ευχαριστώ για το λινκ! Πολύ ενδιαφέρον και το ποστ και μία των ημερών, μου φαίνεται, θα σου "κλέψω" λίγο από το ισλανδικό υλικού σου για το μπλογκ μου...

George Tsitiridis είπε...

το She is a boy i knew είχα την χαρά και την τύχη να το δω στο Φεστιβάλ ντοκιυμανταίρ Θεσσαλονίκης με την παρουσία της σκηνοθέτριας και πρωταγωνίστριας της ταινίας.
Πραγματικά πάρα πολύ καλή ταινία.
Ακολούθησε και μια πάρα πολύ χρήσιμη κουβέντα.
Ελπίζω να την ξαναδούμε σύντομα..
Ισως στο ομοφυλοφιλικό ΄Πανόραμα