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Women and Animation

10/3/2017

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by Tracey Francis
Animation is a complex art form when explored beyond what we see, because it falls within film and the visual arts. In the twenty-first century animation has been revolutionised by computer-generated imagery (CGI), with the aim of reflecting a life-like image. However, it still has non-conformist elements because this medium can tackle the dark or complex in a simplistic to abstract form. Animation has allowed some women to use this art form as a metaphor to reveal hidden stories. The female-led Leeds Animation Workshop distributes and produces films on social issues. Their first animation, Who Needs Nurseries? – We Do was made in 1978 after ‘a group of women friends who came together to make a film about the need for pre-school childcare’.
 
With a rich but modest history of women animators, those who have made it within animation have made an impact. From the pioneering animator and director Lotte Reiniger, who adapted the shadow puppetry of China and Indonesia beautifully for the cinema to Lillian Friedman Astor who was the first female studio animator in America, to Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical film Persepolis. The narratives reflect a female perspective and different way of seeing the world.
 
In 2016 The Hollywood Reporter published their annual animation roundtable with the title ‘Seth Rogen and 6 More on avoiding Ethnic Stereotypes and How to Break the Mold of Princesses’ (Giardina, 2016). Elle online reacted to this article with their own titled ‘We Asked 4 Female Animators About Diversity and Women in the Industry’ (Tang, 2016). They reacted because many readers pointed out that every participant was ‘a white man. And, to further highlight the homogeneity of the panel’s composition’ was the diversity headline. Animator Brenda Chapman reacted with,‘ A roundtable about ethnic and female stereotypes—they choose seven white guys as the experts, and give it that title? C'mon!' Puja Patel (@senari) posted on Twitter (2016) ‘this headline and photo! This photo and headline!’
 
In the twenty-first century is it not possible to have more diverse narratives and perspectives within mainstream animation? Diversity is being addressed within mainstream animation, with films such as Moana (2016) to the animation sequence The Tale of Three Brothers (2010) within Harry Potter and Deathly Hallows Part I. However, the impact of feminism and equality laws has changed society, but the dominant narrative is still homogeneous even though it may at times acknowledge we live a diverse world.
In a recent interview, Tracey Francis discusses with animator and visual artist Jessica Ashman about being an animation director.
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Image ©Jessica Ashman
​Jessica Ashman is an award winning animation director and artist, based in London. She recently had an exhibition – I Don’t Protest, I just Dance In My Shadow – at Four Corners in East London that explored race and gender within animation and the visual arts.
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Image ©Jessica Ashman
Tracey Francis: When did you first realize that animation was a medium you could use to express your inner voice and creativity?
 
Jessica Ashman: I used to love animation as a kid but actually didn’t realize that it was an actual career that actual people could do for a while. For the longest time I veered between wanting to be a ballerina (love of movement) and journalist (love of stories). I started to get into drawing when I was in secondary school, around the same time I started to get into comics and film and I really couldn’t decide on what I liked creatively because I enjoyed it all so much. It was only when I undertook my Art A Level and discovered artists, film and in particular, animation in art that I thought it was an ideal medium for me. It combines so many things I love: drawing, narratives, film, and movement. I applied to a BA in Animation at the University of Lincoln and then that was it! I still wish I pushed the ballet thing more, though!
 
TF: Who are your most important creative influences and why?

JA: My creative influences come from a lot of different places, so I’ll just mention the ones that first come into my mind! I love the work of artist Daniela Yohannes and her afro-futuristic, philosophical paintings. Same goes for the books of Octavia Butler and how she uses incredibly imaginative sci-fi narratives to present metaphors of race and gender rights. Leonora Carrington’s paintings are so magical. They look like fairy tales, yet have something much more metaphysical underneath. Kara Walker is one of the greats but I love how she tackles narratives in her work about black women – everything has a strong story in her work and the fact she doesn’t stick to one medium resonates with me, and my love of mixed media practices. Music plays a big part, too, in influencing my ideas. I listen to NTS [radio] almost daily, to shows like Touching Bass and Questing; they play a lot of quite spiritual hip-hop, jazz and some downright jams. My friends who are creatively doing their thing inspire me, too! Chardine Taylor-Stone’s activism, Shola Amoo’s film work and Stephanie Philips' music and activism really inspire me, too. Any black girl I see playing in a band excites me. And so many talented animators I graduated with from The Royal College of Art. I really could go on forever.
 
