Minggu, 01 Agustus 2010

I Want Your Love ( Short film )

I WANT YOUR LOVE



I WANT YOUR LOVE
A Film by Travis Matthews

Cast: Jesse Metzger, Brenden Gregory




What happens when two friends give in to their urges? “I Want Your Love“, a new new short film by indie director Travis Matthews illustrates very explicitely what it could feel like to fuck a good friend after having a few glasses of wine together. Like the movies Mathews shot for his documentary series “In Their Room” the movie is very tenderly shot, and like other contemporary queer indie movies it combines both narrative and pornographic elements in a way that blurs the borders between a “feature film” and a “porn film”. The whole thing is also part of a bigger film project with the same title Matthews is working on at the moment.

Country: USA
Year: 2010
Genre: Romance, Erotic
Language: English
Location: USA

End Of Love

End of Love
Ai dao jin
Director: Simon Chung
Writer: Simon Chung
Companies:

Heart Production
Breaking Glass Pic.
Release Year: 2009
Country: Hong Kong | China
Language: Cantonese
Subtitle: English (Hardcoded)
Genre: Drama
Runtime: 97 min
Cast:

Lee Chi Kin
Ben Yeung
Clifton Kwan
Guthrie Yip
Joman Chiang


Stuck in a Christian ‘rehabilitation’ camp, boyishly cute Ming a 22 year old Hongkong party boy recalls his double life, a whirlwind of sex and drugs as a rent boy, and a sedate, romantic life with the older and more conservative Yen. Secrets and lies haunt their relationship, as Ming’s mother confronts her son’s sexuality in a most extreme fashion and Yen tries to get Ming to give up hustling

As the story unfolds Ming falls for Keung, a handsome, former drug addict who has been assigned as his sponsor.

Movie Review

Simon Chung directs a 97-minute Boys’ Love film entitled the End of Love. When need comes in the middle of love, how can two perfectly romantic and caring men turn their backs from one another? The one to blame is Ming – a very handsome man whose mother just passed away since she accidentally finds out the real life of her notable son. She could not bear her son’s sexual preference and leaps out the window to face her death.

Looking back on his nasty past as a man hustler, Ming traces his steps together with his memory back to those times when he seeks a cheap thrill with drugs and very explicit relationships with men he only meets on the streets. Could this be the reason why Yen’s feelings for Ming died away? Yen happens to be the lover of Ming who is very much on the conservative side. He shows Ming how deserving he is to show him the love he has always dreamt of.

Little did Yen know that Ming has a landlord named Cyrus who sidelines as a rent boy. This is the source of extra income that Ming thinks he could make something big with. He then clings to the new found refuge and begins attracting and hunting prospects down for an easy buck. Ming and Cyrus are raking in good money with their stint and they even compare notes on how to throw in the perfect bait.

Without the knowledge of Yen, Ming makes real good income from his so-called secret association with the new landlord of the place he is renting. Every night they seem to walk the streets clad in mystery as they literally hunt wandering gay clients who are looking for a moment of ecstasy in their arms.

A sudden change of feelings brings Yen to have questions about Ming’s mysterious job so he follows him around and to his surprise, finds out the real set-up between Cyrus and his lover. Without even thinking, Yen goes to the police and tips his lover’s alleged behavior. On the eve of the bust, Yen could not control his feelings since the man he thought would go beyond bars is not Cyrus but instead it turns out to be Ming.

While serving his sentence, Ming meets another inmate named Keung who makes him endure his times inside the jail. When he finally comes out, Ming decides that there is indeed love at the end of a storm. He vows to himself that even though he is all emotionally battered when Yen tipped him off, Keung is now his salvation. Ming drops by Keung’s place for a visit and gets a shock of his life – Keung is not living alone. He is with someone else too. The End of Love seems to be flowing through Ming veins. So he checks in a Christian Rehabilitation Clinic and goes through several therapies.

Is there a ray of light even though Ming sees the End of Love go pass his very eyes?

