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Tag Archives: miff23

Blue Jean (2022)

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Georgia Oakley crafts a decent debut feature that captures the challenges of being a lesbian in Thatcher’s Britain.

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August 19, 2023 Leave a comment

Hello Dankness (2022)

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There is nothing like a Soda Jerk film.

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August 18, 2023 Leave a comment

Time Bomb Y2K (2022)

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A nostalgic look at Y2K hysteria from the safety of the future.

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August 17, 2023 Leave a comment

Tommy Guns (Nação Valente) (2023)

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Destined to confound, this sometimes surreal drama (with a touch of horror) sits in an uncomfortable space between metaphor and realism.

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August 16, 2023 Leave a comment

The Carnival (2023)

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Isabel Darling’s The Carnival reminded me of a particular ilk of great Australian documentary storytelling, like Maya Newell’s Gayby Baby (2015) and In My Blood it Runs (2019) and Justine Moyle’s Tall Poppy (2021). The storytellers find a subject or a family who seem absolutely ordinary and build a rapport that allows them to tell the story of how they are extraordinary.

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August 16, 2023 Leave a comment

Room 999 (Chambre 999) (2023)

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A room full of filmmakers with remarkably little insight into the world outside of their bubble.

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August 15, 2023 1 Comment

Past Lives (2023)

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Celine Song’s debut feature is a quiet and lyrical ode to inyeon, the Korean term for “the miracle of being in the same room together at the same time.”

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August 14, 2023 2 Comments

Fairyland (2023)

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I want to say nice things about Andrew Durham’s Fairyland because it gives us an overview of queer culture in San Francisco in the 70s to 90s, a pivotal time.

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August 13, 2023 Leave a comment

Fremont (2023)

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I loved Babak Jalali’s Radio Dreams (2016), and he doesn’t disappoint with the tonally very different but just as meticulous Fremont.

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August 12, 2023 Leave a comment

Shayda (2023)

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On the surface, this is a story of a woman trying to leave an abusive marriage, but it shines a light on the insidiousness of domestic violence and its roots in patriarchy.

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August 11, 2023 Leave a comment

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