TF: Your award-winning BAFTA film Fixing Luka is a very personal piece. Why did you choose a traditional fairy tale animation style for this project?
 
JA: The idea for the film was one I had for years and was always based around malfunctioning puppets and a metaphor for people, probably due to my love of stop-motion puppet films. As I developed the narrative, I started to borrow from the familiar tropes of fairy tales as a form of structure; the idea that you have to go on a quest to discover an answer for something you probably had inside of you all along. I think this, coupled with its stop-motion styles makes for a very fairy tale-feeling film. 
 
TF: Your most recent work and exhibition, I Don’t Protest, I Just Dance In My Shadow, is an abstract and confessional piece about being a black woman and woman of colour within animation and the visual arts. How can your work challenge race and gender without you being defined by your gender and race?
 
JA: I think this was the question I was thinking about when making ‘I Don’t Protest…; somehow consolidating my very being as a black woman and how it intertwines with my work. Does it even matter? Sometimes I veer between ‘yes’ and ‘no’.  In the end, I feel by just being a black woman existing and creating in the world we live in today feels like a challenge in itself. A protest of sorts.
 
TF: Your work is very diverse and magical – do you feel that your style creates a platform to express unconventional and hidden narratives?
   
JA: Within my work, I’m always trying to find secret worlds or universes in which to explore stories and narratives. If I’m making a project, I’m going to be momentarily stuck in that universe I created until the project is over. And with animation, you can create any type of magical universe and rules for said magical universe that you can think of; all you need to do is draw or build it. So that combination results in some usually mad results, most of the time! But recently, I feel it is important to ground my work with an emotional core or reality that resonates with other people – I think there is room to be political and imaginative at the same time, and the idea of doing this more in my future work quite excites me.

To find out more about Jessica visit: http://www.jessla.co.uk/.

Underwire Film Festival 2017: ‘I Don’t Protest, I Just Dance In My Shadow’ is a short visual essay film by Jessica Ashman, about navigating the visual art and animation world as a black face in a white space.  More information: http://www.underwirefestival.com/events/women-at-war/.


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“THE ASK”:  How to Overcome the Greatest Obstacle to Success -- YOU?

5/24/2017

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by Stephanie Law

If you could ask for anything, what would it be?  A million dollars?  World peace?  Or, maybe a trip to Mars!
 
No, really.  Think hard.  This is not a trick question.  We dare you to examine what YOU truly want.  This means (gasp!) daring to be selfish.  Self-centred.  Full of thoughts of YOU, YOU, YOU.
 
Sacrilege!  If you're a woman, you had better be thinking of others, supporting your partner, nurturing your family, and sacrificing your needs on the altar of Selflessness.  Right? 
 
Look, nobody's advocating for women to become egotistical monsters.  But if we're being honest with ourselves, the thought of asking for what we want – what we truly want – can be an uncomfortable proposition. 
 
And that's a major problem.
 
In Canada, Women in View (a non-for-profit dedicated to gender and cultural diversity in Canadian media) released a report in 2015, citing that women represented only 17% of directors; 22% of writers; and 12% of cinematographers credited on feature length films that received investment from Telefilm Canada in 2013-2014 (a government cultural agency).
 
You may think, “Hey, that's not so bad!”  Except that women make up just over half of the population in Canada.  That's one glaring gap.  One that should not sit well with anybody.
 
How do we close this gap?  There will always be debate as to what constitutes the solution(s) to this issue.  Some will be in our control.  Others not so much.  Let's focus on the former. 
 
For some of us, we may not care to admit it, but sometimes the biggest obstacle to our own success (however you define that as), is ourselves. 
 
(This is not to negate the real systemic social, cultural, and political issues that conspire to hinder women's successes.  As a woman, and a person of colour, I am acutely aware that I will face barriers and obstacles in this industry due to ignorance, conscious and unconscious biases, and any one of the dreaded “isms.”  But in an effort to take back our power, I offer only my humble opinion below, which is absolutely open for discussion!) 
 
Therefore, before you ask someone to believe in you, you'd better make the ask of yourself: Do you believe in YOU?
 