Night Coridor

Night Corridor
Yao ye hui lang
Director, Writer: Chi Chiu Lee
Companies:

Pure F. Art Syndicate
Golden Gate Pro.
Release Year: 2003
Country: Hong Kong
Language: Cantonese, English
Subtitle: English
Genre: Drama, Horror, Mystery
Runtime: 73 min
Cast:

Daniel Wu, David Smith
Kara Hui, Eddy Ko
Anthony Fernandez
Fung Kuk, Allan Wu
Coco Chiang
Awards: 3 nominations

Summary : An artist investigates the uncanny death of his twin brother who was gnawed and clawed to pieces by wild monkeys. He ends up grappling with the beast within, after being gobbled alive by a ravenous nympho and getting sucked into in a series of grisly murders. Out of his closet tumble skeletons of repressed homosexuality, pedophilic abuse, Oedipal complex and primal cruelty.

But eerier stuff awaits him in a colonial library guarded by a night porter who may be the Devil Incarnate. A danse macabre choreographed with European flair and painterly texture, transposed from the Satanic world of Polansky and Goya to a post-97 Hong Kong of paranoia, animal appetite, and – monkey business. While majority of the show is centered on morbid horror. The scene in which Daniel Wu holds Allan Wu at gun point and forces him to perform oral sex maybe enough to please others.

Year: 2003

Director: Julian Lee Chi-Chiu

Writer: Julian Lee Chi-Chiu (from his own novel)

Producer: Daniel Wu, Stanley Kwan Kam-Pang

Cast: Daniel Wu, Kara Hui Ying-Hung, Guk Fung, Eddy Ko Hung, Coco Chiang Yi, Allan Wu

Review :

Now firmly established as a popular figure in both the commercial and art-house sectors of Hong Kong cinema, hot young actor Daniel Wu (BISHONEN, ENTER THE PHOENIX) co-produced this eerie supernatural drama with Stanley Kwan – director of ROUGE (1988) and LAN YU (2001) – which Wu has described in interviews as: “A dark, non-typical Hong Kong story, with a more European feel to it than most”.

Based on a novel by writer-director Julian Lee, Wu plays Sam, a photographer pursuing a successful career in London, far away from the ghosts of his childhood in HK, where he suffered years of sexual abuse at the hands of a ‘benign’ family priest (Eddy Ko). However, he’s forced to return home when his alcoholic mother (Kara Hui) informs him that his twin brother Ah-hung has died following a horrific incident in which he was torn apart by monkeys (talk about creepy!). Beset by grief and confusion, Sam seeks answers from the ageing night porter (Guk Fung) of a local library which his brother used to attend, where he’s introduced to Ah-hung’s strange girlfriend (mainland model Coco Chiang) whose devotion to Sam isn’t as innocent as it first appears. But Sam’s return to HK has also rekindled his affections for a childhood friend (Allan Wu), whom Ko accuses of being partly responsible for Ah-hung’s death. The mystery continues to deepen…

Filmed in twelve days on a limited budget and photographed with noir-ish intensity by debut cinematographers Wong Chi-ming and Charlie Lam, this multilayered shocker recalls the escalating paranoia suffered by Mia Farrow in ROSEMARY’S BABY (1968), though the Gothic tone and slow-burning tempo of Lee’s film owes as much to similarly-styled Asian entries like RING (1998) and JU-ON: THE GRUDGE (2003). Lee maintains a cohesive narrative structure, despite his fractured editing style and non-linear approach to the material, whilst Wu anchors proceedings with his skillful portrait of a sensitive artist cast adrift in a threatening landscape.

Many of the film’s themes and images are linked explicitly to the famous painting ‘The Nightmare’ by 18th-19th century artist Henry Fuseli (that’s the one in which a horned demon is sitting astride a sleeping/swooning woman draped across a bed), an image whose relevance only becomes clearer as the movie draws to its enigmatic conclusion, and while the stark location photography evokes an appropriate measure of creeping dread, Lee further unnerves his audience by introducing odd, disconcerting noises into an otherwise benign soundtrack, while half-seen images flicker briefly at the edges of the frame.

Though it plays like a character study, the film is intensely cinematic in the usual HK manner, and while the ending is a little abrupt and confusing, events become clearer on subsequent viewings. Like BLOW-UP (1966), this is a movie which refuses to indulge the viewer’s expectations…

Daniel Wu is in every scene, and he’s hypnotic and beautiful and deeply tragic, all at the same time; tormented by the shadows of an unhappy childhood, and consumed by the darker shadows of an impending catastrophe, he tempers the anguish of his brother’s death with the fortitude of a natural survivor. Chiang essays a character not unlike the nightmarish Sadako in the Japanese “Ring” series, an innocent-looking pawn of satanic forces, while Guk’s kindly night porter turns out to be harboring more than a few guilty secrets of his own (my lips are sealed).

