Inside Out

Plan B

Plan B (Director: Marco Berger): If ever there were an award given for most inap­pro­priate lingering shots of snugly covered gen­italia, it would surely go to Plan B, a movie that boasts mul­tiple exchanges with little more than sta­tionary close-ups of crotches. The jus­ti­fic­a­tion is likely some­thing to the effect of exag­ger­ated sexual ten­sion, or gender role irony in response to female objectivity in film, where women are never filmed in close-up without some vis­ible boobage, but real­ist­ic­ally it seems a lot more like, “hey, I can see a dick out­line and it’s turning me on!”

Perhaps this shouldn’t be sur­prising in a film that is essen­tially a per­verse fantasy, with Bruno (Manuel Vignau) responding to his ex-girlfriend’s lack of romantic interest by devel­oping an ersatz homo­sexual rela­tion­ship with her new boy­friend Pablo (Lucas Ferraro). It’s the sort of thing that broad high-concept het­ero­norm­ative comedy is based on, and, if it were an American film, it would likely fea­ture Will Ferrell and Paul Rudd.

But this isn’t a comedy, and it isn’t inter­ested in catering to tra­di­tional male anxi­eties, playing out through a series of awk­ward boyish con­ver­sa­tions and latent sexual ten­sion. The goal is to create an organic union between unlikely lovers, with a pointed weed-induced con­ver­sa­tion about Neverland to let us know that the dir­ector has read some queer theory. They dis­cuss tele­vi­sion shows, child­hood slee­p­overs and Bruno even pulls out some clever lies in order to speed up impending coitus.

Because the actors throw them­selves into the material, bringing charm to some truly dreadful dia­logue, there is minor appeal to what is mostly a series of can­didly filmed con­ver­sa­tions that don’t always propel the story for­ward. The suc­cess here comes from the vis­ible budgetary lim­it­a­tions and estab­lished chem­istry, more so than the film itself, which has its moments, but is mostly plod­ding, sloppy and exceed­ingly uncomfortable.

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Le roi de l'évasion (The King of Escape)
The King of Escape screens on Monday May 24 at 7:15pm at the ROM Theatre. Buy tickets here.

Le roi de l’évasion (The King of Escape) (Director: Alain Guiraudie): Like any playful, sur­realist French allegory, the title, The King of Escape, comes with a two­fold meaning, refer­ring to both the lit­eral tra­jectory of the film—wherein zaftig 42-year-old homo­sexual Armand (Ludovic Berthillot) runs from a variety of oddball characters—as well as the aca­demic sug­ges­tion, which posits queer life as a boyish escape from het­ero­norm­ative demands and expect­a­tions. It works on both levels, playing out as a less accom­plished and cal­cu­lated Francois Ozon film from the ‘90s with a decidedly dif­ferent, almost inverse perspective.

The iden­tity con­struct here is that of an aging man with impulse-control issues. He suc­ceeds as a salesman, step­ping on toes when he soli­cits out­side of his region (a theme con­sistent with all of his struggles), occa­sion­ally driving out to a gay cruising area on the hunt for endowed senior citizens—a Freudian indic­ator of passive role identification.

Initially, the film hops between his gay liaisons and fledgling curi­os­ities at het­ero­sexual life, playing res­cuer to an acquaintance’s 16-year-old daughter Curly (Hafsia Herzi) when she is attacked, waxing dream­like, but even­tu­ally lands a nar­rative thread with a romantic pur­suit. Dissatisfied with the lim­it­a­tions his Peter Pan life­style has imposed, he pur­sues the girl romantic­ally, des­pite con­tract pleas from her father Daniel (Luc Palun) and an overly obser­vant police com­mis­sioner who saddles him with a sexual offender bracelet.

Taking comedy from sheer auda­city, pecu­li­arity and sexual role expect­a­tions, the film works best when on the go. Whether Armand is recog­nizing inap­pro­priate erec­tions or strug­gling with the nas­cent sexual needs of a young girl, whose desires and role recog­ni­tion are quite dif­ferent from those of a 70-year-old gay man, there are con­sistent curi­os­ities and hil­ar­ities at every turn.