“Of course, I believe in me.  What kind of question is that?”  Well, how do you show that you believe in yourself?  If you direct, do you direct?  If you write, do you write?  If you want a foot in the door, have you even knocked on the door?
 
Be honest with yourself.


Knock on the door. Make the ask. 

Last spring, I had to ask myself this question as a writer and filmmaker.  The truth is that it had been more than several years since my last short film.  And while I had continued to write scripts, I wasn't putting myself or my work out there enough – at least, not as much as I'm sure the next guy was.  In short, I wasn't asking myself to succeed.
 
What did I do?  I asked myself to take a risk.  I wrote a new short film – the first in years.  I attached my dream team to the project.  I applied for private funding.  We got rejected for that first grant.  But instead of taking this as a sign that I had no talent, and would never work in this industry, I applied for public arts council grants.  (In Canada, we're fortunate to have government-supported national and regional funding for media artists and media arts projects, such as short films.)   We ended up receiving two arts council grants.  Yay! 
 
The funny thing is... boldness begets boldness.  So, I made another ask.  I asked a friend of mine, a very talented filmmaker/producer, if she would team up with me to apply for a national (Canadian) professional development program focused on feature films.  Guess what?  She said yes. 
 
But that “yes” was only the start.  From there, I worked harder than I ever had, writing a feature film script in a month – finishing just in time to submit to that program's deadline.  There was no time to second guess; I just had to do it.  The result?  We were accepted into the program, and have made excellent connections and progress since. 
 
(Again, I recognize that we are privileged as Canadians to have such opportunities and programs.  But even if you live in a country without these privileges, find a way to connect with mentors, support one another, and create your own film/artistic community if you don't see yourself represented.)
 
Was all of this luck?  Magic?  No.  It was hard work.  It was daring to make “The Ask” of myself – before asking the same of others.  It meant fighting the good fight against self-doubt and insecurities.  Terrifying on the best of days.  But if I could do it, you can do it too. 
 
Knock on the door.  Make the ask.
 
And if that door slams in your face (and it might), knock again.  Better yet, break down the whole goddamn door.
 
In discussion with Her Film Project Editor, Kyna Morgan, we've decided to create a new Q&A series with the goal of raising the profile of female media creators, artists, and decision-makers.  We will ask these women to identify barriers to their success, and to propose concrete action (“The Ask”) towards achieving equality, diversity, and inclusion in the screen-based media industries – for themselves and others.  Stay tuned! 
 
And so... if you could ask for anything, what would it be?
 
Think hard.  We're here.  We're listening. 


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Women helmers of top grossing indies of 2013

1/5/2014

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by Kyna Morgan
@HerFilmProject
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Written & directed by Nicole Holofcener and the 8th top-grossing indie film of 2013
Indiewire has just posted its list of top-grossing independent films of 2013; interestingly, a Mexican film directed by perennially popular comedic star Eugenio Derbez, was the top grosser, co-written by a woman, Leticia López Margalli.  With Hollywood continuously confounded by the American Latino market, it's encouraging to see a Mexican film make such a nice showing.  Read the Indiewire article for the details on eligibility for films included on this list.

Out of the top 30 films, women helmed only two of them, with the highest-ranking woman-directed film (Enough Said) at the #8 spot on the list, which is also the highest-ranked film both written and directed by a woman (Nicole Holofcener).  Women wrote/co-wrote eight out of the top 30 films, with the highest-ranking co-written film at #1 for Instructions Not Included (co-writer Leticia López Margalli).  See the entire list below.

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Noms announced for Sweden's top film award

1/4/2014

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by Kyna Morgan
@HerFilmProject
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The Guldbagge Award, Sweden's top film honor awarded by the Swedish Film Institute, turns 50 this year.  Winners across 19 categories will be presented with the coveted red and gold beetle (named for the actual beetle, the "Guldbagge"), perhaps one of the most unique designs for a film award in the world.  The awards also include the Gullspira Children's Film Award and the Lifetime Achievement Award.  Nominations for Sweden's national film award were decided in early December through a voting committee of 45 members.  Women made a great showing in a number of categories, which is not surprising given the cultural zeitgeist that makes things like the Swedish Film Institute's focus on gender equity behind the camera as well as the recent installation of a Bechdel Test-passing standard for films in Swedish theaters possible.  To read through the list of all nominees, click here.  The awards will be presented on January 20 in Stockholm.

