Showing posts with label gay movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gay movie. Show all posts
Tuesday, 31 January 2017
A Escondidas [en: Hidden Away fr: Fronteras] (2014) - Mikel Rueda
A escondidas did a really good job in conveying one single feeling and it succeeded in making us on edge, deliberately denying what we want to happen or see. Somewhat somehow we have all been there, right?
The last scene, it’s simple but extremely emotional. It contains hope but we could have guessed what happened. It’s not personal, the director uses that scene on propose and there isn’t a hundred ways to interpret it. I like it, because it represents life. Life is unpredictable and the only thing we could do is to be prepared and hope for the best.
Labels:
2014,
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A Escondidas,
film review,
gay,
gay cinema,
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Hidden Away,
Mikel Rueda,
movie review,
Movie Reviews,
spanish cinema,
spanish film,
spanish movie,
teenage gay movie,
tony ed lo
Sunday, 20 November 2016
My own private Idaho (1991) - Gus Van Sant
Beautifully shot and written.
The scene in the wood with Scott and Mike, it brings back so much memories, not that I have built a fire in the woods before, is the fact that admitting your love to somebody and that someone loves you too but just not the same way. I felt like it happened to me a lot of times!
Friday, 23 January 2015
Lilting - Hong Khaou
"Coming out" seems like so 1999, and there are thousand and thousand LGBT-themed movies about that. Lilting is really a simple story, I can't really say much without giving anything away. It's about coming out and it's not about coming out. The choice of focusing the story on the mother (Cheng Pei Pei) and her deceased son's secret lover (Ben Whishaw) is some what weirdly captivating. It's also interesting because they don't have a common tongue, they couldn't understand each other, they couldn't communicate. So how this relationship works? (I guess you have to find it out yourself.)
It is a really slow paced movie, nothing much happened visibly. Khaou brought something fresh and not often seen on the table, the prospective of a mother in a gay movie, it's not about accepting. It's more about self-realisation. The struggles within the 2 characters. Things are in the tip of your lips but you do not date to let them slip. Things that you never admit to yourself or even dare to think about it.
I am trying to compare it with other similar movies, but I couldn't think of any, despite the fact the amount of gay movies I have seen. I genuinely think there isn't anything like this in the market or even something close that has a similar approach.
Lilting is a touching debut from Hong Khaou, with brilliant actors that move us all.
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