Of course, the niche sub­ject matter and less than flat­tering asser­tions do limit the poten­tial audi­ence, seeing as many won’t “get it” and many others won’t want to. But a pol­ished present­a­tion with a sharp and dir­ected sense of whimsy drive this one leaps and bounds beyond other genre offer­ings, for those inclined to such fare.

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2010 Inside Out Toronto LGBT Film and Video Festival
Editor’s Note: I’m very happy to wel­come Robert Bell to Toronto Screen Shots. Robert will be cov­ering Inside Out much more fully than we’ve been able to do in the past. He cur­rently writes for Exclaim! and is only slightly ashamed to admit he has over 6,000 movies in his DVD collection.

So, it’s that time of year when the Toronto gay­bour­hood is aflutter with Pride plan­ning, float design and ward­robe choices, be it fitted salmon-coloured polo shirts, feather boas, or studded cock-rings, which makes a big gay film fest­ival entirely apropos. Since this is the 20th anniversary of the GLBT (sorry, LGBT: an acronym change that I’m cer­tain involved pie charts, a Facebook peti­tion of some sort and a forth­right les­bian chan­neling her inner Susan Sontag) film fest, it’s noted with the tagline “20 Years of Queers”.

Looking at this year’s lineup of titles, which includes a Danish movie about gay neo-Nazis (Brotherhood) and another about 14th cen­tury Korean homos (A Frozen Flower), it’s refreshing to see how few of them focus on the trade­marks of queer cinema, such as psychotic les­bians get­ting raped, or sui­cidal gay AIDS vic­tims. There’s some great rep­res­ent­a­tion of world cinema, along with doc­u­ment­aries, shorts and the usual camp enter­tain­ment for all to enjoy come May 20–30.

In addi­tion to a doc about Joe Dallesandro (Little Joe), this year’s pro­gram includes titles such as The Last Summer of La Boyita, which explores the pains of adoles­cent Sapphic affec­tions and men­tions men­stru­ation twice in the plot syn­opsis. Think “Are you there God, it’s me Margaret”, but with les­bians and horses, an animal that no teenage girl is com­plete without.

Frozen Flower

Korean import A Frozen Flower offers up some period drama, action and 14th cen­tury cos­tumes, taking place at the end of the Goryeo Dynasty, but fea­tures steamy gay sex scenes–something I didn’t see in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.

For those who love bodice-ripping BBC dramas, The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister delivers the true story of the tit­ular les­bian writer and her kooky 19th cen­tury shenanigans.

Of course, no gay film fest­ival would be com­plete without fea­turing some titles about being dif­ferent in an assim­il­ative male-dominated society, and Le Fil and Eyes Wide Open offer per­spect­ives on this issue in Northern Africa and Jerusalem, respectively.

It’s not all stoic polit­ical fare though, with films like And Then Came Lola deliv­ering a saucy lesbo spin on Run Lola, Run, and Is It Just Me? delving into queer his­tri­onics in San Francisco.

I Am Love

That said, my per­sonal picks are the afore­men­tioned Brotherhood, Francois Ozon’s newest film Le Refuge, and I Am Love, which is said to fea­ture another impressive per­form­ance from the ever-wonderful Tilda Swinton. We all have our own tastes, how­ever, which is why you may want to see a full listing of titles over at insideout.ca.

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2009 Inside Out Toronto LGBT Film and Video Festival

Film lovers in Toronto are spoiled. It seems that just when one film fest­ival ends, another one begins. From May 14–24, the Inside Out Toronto LGBT Film and Video Festival will bring films from 29 coun­tries to our city. Now in its 19th year, the fest­ival seeks to become the com­pre­hensive queer fest­ival in the world, according to Director of Programming Jason St. Laurent. “We hope everyone will find some­thing (or someone) to love at Inside Out.”

This year, there is a spot­light on France, show­casing 15 fea­tures, docs and shorts from the country that has been the birth­place of so many cine­matic tal­ents and move­ments. Gäel Morel’s New Wave and Born in ’68 from dir­ectors Olivier Ducastel and Jacques Martineau look inter­esting to me.