BEST DIRECTOR

While only one of the three directors nominated was a female director, Anna Odell, she was also nominated in the Best Screenplay category for the same film, The Reunion (Återträffen).


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Review: Julia Loktev's contemplative The Loneliest Planet (2011)

10/22/2013

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by Lotus Wollschlager
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A film by Julia Loktev

This film is about an engaged couple named Nica and Alex played by Hani Furstenberg and Gael Garcia Bernal (Y Tu Mamá También).  They go backpacking in the picturesque Caucasus Mountains with a Georgian tour guide named Dato.  There is very little dialogue in the beginning of the film as it focuses on the beautiful scenery they are experiencing.  The two seem to be happy just exploring together and have a goofy and carefree connection.  While hiking, they come across an older man with two younger boys.  The older man speaks with Dato in his native tongue and Alex finally asks them what is going on and is confronted with a gun to his face.  His initial reaction is to cower behind Nica and then when realizing his folly quickly pulls Nica behind him to shield her.  Dato gently takes the gun away from the man, and the man gestures that there are no hard feelings and gives Alex a pair of sunglasses.  Alex is shaken and confused and takes off his bracelet thinking the man wants something in return.   He waves Alex off and then then walks away with the younger boys.  Nica, visibly shaken and dazed, turns around and walks off with Dato and Alex slowly following behind her.  The film shifts at this exact moment, and the rest of the film revolves around the fallout from this scene.

Alex keeps his distance from Nica, and there is a telling panoramic shot of the three of them with distance, both physical and emotional, between all three of them.  You can see the shame written all over Alex’s face and the inner battle he must be struggling with for not instinctively protecting his fiance.  That one moment forced Alex’s core being out into the open for Nica to see and you can’t help but wonder if they both were unsatisfied with what they saw.  Sometimes it seems that it only takes one event to truly reveal a person’s true colors.
              
I enjoyed the cinematography and the beautiful scenery, but the pace of the film was a bit slow for me.  Both actors did a great job expressing their feelings without saying a word as so much relied on their silent emoting.  The director, Julia Loktev, had a way of making the movie steer you in a direction with, at first glance, seemingly small moments and covert emotions.  Parts of the editing with the film’s music and scenes were choppy, and that only seemed to enhance how discombobulated the couple felt after the incident.  There were many subtle elements to the film that seemed out of place on their own, but Loktev artfully pieced them together to make it all work.  (This film won the Grand Jury Prize at AFI Fest in 2011.)
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Review: Ry Russo-Young's Sundance hit Nobody Walks (2012)

9/27/2013

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by Lotus Wollschlager
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Nobody Walks is a film that follows Martine (played by Olivia Thirlby), whom is an aspiring filmmaker from New York.  She arrives in Silver Lake, California, because a friend of a friend’s husband named Peter (John Krasinski), a sound designer, has offered to help her with her film on bugs.  Martine stays with Peter’s family which includes Julie (Rosemarie DeWitt), her teenage daughter Kolt from a previous relationship, and their son Mason.  Dylan McDermott makes a cameo appearance as Kolt’s father.  They seem to have a “happy family” vibe when the film starts, but you start to see that shift as Martine and Peter start to spend more time together.  Their relationship starts off as strictly professional but quickly turns personal.  Julie recognizes Peter’s attraction to Martine and only asks that he doesn’t embarrass her.  Through it all Martine seems mostly innocent and genuinely focused on getting her film finished.  Peter quickly develops what he seems to feel is a strong connection with Martine and gets angry and feels betrayed when Martine spends a night with Peter’s assistant.  Martine exasperatingly admits that all she wanted was to work on her film, and Peter seems crushed by her lack of reciprocated feelings.  Peter obviously misread Martine’s intentions but still blames Martine and projects his frustrations.  Then on the other hand, you also have Julie having her own sort of dalliances with her narcissistic psychiatric patient.