Slow-going, but bewitching and dreamlike in the best possible way, the movie was given a Category III (adults only) rating by HK censors for some frank sexual material, including an extraordinary scene in which Sam sprawls beneath his bedclothes, masturbating langurously over a recent photograph of the young man he once loved and lost (now a hunky radio DJ). Few actors of Wu’s standing have ever been so daring in HK cinema.

Director’s Comments

NIGHT CORRIDOR , a Hong Kong Arts Development Council sponsored feature film project, is a psychological thriller cum story of unrequited love with post-colonial Hong Kong as its backdrop.

Adapted from Julian Lee’s novel of the same title, inspired by a gothic painting by Fuseli called ‘Nightmare’, NIGHT CORRIDOR is about law and desire – our darkest, deepest human yearning, like the evil spirit embodied by the witches in Goya’s painting. In the film, a colonial library in Hong Kong is represented as a killing ground for the devil.

Through the protagonist’s ( an émigré artist returning to Hong Kong from London, U.K.) investigations into his twin brother’s murder by wild monkeys, he uncovers a pile of skeletons in his cupboard — Oedipus complex, repressed homosexuality, pedophilic abuse, perverted lust, bestiality. His final downfall into Satan’s abysmal trap, resembles unfolding of the relationship between Mickey Rourke and Robert De Niro in ANGEL HEART.

The film echoes the atmospheric style of Roman Polanski’s THE TENANT and REPULSION with supernatural elements reminiscent of X FILES and the dark, warped universe of David Lynch掇 BLUE VELVET. The film is largely composed of night shots and interiors, with a mise en scene that evokes the rich textures and lighting of Gothic paintings s well as Dutch Masters.
— JULIAN LEE



I M Not What You Want

In the movie, Lam plays Ricky, a gay university student who had just decided to come out of the closet. Hung plays Ricky’s friend Mark. When Ricky decided to announce to his family his sexual orientation he was warned by his fag hag Olivia (played by Carol Chan) not to. He still pushes through with his decision, not wanting to hide his true personality anymore. True to Olivia’s warnings, Ricky’s parents not only were displeased about his being gay. They could not accept having a gay son that they threw him out of the house shortly after his confession.

Ricky decides to stay at Mark’s place while waiting for things to cool down at his home. He moves in with Mark even if Mark’s girlfriend Mabel (played by Joyee Lam) does not approve of the arrangement. She doesn’t trust Ricky and is uncomfortable with his being gay. As the days go by, Ricky and Mark developed a deeper kind of friendship. Unbeknownst to Ricky, Mark is actually gay. At first Mark struggles with confiding to Ricky about his sexual orientation. He didn’t have Ricky’s confidence and self-assurance on being homosexual. After much internal debate, Mark eventually opened up to Ricky and confesses his feelings. That night, they decided to be together despite Mark not having broken up with Mabel yet. The movie’s ending straddles the line between being heartwarming and causing heartbreak as it deals with the feelings of all the characters.

The first thing that viewers will notice is that I Am Not What You Want does not contain any sex scenes that are common with gay movies nowadays. By removing that plot element, the movie pushes off the gay film stereotype. What it focuses on instead is that what matters is only “love” as there should be no distinction between “gay love” versus “straight love”.

This alternative inspection of love and sexuality also challenges the values and points of view taken mostly by heterosexuals especially in Hong Kong and China. Viewers will find the story tender, and the approach taken towards its subject matter as very compassionate. The portrayals of all the characters and their actions are realistic, which is one of the things that the movie is successful with. The only thing perhaps that makes this movie perfectly well made is that the cinematography can get a bit blurry. It is not evident if this effect is intentionally done by the director, so it can get distracting sometimes.

I Am Not What You Want is only 48 minutes long. Released in 2002, this is director’s Kit Hung second short film. It was presented at the International Festival of New Film in Split, Croatia, the Internationaal Speel Film Festival in Gent, Belgium, and other gay festivals in San Francisco, London, Bangkok, Tokyo, Melbourne and New York. I Am Not What You Want also won a Special Jury Award at the Golden Dragon film festival in Belgium.

