The deepest recesses of the human psyche. An interpretation of Freud’s theory of transference.
Filter Films
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A helpful narrator teaches three queer youth how to deal with difficult social situations they might encounter out in the big wide world they are about to enter. Learning has never been so fun!
Social Conflict Management
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The day the Film-Makers’ Cooperative was forced by loss of lease to move from their offices at Lexington Ave. and 31st Street in New York City, filmmaker and Coop member Joel Schlemowitz showed up with a camera to document the historic moment. On the soundtrack Jonas Mekas, one of the Coop’s founders, and MM Serra, the current executive director, describe the Coop’s beginnings, the organization’s recent struggles, and the difficulties of finding space for the arts.
Moving Images – The Film-Makers’ Cooperative Relocates
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A short documentary of the artist working in his studio speaking about his painting, modernism, formalism and censorship in Canada from a gay perspective.
Digital Nudes in Oil
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“Dying for the Pleasure” is the result of a poem-as-script strategy. It is a darkly humorous, kaleidoscopic trip down Memory Lane, the audience witness to a woman’s anxiety surrounding the loss of our humanity after we “crawl inside,” to become enveloped, shielded, and cut off from others by a body of steel. Director: Katrin Bowen Writer, Producer: Heather Haley
Dying for the Pleasure
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A pregnant moment from Hitchcock’s “Vertigo” triggers this haunting exploration of lineage, memory, and loss. Using a combination of 16mm and Super 8 film, “Still Light” journeys through a forest of old photographs, shadowed by the ethereal voice of Kim Novak.
Still Light
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Purple is the colour of a fresh bruise. Haley’s latest videopoem, “Purple Lipstick” confronts the insidious nature of domestic violence through compelling juxtapositions. A disembodied female voice employs vivid language, absurdist against a backdrop of banality, images of “normal” family life. Numb in her isolation and still in her nurse’s uniform, a wife and mother prepares dinner. The inherent terror of her homelife is invoked with excruciating tension. Its brutality can only be alluded to.
Purple Lipstick
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The impressionist, lyrical style of the film is a departure for Nicolaou, who describes this film as “one half documentary and one half fictional narrative.” The film is a collage visually and thematically, though the narration serves to anchor the piece with a freestyle kind of story telling. Nicolaou drew upon experiences in her own life when creating the film. She incorporates footage from her family’s home movies of the 60s and 70s. “A haunting portrayal of the yearning for intimacy between parent and child.” – Henry Mietkiewicz, Toronto Star Life always appears to be more joyous in old home movies, and Nicolaou liked contrasting the vibrant and beautiful mother and grandmother figures in the past with the more melancholy and damaged images in the present. The comparison is especially interesting, as Nicolaou’s own grandmother, Mary Christo, plays the role of the Baba in this film. Nicolaou also used her experience coming to terms with her own mother’s illness – Multiple Sclerosis- to explore the parallels between the lack of acceptance of homosexuality and of disease in a traditional Macedonian family. The literal loss of sensation and mobility that the disease brings becomes in “Dance With Me” a metaphor for an emotional numbness and an inability to engage. The invitation to dance becomes a call to communicate, to celebrate and ultimately to accept. Awards: Best Experimental Film, Yorkton Short Film Festival ,1998; Audience Award, Best Short, Torino International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, 1998
Dance with Me
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This film is an intensive insider’s look at Mardi Gras and the myriad of musical traditions in this annual celebration in New Orleans. It provides an interesting background to black America’s honouring of the native peoples in the southern States. Dressing in elaborate Indian costumes they make specifically for the Mardi Gras, black Americans tell of the time when native communities gave them refuge from the slavery of the southern States. A film rich in its investigation of Southern music as a cultural expression of a people’s struggles.
Always for Pleasure
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The last home movie. Shot on now discontinued Kodachrome 40 super 8 film stock, a cine-poem to time, childhood and the colour of memory.
Fountain of Youth
