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October 1997, Week 1

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Sender:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Subject:
From:
Jenni Olson <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 2 Oct 1997 19:46:45 -0400
Comments:
Reply-To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
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>Date:    Wed, 1 Oct 1997 07:59:38 -0500
>From:    "Dr. Chella Courington" <[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: Race, Class, Gender, & Sexual Orientation in Contemporary Film
>
>Dear List Members,
>I am teaching a junior/senior film course in the spring on Issues of Race,
>Class, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in Contemporary International Film. I
>plan to show 6-8 films. So far, I have decided to show: _Once Were
>Warriors_, _Duaghters of the Dust_, and _The Wedding Banquet_. Any ideas
>for other films? I would very much appreciate your suggestions and advice.
>Thanks, Chella Courington.
>
>
>**************************************************************************
>****
>" I feel the revolutionalizing of our continent hinges on the woman
>question."
>     Ama Ata Aidoo, in Adeola James, _In Their Own Voices_
>
>
>Chella Courington
>Associate Professor of Literature
>Huntingdon College; Montgomery, AL 36106
>[log in to unmask]
>
>------------------------------
 
Perhaps Deepa Mehta's new film, FIRE would be appropriate.
 
               Fire (1996)
 
                                                   Type:
                                                              Lesbian
                                                   Form/Style:
                                                              Narrative
                                                   Subjects:
                                                              Asian Images
 
                                                              Family
                                                              Issues
 
Relationships
                                                   Country:
                                                              Canada
                                                   Language:
                                                              English
                                                   Running
                                                   Time:
                                                              104 minutes
                                                   Format:
                                                              35mm (color)
                                                   Director:
                                                              Mehta, Deepa
 
 
               Fire sets the screen AFLAME!
 
               It's not everyday that an Indian-born and educated
filmmaker takes on the
               highly charged agenda of rocking the boat of gender role
assumptions that so
               definitively structure what it means to be a woman in
contemporary India;
               that is exactly what writer/director Deepa Mehta has done
with her new film,
               Fire which unravels the story of two women, sisters-in-law
trapped in
               loveless relationships in modern New Delhi. One is the
dutiful
               well-weathered wife of a celibate eclectic, the other, the
new bride of the
               eclectic's brother who is still embroiled in his own
self-centered affair with
               his sex kitten of a mistress; the women turn to each other
for companionship
               and find erotic pleasure and desire in their connection.
The art direction is
               rich; the acting (led by Indian cinema diva, Shabana Azmi
and the captivating
               Nandita Das) is enrapturing; and the sardonic humor
borders on delightfully
               shocking to keep the viewer completely tantalized by the
unfolding story.
               While there are certain tropes that wear thin by the end
of the film, Mehta
               never goes overboard and it is easy to forgive a few
overly melodramatic
               scenes, especially when they are so well balanced with
tantalizing others.
               This is truly a must-see for feminists, queers and lovers
of love alike.
 
               --Mary Gray for PopcornQ
 
               Distributors for educational and non-theatrical
exhibition:
               Zeitgeist Films ([log in to unmask])
 
 
 
 
Jenni Olson
Producer, PopcornQ
 
PopcornQ: The Ultimate Online Home for the Queer Moving Image is
available now at http://www.popcornq.com or at AOL Keyword: PopcornQ.
 
FRESHLY POPPED!  CHECK OUT ALL THE NEW FEATURES ON POPCORNQ 2.0!
 
PopcornQ is proud to present the first global online lesbian and gay
movie channel, the PQ Online Cinema.  You've got a queer film festival in
your living room with our lesbian and gay shorts, classic queer trailers,
audio clips, and archival movie shorts.  Sit back, relax, and enjoy some
fresh PopcornQ.
 
PlanetOut - 965 Mission St. #730 - San Francisco CA 94103
VOX 415/547-2800 x309 * FAX 415/547-2801
http://www.planetout.com
 
----
Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite 
http://www.sa.ua.edu/screensite

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