Desperate Remedies"(1993), directed by Stewart Main and Peter Wells, screening July 6 and 8 as pa... Planet Queer...
Desperate Remedies"(1993), directed by Stewart Main and Peter Wells, screening July 6 and 8 as part of the Museum of Modern Arts "Another Wave" Global Queer Cinema" series.
The innovations of early 90s New Queer Cinema paved for the way for LGBT films to become a niche market, which is probably not what directors like Todd Haynes, Tom Kalin, and Gregg Araki intended. Identity politics make strange bedfellows. The only common thread between Ang Lees "Brokeback Mountain" and Apichatpong Weerasethakuls "Tropical Malady" is their characters sexuality, expressed in quite different ways, yet both are considered "gay films." The problem with niche marketing is that the understandable desire not to be stereotyped can cross over into a demand to be flattered. Logo is unlikely to show any films depicting father-son incest, like Tsai Ming-liangs "The River," or even a view of living with AIDS as pessimistic-but without any tragic grandeur-as Anahi Berneris "A Year Without Love," which plays in the second part of MoMAs series "Another Wave: Global Queer Cinema." "Another Wave" offers a supplement to the vision of queer cinema offered up each summer by the New Festival. It doesnt ignore North America and Western Europe, but it treats them as part of a larger world. African, Latin American and Middle Eastern visions of sexuality merit equal time, while in films like Canadian director Elle Flanders "Zero Degrees of Separation" national identity is as important as gayness. While gender parity isnt exactly the first halfs strength-it includes only two programs of films by women-the percentage of female directors work increases in the second half, which runs from September 1-16. That section also includes a program of shorts about AIDS, as well as one of films by Jim Hubbard, who helped curate the series.
The series is particularly strong on Asian films, including "Tropical Malady," Stanley Kwans "Lan Yu" and Malaysian director Amir Muhammads excellent short "Pangyau." Yonfans 1995 "Bugis Street" takes place in 60s Singapore, where 16-year-old Lian (Hiep Thi Le) moves into a hotel primarily occupied by transgendered prostitutes. Naive at first, shes shocked to discover that one is a biological man, but she quickly comes to feel at home among them. Featuring several scenes of full-frontal male nudity, "Bugis Street" takes a sledgehammer to stereotypes of Singaporean prudishness, but at heart its an old-fashioned melodrama. The plot is episodic, progressing from vignette to vignette. For all the hookers flamboyance and diva attitude, Jacky Tangs cinematography is the real star here. He fashions a dazzling look for the film, full of deep primary colors. Although its depiction of sex work is rather sanitized and the ending a bit pat, but "Bugis Streets" bittersweet mood is appealing and powerful. "Lan Yu," adapted from a novel published anonymously on the Internet by "Beijing Comrade," was shot in Mainland China without government sanction by Hong Kong-based director Kwan. Through a love story between a rich man in his thirties and his much younger partner, it reflects obliquely on Tianamen Square and more directly on the rise of capitalism in China. Even while acknowledging the closets pressures, it takes gay sexuality for granted. It welds together a romance and depiction of the ups and downs of Chinese life in the 90s. Via the power of money, its characters wind up exchanging roles.
In "The River," pollution leads to agonizing neck pain for a young man (Lee Kang-sheng) who worked briefly as a movie extra; meanwhile, his closeted father faces agonies of his own. It may be hard to understand "The River" without knowledge of the entire Tsai Ming-liang oeuvre. Water imagery crops up very often in his films, but it doesnt have a fixed meaning. Here, it may represent chaos, but its also a part of our bodies. Tsais master-shot compositions, long takes and elliptical narrative-father and son dont meet for half an hour, at first appearing to be strangers-verge of being a cliché in Asian cinema. Nevertheless, David Cronenbergs "The Brood" is the film "The River" reminds me most of. In many respects, its a horror film without being a genre film. Once he begins suffering from neck pain and constantly tilts his head to one side, Lees physical presence begins transforming-his anxiety stems as much from discomfort with his body as any other source.
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