Opening the fest­ival is Ella Lemhagen’s romantic comedy Patrik 1,5 (review), which was fea­tured at TIFF last September. And if you missed John Greyson’s Fig Trees at the just-concluded Hot Docs, you can catch it at Inside Out.

Two more films I’m def­in­itely curious about are Bohdan Sláma’s A Country Teacher (Venkovský ucitel) from the Czech Republic, which also fea­tured at TIFF last year, and Closing Gala The Fish Child (El niño pez) from Argentinean dir­ector Lucía Puenzo. Her first film XXY gen­er­ated a lot of buzz and although I’ve still yet to see it, she seems like someone to watch.

Though I’m still catching up on Hot Docs, I hope to fea­ture a few reviews from Inside Out over the next few weeks.

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Wild Combination

Wild Combination (2007, Director: Matt Wolf): Until about a year ago, I’d never heard of Arthur Russell. A classically-trained cel­list who died at the age of 40 in 1992, Russell was in danger of falling into obscurity. But then some­thing won­derful happened. Those closest to him began to re-release some of the music he cre­ated and sud­denly a man who seemed out of his time while alive began to influ­ence a new gen­er­a­tion of musi­cians. The 2004 com­pil­a­tion Calling Out of Context is a good place to begin. It was around the time of that CD release that dir­ector Matt Wolf became familiar with Russell, and decided to make the film.

Russell was born and raised in Oskaloosa, Iowa, but ran away to San Francisco while still in his teens, where he joined a Buddhist com­mune. It was in San Francisco that he made the acquaint­ance of Allen Ginsberg, and the two remained friends and col­lab­or­ators for years to come. Russell soon fol­lowed Ginsberg to New York, where he soon become part of the artistic land­scape at The Kitchen. Part of the avant-garde scene that included Philip Glass, Russell wrote and per­formed here reg­u­larly, often singing along with his cello-playing. It was during this period that Russell began to acknow­ledge his homo­sexu­ality, even­tu­ally meeting and falling in love with Tom Lee, who was (and remains) a tire­less sup­porter of his work. His involve­ment in the gay scene intro­duced him to under­ground dis­cotheques, and soon he was writing dance music under ali­ases such as Dinosaur L, Indian Ocean and Loose Joints. Though he achieved some modest com­mer­cial suc­cess with these records, he never really made a break­through, per­haps because his talent was too big to be con­fined to one type of music. The film fea­tures a gen­erous selec­tion of his work, and it ranges from avante-garde to dance to pop to folk rock, all of it accom­panied by Russell’s utterly unique singing voice. He used his voice as another instru­ment but it gave all of his music a slightly odd quality, making it com­mer­cially unap­pealing at the time. It didn’t help that he was a per­fec­tionist, rarely feeling that a record was “fin­ished” and making it extremely dif­fi­cult for him to take dir­ec­tion from others. Later in his life, he began to exhibit symp­toms of para­noia, feeling that other musi­cians were stealing his ideas.

Matt Wolf has made an immersive film that right­fully fore­grounds the music, often accom­pa­nying it with evoc­ative scenes of the vast Iowa land­scape that seems to have informed Russell’s work. Another musical theme was the expans­ive­ness of water, and per­haps it was this desire for open space that led Russell to spend so much time on the Staten Island Ferry, scenes which Wolf has recre­ated by filming with vin­tage video cam­eras. I had a mixed reac­tion upon learning that so much of the “archival” footage in the film was recre­ated. As Wolf explains, there just wasn’t that much real archival footage to work with, but I think I would have pre­ferred that the film itself car­ried some dis­claimer that the footage wasn’t authentic instead of having to hear it from him in the Q&A. But don’t let that stop you from seeing the film. For those with some famili­arity with Arthur Russell, it will fill in the pic­ture behind the music, but more import­antly, it will help you to intro­duce the work of this undis­puted genius to your friends.

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Matt Wolf from after the screening:

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Duration: 13:43

Official site of the film
Teaser

8/10(8/10)

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