Songs

  • Flower and Glass, by Chet Lam
  • Me and Instant Noodles, by Chet Lam
  • Come Closer, by Chet Lam
  • One vs Two, by Chet Lam, performed by Lam Yee Man


KURAP


Kurap is an indie film about greed and corruption among small-time criminals in the streets of Manila starring GMA contract artist Sherwin Ordonez in his first mature role.Ambet is a small-time pickpocket lurking in the busy streets of Metro Manila.Together with his gang of young criminals, he steals things and sells them the easiest way possible…. through bribery and corruption.





Meanwhile, Ambet’s only sister Luchie, is afflicted with glaucoma, a disease which causes slow blindness of the eye.Ambet’s illegal income is not enough to sustain the two of them let alone Luchie’s sickness.Marlon will then enter the picture.





He is a cunning cameraman who is always chasing for a video material on petty street crimes, prostitution and prohibited drugs.His hidden camera is constantly on the hunt for juicy stories which he is peddling to his publicity-hungy client, the television netwrok.





As Luchie’s eye condition aggravates, Ambet will agree to work for Marlon as an ‘undercover agent’.Ambet will be caught in a dilemma and will eventually betray his comrades all in the name of love and money.In the blink of an eye, moral degradation, sexual awakening, deceit and deception will be exposed.Corruption and greed will consume them leading to their own death and destruction.





Kurap competed in the 10th Osian’s Cinefan Asian and Arab Film Festival in New Delhi, India last week. It was chosen as the opening film in the 10th Cinemanila International Film Festival on October 15-29, 2008. And on October 10-19, 2008, it will compete in the 24th Warsaw Film Festival in Poland.

SERBIS



A drama that follows the travails of the Pineda family in the Filipino city of Angeles. Bigamy, unwanted pregnancy, possible incest and bothersome skin irritations are all part of their daily challenges, but the real “star” of the show is an enormous, dilapidated movie theater that doubles as family business and living space. At one time a prestige establishment, the theater now runs porn double bills and serves as a meeting ground for hustlers of every conceivable persuasion. The film captures the sordid, fetid atmosphere, interweaving various family subplots with the comings and goings of customers, thieves and even a runaway goat while enveloping the viewer in a maelstrom of sound, noise and continuous motion.

The Pineda family operates a run-down movie house in a city in the province, which shows dated sexy double-feature films. The family has taken up actual residence in the old building as well. The matriarch Nanay Flor, her daughter Nayda, son-in-law Lando and adopted daughter Jewel take turns manning the ticket booth and the canteen. Her nephews Alan and Ronald are the billboard painter and projectionist respectively.

Nanay Flor had filed a bigamy case against her estranged husband and is attending the court hearing today when, after a number of years, the decision will be finally handed down. It is within this context that the story unfolds. As the rest of the members go about their daily activities, we get a glimpse of how they suffer and deal with each other’s sins and vices — relational, economic or sexual.

Alan, who is financially unprepared for marital responsibility, feels oppressed by his pregnant girlfriend’s demand of marriage. Nayda, who entered marriage out of tradition, is torn between marital fidelity and her ambiguous attraction towards her cousin Ronald. Nanay Flor, who loses the case, feels betrayed not only by the court judge but also by her son who testified in favor of his favor.

Preoccupied with their personal demons, the family in unmindful that inside the movie theater, another kind of business is going on between the “serbis” boys (male prostitutes) and the gay patrons.

KAMBYO

After producing two successful movies, Ang Lalake sa Parola and Ang Lihim Ni Antonio, the indie film tandem of Lex Bonife (as screenplay writer) and Jay Altarejos (as director) are at it again to give us another gay-themed movie to watch out for, entitled “Kambyo”.

The film brings to the silverscreen two of the hottest members of Viva’s all-male bump-and-grind group Men of Provoq, Johnron Tañada and Gabz del Rosario; along with indie film discoveries, Rayan Dulay and Kenjie Garcia; and former teenstar Harold Macasero.

Kambyo is story about four 21-year-old men belonging to the different permutations of gay sexuality experience a paradigm shift in their lives after a road trip to Ilocos Sur.

MACKY (RAY AN DULAY) organizes a road trip to Ilocos Sur after graduation to visit his best friend PHILIP (JOHNRON TANADA) from first year college who left the university before their sophomore year due to family problems. He is joined by his activist, bisexual cousin MANUEL (KENJIE GARCIA); artistic and promiscuous gay man XAVIER (HAROLD MACASERO); and a good looking vagabond, ALDO (GABS DEL ROSARIO).

