Transgender issues have taken center stage at the Venice Film Festival this year, with Italian director Emanuele Crialese even using the platform to reveal he was born a woman as he presented his new film starring Penelope Cruz.
The revelation by Crialese came at a press conference for his new film, L’Immensita, which is inspired by his difficult adolescence.
“I am never going to be like any other man... I was born biologically a woman,” Crialese said.
Photo: AFP
He added that, despite his transition, there was still a “huge part of my character that is female.”
In the film, Cruz’s character attempts to protect her teenage daughter, who identifies as a boy, in a bourgeois household dominated by an abusive, unfaithful husband.
It is not alone at this year’s festival in embracing artists who reject traditional gender roles or tackle issues around sexual identity. Another film in the main competition, Monica by Italian director Andrea Pallaoro, stars a transgender actress in the leading role — a first in 79 editions of the festival.
Photo: REUTERS
Trace Lysette, known for her role in Amazon Prime series Transparent, plays a transgender woman who returns to Ohio after a long absence to care for her dying mother.
“It’s very rare that you see a script where there’s a trans character at the center and the movie is told through her lens,” Lysette told reporters. “Usually trans characters are more a sidebar vehicle for someone else’s story.”
Besides exploring the title character’s emotional and psychological world, the movie reflects on “the precarious nature of each of our identities when faced with the need to survive and transform”, said Pallaoro.
STRUGGLING FOR DECADES
Themes of gender identity are also the subject of various documentaries in the festival.
In All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, director Laura Poitras centres on the art and activism of US photographer Nan Goldin, whose early work focused on gay culture and volatile male-female relationships.
One of the breakout performances has been Quintessa Swindell, a non-binary actor, who stars alongside Sigourney Weaver and Joel Edgerton in Master Gardener, playing out of competition.
Meanwhile, a documentary by French director Sebastien Lifshitz, Casa Susanna, recounts the story of a clandestine community of cross-dressers in conservative America of the 1950s and 1960s, relying on archival footage and surviving members of this “pre-queer” history.
“It’s been a struggle for decades to try to break out of the archetypes,” Lifshitz said.
Another French director, Florent Gouelou, presented Three Nights a Week, a film he described as “a declaration of love” to the art form of drag.
In the film, Baptiste, a man in a relationship with a woman, discovers the Parisian world of drag queens and falls in love with one of them, Cookie.
“Through the character of Baptiste you see my own fascination and through the character of Cookie, you see my own experience as a drag queen,” said Gouelou.
While Americans face the upcoming second Donald Trump presidency with bright optimism/existential dread in Taiwan there are also varying opinions on what the impact will be here. Regardless of what one thinks of Trump personally and his first administration, US-Taiwan relations blossomed. Relative to the previous Obama administration, arms sales rocketed from US$14 billion during Obama’s eight years to US$18 billion in four years under Trump. High-profile visits by administration officials, bipartisan Congressional delegations, more and higher-level government-to-government direct contacts were all increased under Trump, setting the stage and example for the Biden administration to follow. However, Trump administration secretary
A “meta” detective series in which a struggling Asian waiter becomes the unlikely hero of a police procedural-style criminal conspiracy, Interior Chinatown satirizes Hollywood’s stereotypical treatment of minorities — while also nodding to the progress the industry has belatedly made. The new show, out on Disney-owned Hulu next Tuesday, is based on the critically adored novel by US author Charles Yu (游朝凱), who is of Taiwanese descent. Yu’s 2020 bestseller delivered a humorous takedown of racism in US society through the adventures of Willis Wu, a Hollywood extra reduced to playing roles like “Background Oriental Male” but who dreams of one day
In mid-1949 George Kennan, the famed geopolitical thinker and analyst, wrote a memorandum on US policy towards Taiwan and Penghu, then known as, respectively, Formosa and the Pescadores. In it he argued that Formosa and Pescadores would be lost to the Chine communists in a few years, or even months, because of the deteriorating situation on the islands, defeating the US goal of keeping them out of Communist Chinese hands. Kennan contended that “the only reasonably sure chance of denying Formosa and the Pescadores to the Communists” would be to remove the current Chinese administration, establish a neutral administration and
Burnt-out love-seekers are shunning dating apps in their millions, but the apps are trying to woo them back with a counter offer: If you don’t want a lover, perhaps you just need a friend? The giants of the industry — Bumble and Match, which owns Tinder — have both created apps catering to friendly meetups, joining countless smaller platforms that have already entered the friend zone. Bumble For Friends launched in July last year and by the third quarter of this year had around 730,000 monthly active users, according to figures from market intelligence firm Sensor Tower. Bumble has also acquired the