Queerama (DVD) Directed by Daisy Asquith Queerama is a film created from the treasure trove that is the BFI National Archive. The story traverses a century of gay experiences, encompassing persecution and prosecution, injustice, love and desire, identity, secrets, forbidden encounters, sexual liberation and pride. The soundtrack weaves the lyrics and music of John Grant and Hercules & Love Affair with the images, and guides us intimately into the relationships, desires, fears and expressions of gay men and women in the 20th century a century of incredible change. Starting with the first gay relationship on film released in 1919, Different From the Others, Queerama weaves its way through the decades from unknown newsreel amateur film from the 20s and 30s, to the sexual liberation of the 00s queer and transgender scene and the chemsex, gay parenting and marriage campaign of recent years. Special features Fully illustrated booklet with new writing on the film, and full film creditsOther extras TBC UK | 2017 | colour, and black & white | 70 minutes | 1 x DVD9, Region 2 | Cert 15
W**7
I am in it!
Came across this documentary unintentionally. Found it historical and interesting.Over halfway through I recognised a friend from the London scene from waaaaay back when.... so, I decided to pay closer attention to people in the club dancing clips....and near the very end....there I was right close up wearing a silver wig and a little gold framed mirror around my neck and a dummy cctv camera held upside down like a sci-fi laser gun.I remember it was a Kinky Gerlinky night back around 1991 and I think it was at The Empire Leicester Square. People REALLY made an effort in their costumes and designs for those Kinky Gerlinky nights.The guy filming had one of those huge dinosaur of a VHS camcorder up in my face...so I did a few moves..... Not realising 28 years later I would actually see myself on one of these programmes.
B**B
MTV?
Unusual presentation for a documentary. I had expected to see a film more like The Celluloid Closet. It was a long form music video with scenes from British cinema.
A**Y
Four Stars
The dvd did not disappoint. Interesting presentation, the extras were great.
T**A
Four Stars
Interesting.
T**A
Loved it!
Amazing doc!
C**C
Two Stars
A series of clips of gay scenes from the films of yesteryear, but absolutely no analysis or linking narrative.
A**R
Five Stars
absolutely love this documentary
S**G
cutting and pasting from the BFI archive, with love
This film is a huge collage of clips of mainly older films, and part of the fun is recognising which films they are taken from, as there is no commentary. The juxtaposition is often imaginative, suggesting a sort of dialogue from different sources, sometimes. Although the film only lasts 70 minutes, it feels quite dense - a big collage with lots of different bits of paper. In the Q&A from the NFT the director Daisy Asquith says how they couldn't afford the full range of clips they wanted, but tried to make a virtue out of this - something they have definitely achieved, I think. The mixture of familiar and unfamiliar is very effective; as is the blend of overt material and b/w footage of people tiptoeing around the issue. All the sources are British, of course, being from the BFI archives. Some of the films - one featuring Richard Burton as a gay hairdresser with another straight star, which looks pretty bad even from the few seconds we see - are well worth just getting this much of. Another plus is the songs of John Grant, so touching in themselves, and here providing the right emotional context for these scenes - it makes the whole thing moving and threaded with desire from beginning to end. The extras are as long as the film itself, including two TV programmes from the 60s presented by Bryan Magee, one on gay men, and the following year (1965) another on lesbians - they make for very interesting viewing, the subjects are so articulate, and the kind of questioning sympathetic while also reflecting how strange gay lives seemed to most people - the frequent unquestioning use of the word 'normal', for instance.
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