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Ten
Thousand Things
Multicultural Webfinds
"Ten
Thousand Things" is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.
Tokyo
gay film festival continues second weekend run Jul 17-21
Kimberly Hughes (also
posted here)
The 17th annual Tokyo International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival kicked
off its two-weekend run last Friday to a packed house, where prominent
guests including A Jihad for Love director Parvez Sharma discussed
challenges of LGBTs gaining social acceptance.
With most past festivals running as a single-weekend, single-venue event,
this year's event expanded to encompass two locales over a total of eight
days (July 11-13 and 17-21). While the festival's second half will continue
to make its home in the artsy venue of Spiral
Hall (<) in Tokyo's fashionable Aoyama district, this
past weekend's films screened for the first time in festival history at
the deluxe Wald 9 Cinemas in Shinjuku, adjacent to Tokyo's famed gay neighborhood
of Ni-chome.
Image caption: At TILGFF: (second pic from the bottom)
Were the World Mine director Tom Gustafson (left) with co-writer
and co-producer Cory Krueckeberg; A Jihad for Love director Parvez
Sharma with producer Sandi Dubowski, a Jewish-American who directed and
produced the 2007 documentary film Trembling Before G-d about
gay and lesbian Orthodox and Hasidic Jews.
"The larger scale of this year's festival will enable a greater number
of people to come and see the films," commented TILGFF staff member
Seiji Sugawara (not his real first name). "And while we are still
tallying the numbers, it is safe to say that the first weekend of the
event was a huge success."
The expansion of the festival also comes at a time when homosexuality
is beginning to be more broadly discussed in the Japanese media - particularly
due to the wild popularity of recently broadcast television drama Last
Friends, which featured a character openly exploring
her gender and sexuality.
The festival opened with Were
the World Mine, a musical-style comedy-drama portraying
the life of Timothy, a gay high-school student living in Anytown, USA.
Picked on at school for being gay, Timothy life's changes radically when
he is cast as the lead role of Puck in the school play, Shakespeare's
A Midsummer Night's Dream - and finds himself in control of a
special love potion after the lines he is rehearsing for his school play
suddenly turn into reality. With a phenomenally talented cast and a superb
soundtrack, the award-winning film ranges from hilarious to poignant as
it lays bare society's existing categorisations and gives voice to those
courageous enough to challenge them.
Following the screening, a talk session was held with film director Tom
Gustafson, together with co-writer and co-producer Cory Krueckeberg. The
discussion was facilitated by Margaret, a beloved Tokyo drag queen who
emcees the festival every year, and who has no qualms about making her
guests squirm on stage. As such, she jokingly asked both guests about
what they thought of Japanese "fairies," whether or not their
film was made as a parody of Romero's zombie movies, and even whether
their hotel room had a single bed or not!
The session did have its serious moments, however, as Gustafson explained
that his desire to make the film came from his own difficult experience
of growing up gay in a small, conservative town in the United States.
"If I would have seen a film like this when I was a high school student,
it would have had a huge impact on my life," he told the audience.
In an effort to make the film accessible to as many young people as possible,
Gustafson and Krueckeberg routinely ask organisers to make a stash of
free tickets available to LGBT youth in every film festival city that
they visit. In Tokyo as well, 15 free tickets were purchased by an anonymous
corporate sponsor and given to the members of two youth organisations:
the gay support group Peer Friends, and the UK-Japan LGBT youth exchange
project set up with Bristol, England. This program of reaching out to
youth has a significant and far-reaching impact indeed, as the worldwide
circuit of Were the World Mine also includes countries such as
Canada, Denmark, Hungary, Ireland, Italy and South Africa, in addition
to numerous cities around the United States.
The film has also picked up numerous prestigious awards in several countries
- including mainstream film festivals in addition to gay and lesbian-themed
ones. This has not meant easy sailing all the time, however. In a subsequent
interview, Gustafson pointed out to Fridae that despite the film's overall
success, it was rejected from the top five film festivals in the United
States - ostensibly for being 'too gay'. "Perhaps they didn't like
the fact that it features a positive ending," he mused.
Krueckeberg agreed: "The mainstream film industry in the US is petrified
of making films associated with the gay closet - even though, ironically,
it's this very same industry that created and continues to sustain that
closet's existence".