The film takes a close look at family dynamics and how infidelity can affect everyone.  Peter and Julie seem like they have a solid partnership in the beginning of the film, but even though they have a seemingly strong bond, it is quickly forgotten in the heat of the moment.  I like how Ry Russo-Young juxtaposed the affair with Peter’s family’s everyday mundane activities during the exact moment he crosses the line.  I was holding my breath and waiting for something to happen to stop them.  It is easy to see how people can stray on a whim and not even fully realize how devastating their actions can be. 
     This is the first film I have seen from Russo-Young, and I am sure it won’t be the last.  It is a real and honest take on how a family can easily be thrown off kilter from partaking in life’s many temptations.  Russo collaborated with Lena Dunham (Tiny Furniture and “Girls”), and Dunham brings her knack for showing the gritty and raw details of life and relationships.  The film also took home the Special Jury Prize at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.  It is a nice change of pace from the overabundance of sugar coated mainstream films.
Nobody Walks is distributed by Magnolia Pictures and available on DVD and Blu-ray.  Visit the film's website.
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Now Showing: Haifaa Al Mansour's feature film Wadjda, made in Saudi Arabia

9/26/2013

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by Kyna Morgan
@HerFilm
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When I first heard about filmmaker Haifaa Al Mansour, I was delighted, enthusiastic, and wanted to learn more about her.  Not only is she the first Saudi woman filmmaker, she has made the first Saudi feature film.  Her film Wadjda, about a girl who has a simple dream of buying and riding a bicycle, has been making a big splash all around the world since last year.  Mansour has been racking up awards for her film in Venice, Rotterdam, Dubai, and beyond, and has been doing a number of interviews.  It was recently announced that Wadjda has been nominated by Saudi Arabia as its Oscar entry for Best Foreign Language Film. 
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Listen to an interview with Haifaa Al Mansour on CBC Radio that was posted online this morning.  (Link opens a radio pop-up.  Or, you can access the interview in this article.)

You can also Follow Mansour's tweets @Haifaamansour.

Mansour is one of several women directors whose films are being put forth as Oscar contenders for Best Foreign Language Film.  As of the writing of this article, seven countries have nominated films directed solely by a woman, with several others nominating films directed by a female-male directing team.  Sole female directors have made films nominated by the Czech Republic (Agnieszka Holland, Burning Bush), New Zealand (Dana Rotberg, White Lies (Tuakiri Huna)), Slovakia (Mira Fornay, My Dog Killer), the Philippines (Hannah Espia, Transit), Finland (Ulrika Bengts, Disciple), Portugal (Valeria Sarmiento, Lines of Wellington), and Spain (Gracia Querejeta, 15 Years and One Day). 
Wadjda is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics and had a few select screenings earlier this year.  Released on September 13 in New York and Los Angeles, it will be rolling out in various cities across the U.S. over the coming months.  Click here to see if it might be playing at a theatre near you! 

Maybe you'd like to consider arranging a get-together of film-loving friends, watch the film as a group, and have a chat about it afterwards.  A film field trip! Let us know if you do. What did people think of it?
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Vampire thriller Kiss of the Damned: Interview with writer-director Xan Cassavetes

9/25/2013

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by Katie Carman-Lehach
@katiecarman
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Xan Cassavetes, director of KISS OF THE DAMNED, a Magnet Release. Photo courtesy of Magnet Releasing. Photo credit: Vera Anderson
If you're in the mood for a sexy, atmospheric vampire thriller, look no further than Kiss of the Damned, director Xan Cassavetes' feature film debut which opened in theaters nationwide May 3rd (also currently on VOD). A talented director in her own right, Xan is the daughter of film director John Cassavetes and actress Gena Rowlands so it's no surprise that the apple did not fall far from the tree.

I had the opportunity sit down and ask her how the film came to be, what her creative process is like and what her opinions are on being a woman in the film industry making a movie about three beautiful and powerful vampire ladies. (Click here for a full review of the film!)

First, I know this is your first narrative feature film and your previous film was a documentary about Z Channel, the famed Los Angeles cable channel (Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession). Had you always wanted to do narrative films?

XC: Yes.

Were you doing other narrative films before this feature film or…

XC: Well no, but I had been trying. [laughing]

What was the experience like for you, jumping from documentary to narrative film?

