London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival preview
http://scribe-kunstblog.blogspot.com/2008/03/london-lesbian-and-gay-film-festival.html

27 March - 10 April

Less than a week to go before the 22nd LLGFF at London's South Bank and
there is much to anticipate, from Alek Keshishian's rom-com *Love and Other
Disasters *to Angelina Maccarone's sensitive drama, *Vivere*.

Between these two bookends one finds an array of new queer films and
material ripe for reconsideration, with films by Seidelman, Bergman and
Altman given an airing.

Among the new offerings that catch the eye are: *Otto*, the latest from
aging enfant terrible Bruce LaBruce, in which a queer zombie runs amok in
Berlin; *Viva*, Anna Biller's feminist satire on 1970s' sexual mores; *A
Jihad for Love*, Parvez Sharma's doc which investigates the intersection of
Islam and queer identity; and *Derek*, Isaac Julien's doc on auteur Derek
Jarman.

Experimental filmmakers Bev Zalcock and Su Friedrich get retrospectives
looking at their decades-long practice, while other strands looks at Queer
Dance and Lezploitation. And there's even an all-night musical programme,
featuring such guilty pleasures as *Can't Stop the Music*, for those who
don't want to go to bed.

Of the films I have seen, highlights include the closing night gala, Vivere,
previously reviewed and recommended. Angelina Maccarone has built up an
enviable body of work as a writer/director and it's a mystery to me why she
is not as feted as Fatih Akin and other celebrated young German directors
and why her work has not reached a wider audience. Having appeared at the
LLGFF in 2006 with the brilliant *Unveiled*, she returns with three
intertwined stories of women on the road from Germany to Rotterdam over an
eventful Christmas.

Zero Chou won the Teddy at the 2007 Berlinale with *Spider Lilies*, a highly
stylised depiction of online lust and troubling reality between two women in
Taiwan.

Lucia Puenzo's *XXY*, Argentina's entry for the Academy Award, is a
ponderously paced but engaging drama of intersex identity and family
relations on an island off Uruguay.

*The World Unseen* (dir Shamim Sarif) features beautiful cinematography and
smouldering drama in South Africa. Adapted from her own novel, Sarif's film
looks at a growing attraction between two Asian women in 1950s South Africa.
As she explained to me, it's partly based on stories her parents told her of
living under apartheid and negotiating the thorny social structures.
Enjoyable, although the two leads appear to be acting in two different
films.

*A Walk into the Sea* is a very personal film by Esther Robinson exploring
her uncle Danny Williams' troubled and mysterious life. A fringe member of
Warhol's Factory, Williams shot several short films before he disappeared in
1966 while on a visit home. Robinson explained to me she wanted to make
space for his films in her documentary, and his previously unknown footage
appears for the first time, alongside sometimes conflicting interviews with
survivors of the Warhol scene.

www.bfi.org.uk/llgff
-- 
www.gaybombay.in
www.gaybombay.info

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