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FILM REVIEWS / Two fascinating docs at Rendezvous with Madness
Mike Vokins / Toronto / Thursday, November 05, 2009
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Two stellar documentaries are part of the lineup for this year’s Rendezvous with Madness Film Festival running Thu, Nov 5 to 14. Prodigal Sons follows trans filmmaker Kimberley Reid as she returns to her hometown and her estranged brother in Montana, while Cure for Love captures the lives of people within the ex-gay movement in Canada.

SIBLING RIVALRY. A trans woman returns home to patch things up with her brain damaged brother — the grandson of Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth — in Prodigal Sons.
A very personal and compassionate story, Prodigal Sons has more than its fair share of family drama. Reid, a trans woman, ventures into delicate territory as she returns to her high-school reunion in small-town Montana. But that turns out to be the least of her worries — her troubled relationship with brother Mark is the real meat of the film. Mark’s fragile mental health pushes the boundaries of Kim’s identity and eventually her safety as well.

Growing up Kim was a high-school quarterback, popular and good-looking; Marc, well, wasn’t. At 21, when a car accident left Mark with a brain injury and mood swings, all he could do was recall the past. This didn’t sit well with Reid, keen to banish her former life. The two barely spoke for 10 years.

Upon their reunion Mark’s awkward rehashing of the past creates great tension. But Reid’s sympathy and willingness to move away from old conflicts keeps the peace — for a while.

Mark’s progress is undermined by several dark episodes without medication and there are some terrifying on-camera moments where Mark violently lashes out at Kim. Highlights of their past conflicts bubble to the surface and we see the dark side to which Kim closed the door all those years ago.

The film takes a bizarre turn as Mark, who was adopted, finds out the identity of his birth parents. He’s descended from none other than Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth (being put up for adoption by Rebecca Welles, their daughter). A trip to Europe to visit Oja Kodar (Orson Welles’s former partner) seems to give Mark a new take on his past and a healthy handle on life. But back home Mark relapses dangerously and the family’s unity is up in the air.

Kim Reid’s documenting of her family not only gives beautiful insight into how families struggle when one member’s mental health is in jeopardy but also captures the complexities of sibling rivalry.

Reid’s insightfulness on her and Mark’s dynamics are profound. Mark’s entrapment in the past contrasts her own rejection of it. Their reunion brings up her own issues as a trans person who is at once rejecting her former identity while at the same time trying to salvage the past.

Prodigal Sons screens at 9:15pm on Fri, Nov 6 at the Workman Theatre.



further along the mental health spectrum, Cure for Love follows a group of individuals involved with Exodus International, a network of Christian organizations devoted to eradicating homosexuality.

Brian and Ana are a “re-oriented” couple, newly married and trying to settle in. Ana likens marriage to “having a permanent roommate.” She states, “I don’t use the term falling in love — because it’s stupid.” Meanwhile Brian declares, “I’m totally still attracted to men…. My wife knows that, my church knows that.”

However their friends Jonathan and Darren, more accepting of their own sexuality, have left the community and are now part of the ex-ex-gay movement — people who have survived the rigorous therapies and reeducation of the evangelical church.

“The doctrine of guilt is so pervasive,” notes Jonathan, who talks of his unending self-hatred that nearly led him to suicide. “If what I believed was so righteous then why was it driving me to do such an unrighteous thing?”

The refreshing part of the doc is that it avoids overt commentary and lets the characters speak for themselves. Whereas the seminal ex-gay doc One Nation Under God from 1993 gives a left-leaning introduction to this creepy culture, lesbian wrtier and codirector Christina Willings avoids judgment and offers a more cinema verité style in understanding her subjects’ situation and pressures.    

Reading their personalities is the most fascinating part of the movie: Brian’s over-the-top happiness and Ana’s etherized persona offer a marked contrast to the ebullient Jonathan and relaxed Darren.

But can ex-gays and ex-ex-gays be bffs? Cut to a cataclysmically awkward dinner party where Jonathan and his new boyfriend explain their happiness with the repressed Brian and Ana.

The film highlights each person’s acceptance of each other despite the cavernous rift between the queer and evangelical communities. As Jonathan states, “I’d be so happy for Brian and Ana if their marriage last their whole lives.”

Cure for Love screens at 7pm on Nov 6 at the Workman Theatre.


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Reader Comments


 
Work while it is yet day.
Once again, I bid each and every person a most wonderful and glorious day. I would also that the blessings or our Lord, and Savior, Jesus Christ the Son of the Living God rest up all of those who read this message. That is, those who read each line from top to bottom. Why I put it in this way is: I know those who have a deep antichrist spirit will skip over, or drop out, once it become obvious, this being a Christ glorifying message, rather than being a message that puts “Jesus the Christ” and all that He stands for down. Yes, sad but true just the same, we seemingly move into more of a Christ denying…also a Christ hating society day by day. However, the truth of the matter is: this should not be a surprising issue for believers. For just like within this world that our God of love has created, He has given us both light and darkness. As we each know there is a time for both. The light makes it more convenient for working and getting things done, whereas, darkness makes it more convenient for rest from all the work we’ve accomplished during the daylight hours, as all will know. Within the spiritual realm it is pretty much the same. The difference being: now we’re to work while it is yet day, in preparation of our soul’s salvation. The night (which, much of it, we’re now within.) is for checking out…as a person would do when in preparations for making a long trip. For they sure don’t want to forget anything. Also making preparations for a long, long trip, the electricity is soon to be turned off.. After which, they’ll not be able to see anything, therefore making it very hard to stumble around in the darkness making preparations to make their departure. To make a long, long, story short folks…we’re now within the preparedness hour. What I’m saying in shorter words…will we now get ready…put differently…will we now set our house in order…or, will we chose, by not doing so, to be left behind? John 9:4 I must work the works of him that sent me, while
William Dunigan, Rentz America
11/05/09 3:38 PM EST
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Cause even the might stand accused
Strange vibrations in the air. Is anybody really aware that everybody's got an aura. It can either work against ya or it can work for ya. Chaka Khan, Book of Rufus 19:75
gb, Toronto ON
11/06/09 5:26 PM EST
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