XC: Well, there was a long time in between because I’d been trying to make movies very, very hard. I was working very hard, taking it very seriously. Obsessive-like, but they were not necessarily the kind of movies that financers like, jump up and down and clap their hands for. But finally, you know, I was about to get another movie made before Kiss of the Damned. It was a movie that I’d written like 5 years before, right after Z Channel and it was an obsessive love story that took place in Mexico City. I did get it green lit and I got it ready to go, but by the time I did, it was just, I wasn’t connected to it the way I was when I had written it, you know? And I just longed to do something that was immediate and you know, had that immediacy and that was very fresh.
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The passion had kind of waned?

XC: Yeah, I mean, I sort of had changed as a person, and I really loved the screenplay. I think my producer is still going to make the script with another director. But you know, sometimes…I outgrew it, sort of stylistically and thematically.

If I saw that movie I’d love it, but it’s just not for me to make. So I took some of the people who were working, financers working on that, and for a fraction of it wrote a vampire movie in 3 weeks and that’s how [Kiss of the Damned] came to be.


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DVD release: Nobody Can Cool available on August 20

8/18/2013

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An uncomfortable evening among strangers turns ominous when a young couple on a weekend getaway inadvertently intrude on a criminal couple's hideout.
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Nobody Can Cool, the first feature film by Dpyx (Marcy Boyle and Rachel Holzman), is a graphic novel and film noir slant on the “women in jeopardy thriller.”  It was shot in 14 days in Castaic, California on a shoestring budget. There are few female directors making genre movies and we hope to help fill that void with entertaining and provocative films.  We are now developing hard action, science fiction and horror projects with female characters whose narrative journeys are a driving force for the plot and challenge the narrow depictions of women in mainstream genre films that often limits women to roles on the sidelines of the story.

Nobody Can Cool will be available on DVD beginning August 20, 2013.  Visit the website.

WATCH THE TRAILER:
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Review of Kiss of the Damned by Xan Cassavetes

6/22/2013

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by Katie Carman-Lehach
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Though I haven’t seen the Twilight series of films, I know enough about them to consider Kiss of the Damned a welcome addition to the current Vampire revival -- gone is any sense of stolid purity or virginity, and in its place is a sexy, modern Gothic vampire tale, written and directed by Xan Cassavetes.

KOTD is a film I consider a great representation of the underlying symbolism of vampirism. The act of sucking blood, one’s life-force, from another person in the hope of immortality has been used throughout history as a direct symbol of sexuality and sex. And in that spirit, Xan has created an absorbing Euro-style throwback thriller, story of familial drama and lustful romance, set between a stunning gothic mansion in the countryside of Connecticut and the darkened streets of New York City. The older, more mature sister Djuna (Joséphine de La Baume) has just started a relationship with a young human, Paolo (played by Milo Ventimiglia) when her wild freewheeling sister Mimi (played by Roxane Mesquida) arrives unannounced.
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Filmmaker Xan Cassavetes
The two sisters have different ideas of how a modern vampire should live, and so they go at it throughout the film, Djuna trying to live a proper (and under the radar) life while Mimi runs amok, commuting back and forth to NYC, feeding herself with many victims along the way while simultaneously ruining the life her sister has created for herself. We even delve into the private society of the vampires of NYC, with a wonderful appearance by actress Anna Magoulis playing Xenia, a high society vampire who seems to be the mother hen of the two sisters, doling out advice and orchestrating private events for the secret society.

The film is lensed with a very specific tone and feel – it’s gorgeous and dreamy, but has a sort of sad melancholy to it, the imposing mansion in the field seeming to reinforce Djuna’s self-imposed seclusion. Alternately, Mimi’s character is reflected in her trips to NYC’s gritty, claustrophobic, underground clubs. Their contrasting ideas about life are made clear from the start.

While there is certainly a lot of blood, there isn’t as much gore and violence as a modern-day American horror audience would expect, which I think is a good thing. Instead, the film expands beyond the vampire stereotypes to show a more personal perspective, focusing not only on the primary goal of their survival but of navigating that survival through family and lovers and such.

You shouldn’t be dissuaded by the seemingly straightforward story though -- Xan’s unique style of storytelling and how she chose to visually represent it are quite engaging (as is the heaping spoonful of eye candy, both male and female, in this film which will surely keep your attention if nothing else does.)

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