The second day of the festival featured another guest director: C. Jay
Cox, whose film Kiss
the Bride introduced viewers to three main characters struggling
to uncover their truest desires. Also set in small-town USA, Matt - who
left home after discovering his sexuality - is shocked when he receives
an invitation to return and attend the ceremony of his ex-boyfriend Ryan's
marriage - to a woman. While Matt hopes to win Ryan back, it becomes increasingly
unclear how things will turn out as the story continues to unfold in a
series of unexpected twists.
Interviewed by Seiji Sugawara during the Q&A session, who asked why
the sexuality of some of characters show signs of fluidity, Cox explained
that he was attempting to portray the fact that sexuality is not always
something that is written in stone - and that questioning one's own attractions
can be a natural process for some people at certain points in their lives.
Prompted by Sugawara to explain why he decided to depart from the angst-ridden
energy of his much-acclaimed 2004 film Latter
Days, which told the story of a young man who discovers
his attraction to men while serving as a missionary of the Mormon faith
- which is known for its strong stance against homosexuality - Cox explained
that he was interested in making his latest feature something completely
different and more upbeat. "As a former Mormon myself, making Latter
Days was a wrenchingly painful experience for me at times,"
he admitted. "The rest of the crew and I would joke around that we
should make our next project a romantic comedy - and that's exactly what
we did."
The third day of the festival also offered guest appearances from the
documentary A Jihad
for Love (<>http://www.ajihadforlove.com/), which
has received accolades during screenings worldwide (although being notably
banned from the recent
Singapore International Film Festival in what was to be its
first Asian screening). The film portrays the lives of gay men and lesbians
in 12 different countries who attempt to reconcile their identities with
their belief in the Muslim religion, which strictly condemns homosexuality
- even denouncing it as a crime punishable by death in certain countries.
The documentary serves as a tender reminder of both the purity and the
strength of love, as numerous people interviewed in the film assert that
they have committed no wrongdoing by simply loving another in accordance
with the true desires of their own hearts. The film also offers several
episodes that give hope of the Islamic religion expanding in order to
accommodate an understanding of homosexuality, such as the portrayal of
a gay imam in South Africa who holds sessions where he is able
to successfully engage others in his religious community regarding the
topic.
The film does not shy away, however, from portraying the very real hardships
- and sometimes life-threatening dangers - of living as a homosexual within
the Islamic faith. "It took several years for some people to feel
comfortable enough to show their face on camera," explained director
Parvez Sharma during an audience discussion following the film. "And
even then, people were constantly calling me up during the editing process
to ask that I conceal their faces." At one point, in an irony-laden
moment of exasperation, Sharma even blurred the face of a penguin appearing
in the film. "Maybe I should sell t-shirts in Tokyo featuring the
penguin," he joked to the audience.
Sharma also appeared onstage with A Jihad for Love producer Sandi
Dubowski, a Jewish-American who directed and produced the 2007 documentary
film Trembling
Before G-d about gay and lesbian Orthodox and Hasidic
Jews. One audience member spoke up and confessed his surprise to Sharma
and Dubowski regarding the collaboration, explaining that there is a strong
image in Japan of Islam and Judaism standing at odds with one another.
"When I was a new immigrant to the USA, Sandi helped me out tremendously
by opening many doors of support that I never would have been able to
access otherwise," Sharma replied. "Being a Muslim-Jewish collaboration,
I think this film has the longest credit list in history!" he added,
again eliciting laughter.
Sharma then invited the audience to join the discussion taking place by
people around the world regarding issues related to the film, which is
found at his blog.
The TILGFF includes a total of more than 40 films from nearly 20 countries,
and has something on offer for all tastes. To cover just a sampling: European
lesbian-themed films Shelter (Italy) and Looking for Cheyenne
(France) both confront the collision resulting from the reality
of socioeconomic disparities existing between lovers; and the Spanish
film Boystown is a comedy of errors with a phenomenal cast and
a series of hysterical one-liners.
The festival's first weekend also offered a number of films from Asia,
such as South Korea's No Regret, Thailand's Bangkok Love
Story, Taiwan's Drifting Flowers (by Chou MeiLing of Spider
Lilies fame), Japan's Strange Couples and Moon Shadow,
and both Japanese and Asian short film collections.
Most films will be re-screened this weekend at Spiral Hall. For further
information, see the official
festival website (tokyo-lgff.org).
For a glimpse of South Korean film No Regret director Lee-Young
Hoon during his visit with the audience, as well as other juicy festival
tidbits, see the TILGFF
blog.
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