After the road trip, Macky is able to let go of his secret feelings for his best friend Philip, who is now married with two children; Manuel is able to express his love for Xavier; Xavier gets to realize that he is worth the love that he has been fearfully avoiding; and Aldo realizes that he still can dream despite the struggles in his life.

I LOVE DREAM GUY

In this Boys love movie, five young men land job contracts as entertainers in Japan and form a new hip-hop dance group called Dreamguyz. Guided by their gay manager DIDI (Jao Mapa), they spend the next few months before their trip bonding as friends who share a common dream of finding greener pastures in the Land of the Rising Sun.





MICHAEL (actor) worked as a dancer in Japan when he was still a minor, using a fictitious name and a forged passport. He makes sure his recruiter doesn’t find out he’s not a first-timer to Japan like the rest of the guys.



BENJO (actor) seeks to escape a cruel stepfather and find his missing older brother, a musician turned illegal alien in Japan. ALVIN (actor) is Didi’s lover, who openly expresses his affections for his benefactor while hoping to make his own money in Japan. The two members who share choreographic duties, Jake and Rico, quickly develop a secret romance. Problem is, Jake lives with his devoted girlfriend Jenny (Niña Jose), who supports him financially. On top of his dilemma, Jake is soon discovered to have a heart ailment, jeopardizing his chances of joining the group’s trip to Japan.



As a former Japayuki himself, Didi knows a stint in Japan hardly guarantees a financial windfall for the group. So he enlists the members in a networking company that has been giving him good dividends.





Unfortunately, the company collapses without warning. It ruins Didi and threatens to dissolve not just his relationship with Alvin but the group itself. Violence erupts on the eve of their trip, which could shatter the dreams of the Dreamguyz.


Additional Information:


Director: Joel Lamangan
Genre: Drama, Boys love
Castings: Marco Morales, Jao Mapa, Niña Jose, Sherwin Ordoñez
Country: Philippines
Language: Filipino, Tagalog

Litle Big Boy

Little Boy Big Boy

Director: Joselito Altarejos
Writer: Lex Bonife
Companies:

Viva Films
Beyond The Box
Release Year: 2009
Country: Philippines
Language: Filipino | Tagalog
Subtitle: N/A
Genre: Drama
Runtime: 75 min
Cast:

Paolo Rivero
Douglas Robinson
Renz Valerio
Ray An Dulay
Sophia Baars

Little Boy/Big Boy tells the story of a carefree graphic artist named Raymund and how he is filled with doubt as he is suddenly faced with the responsibility of looking after his seven-year-old nephew Zach. But while taking care of Zach, Raymund finds himself in the middle of building a relationship with his new lover Tim where he teaches him the value of acceptance and self-respect. This gripping indie film, which stars Paolo Rivero as Raymund, Douglas Robinson as Tim, and Renz Valerio as Zach, is helmed by Joselito Altarejos with screenplay by Lex Bonife. The director shares that Little Boy/Big Boy “has turned out to be an adult gay-drama with lots of sensitive scenes, heart-warming moments and insights on relationships – gay or straight.”

Boring Love


Boring Love
Seng Ped
Director: Sarawut Intaraprom
Story: Pantip.com
Companies:

Shine Entertainment
Weekend Project Pro.
Release Year: 2009
Country: Thailand
Language: Thai
Subtitle: N/A
Genre: Drama, Romance
Runtime: 83 min
Cast:

Nattapol Nillapoom
Attiwat Lumkool
Intira Ketworasoontorn
Taweewat Wanta
Pimchada Rungpiromkit


Based on a hot topic that been posted on Pantip.com which later became a best-selling book, Boring Love is a comedy that tells the story of a guy named Ped who is caught in the middle of two persons who seem to have feelings towards him.
Ped and Oiy work at an airline. Oiy, who is gay, wants more than just friendship with Ped, but his heart as well. Ped, who has just broken up with his girlfriend, tries to get Oiy out of life, as he can't accept being gay. He draws closer to Oiy without realising it, as he sympathises with his plight, and Oiy is a good friend at least. However, acting on his old instincts he sets up a meeting between his old girlfriend, Kai, and Oiy, in the hope Kai can persuade him to go straight. Kai secretly fancies Oiy, and fancies her chances of converting him. Oiy discovers the meeting was a set-up. Feeling betrayed and rejected, he leaves Ped's life, just as Ped had wanted. However, once Oiy has gone, Ped discovers he can't live without Oiy, and was much closer to his friend than he realised...