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A New Kind of Tranny Different for Girls Transsexual imagery has typically been found in films that no self-respecting tranny, or even any mildly sophisticated viewer, would claim. Drag queen director Ed Wood gave us the sexploitation take in Glen or Glenda (aka I Changed My Sex), a threadbare plea for tolerance mixed with softcore bondage footage. Hollywood tried half-heartedly to exploit the phenomenon in The Christine Jorgensen Story (1970), but the result was so lifeless the movie's mostly forgotten. Transsexuals figure as minor lights in the occasional independent or import (Priscilla of the Desert comes to mind), and of course Hong Kong has weighed in on the subject in its bizarre martial arts gender-benders like The East Is Red.
Kim and Prentice seem to have little in common. He spends his time fucking up simple deliveries, arguing with his girlfriend, and trying to relive his youth as a punk rocker. Kim, on the other hand, talks quietly, works efficiently, and acts as de facto marriage counselor for her sister while her own love life appears to be nonexistent. Their teenage past, where Prentice defended Kim/Karl against homophobic bashing, continually reasserts itself, most notably when Prentice attacks a policeman who sticks his hand under Kim's dress.
Sexual politics the idea of gender as malleable, constructable, and in a sense ultimately irrelevant runs throughout the film, climaxing in the second major moment of transgression: Kim and Prentice's long-awaited first love scene. When he asks for a visual analogue to his earlier question about her physical changes, Kim again obliges, this time doing a slow striptease that the camera lovingly records in half-light. This is a powerful, virtually unprecedented image of the unapologetic transsexual standing naked before us in a narrative film, demanding acknowledgment. In an interview, director Richard Spence said that Steven Mackintosh, who plays Kim, is in real life straight and married, a fact that, while not necessary to appreciate the scene, adds further resonance to the film's theme of self-created gender. The mesmerized Prentice, standing in for the audience, stares at Kim with a sense of wonder and excitement, subtly suggesting we do the same. July 1997 | Issue 19 ALSO: More tranny films, plus our collected articles on gay and lesbian cinema |
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New book from the
editor and writers of
Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors
from Classical Hollywood to
Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture),
by Gary Morris (Editor),
Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword).
London and New York:
Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
and David Carradine)
Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles