Evangelina Kranioti’s ethereal documentary ‘Obscuro Barroco’, following the experiences of transgender personality Luana Muniz as she navigates the streets of Rio de Janeiro’s Carnival, promises “a story of a calm darkness”. But across the film we follow a movement from night to day, with the closing scenes of the film depicting beams of sunlight stretching across the skyline. The transformation of the city from darkness to light offers a symbolic parallel to the metamorphosis of gender seen in the film, and more generally to the growing visibility of the trans population in this region. Just as the trans protagonist steps into Rio’s dawn, numerous trans artists are emerging onto the Brazilian art scene. Kranioti’s documentary is the first of a number of Brazilian and Latin American films submitted to the Teddy Award 2018, celebrating trans and queer culture. ‘Bixa Travesty’, directed by Kiko Goifman, is a tender biopic of Brazilian transgender singer Linn da Quebrada, and ‘La omisión’, Argentinian filmmaker Sebastián Schjaer’s first full-length fiction film, portrays the struggles of a young transient worker. The increasing representation of trans people on the big screen is matched by developments on the small screen. 2017 saw the production of TV Series, ‘Edge of Desire’, a soap opera chronicling the transition of a transgender man that draws in roughly 50 million viewers per night[1]. Broadcast on Brazilian TV network, Globo, the show is the nation’s first ever soap opera featuring a transgender character. Similarly, transgender singer Pabllo Vittar broke the Brazilian record for YouTube view with their song Sua Cara this year[2], and British transgender playwright Jo Clifford’s show, ‘The Gospel According to Jesus, Queen of Heaven’, which imagines Jesus as a trans woman, continues to be a sell-out hit at theatres across the country since its arrival in 2016[3]. Brazil is home to a large community of transgender people, added to which are the members of what is known as the country’s “third sex”, travestis (individuals designated male at birth, but who live a feminine gender identity). Its annual Pride parade in Sao Paolo, which attracted an estimated 3 million attendants this year[4], is the largest in the world. The country is also seen as something of a beacon when it comes to the legal rights of LGBT people. The government was one of the first to work with LGBT rights organisations to offer free medical care to HIV/AIDS sufferers, and 2013 saw the legal recognition both of same-sex marriage and of the right to change a person’s name and gender marker on some government-issued identification documents[5]. It is only right, then, that the growing legal realisation of trans identities is mirrored in the realisation of those identities in Brazilian art. But there is a looming shadow over these advancements; with more visibility in the public sphere comes louder and more violent hostility. In the art world that hostility translates to societal censorship, with two Brazilian exhibitions of queer art this year being shut down early thanks to right-wing and conservative Christian protests. In everyday terms the opposition to the trans and queer community takes the form of brutal violence. “Machismo” culture is still very prominent in parts of Latin America: according to the UN, a woman is assaulted every 15 seconds in Sao Paolo[6], and in 2017, 200 LGBT individuals were murdered in Brazil. Trans people are particularly at risk, as was cruelly illustrated earlier this year when a video went viral of trans woman, Dandara dos Santos, being tortured and killed in Fortaleza. It may be many years before trans art can step into a light unpolluted by such prejudice and violence, but for the moment we must recognise the courage of the many film-makers, actors, singers, and theatre-goers that are publically celebrating queer and transgender culture despite such animosity. By Hannah Congdon [1] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/07/world/americas/brazil-transgender-pabllo-vittar.html [2] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/07/world/americas/brazil-transgender-pabllo-vittar.html [3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWNQtlsvQiY [4] http://www.rioonwatch.org/?p=37249 [5] http://www.rioonwatch.org/?p=37249 [6] http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-33939470
Tag Archives: Obscuro Barroco
TEDDY AWARD CEREMONY 2018
For those unlucky few who weren’t able to join us for the famously fabulous TEDDY AWARD ceremony, you can see the entire ceremony here! Highlights include Wieland Speck’s annual speech, Sate Minister Markus’ Prabst defiant proclamation against homophobia, Jack Woodhead’s upside-down piano-playing, and Linn de Quebrada’s stunning stage performance.
All here for you to watch again and again…
TEDDY TODAY: Friday 23rd February
It’s the day you’ve all been waiting for – THE TEDDY AWARD CEREMONY IS HERE!!!! As a warm-up to tonight’s proceedings, why not catchup on some of the lovely selection of films listed below, before glittering-up and joining us for a night of celebrations at the Haus der Berliner Festspiele.
See you on the dance floor!
Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot
Director: Gus Van Sant
USA 2018 113′, English
Zoo Palast 1, 12:30
Evidentiary Bodies
Director: Barbara Hammer
USA 2018, 10′, Without dialogue
Akademie der Künste, 18:00
Garbage
Director: Q
India 2018 105′, Hindi
Cubix7, 20:15
Hojoom (Invasion)
Director: Shahram Mokri
Iran 2017 102′, Farsi
Cubix 7, 22:30
Ludwig der Zweite, König von Bayern (Ludwig II of Bavaria)
Director: Wilhelm Dieterle
Germany 1930, 132′, German intertitles
Zeughauskino, 21:30
Obscuro Barroco
Director: Evangelia Kranioti
France/Greece 2018 60′, Portuguese
Zoo Palast 2, 16:00
Para Aduma (Red Cow)
Director: Tsivia Barkai Yacov
Israel 2018 90′, Hebrew
CinemaxX 3. 13:30
Shakedown
Director: Leilah Weinraub
USA 2018 82′, English
CineStar 7, 14:30
T.R.A.P
Director: Manque La Banca
Argentina 2018 16′, Spanish
CinemaxX 3, 21:30
Touch Me Not
Romania/Germany/Czech Republic/Bulgaria/
France 2018
Director: Adina Pintilie 125′, English, German
Friedrichstadt-Palast, 12:00
Tuzdan kaide (The Pillar of Salt)
Director: Burak Çevik
Turkey 2018 70′, Turkish
CinemaxX 4, 22:00
The TEDDY films 2018!
Here you’ll find a taste of what’s to come in the 32nd TEDDY AWARD at the Berlinale, taking place from 15th – 25th February. Throughout the festival we’ll be interviewing the directors and teams behind the TEDDY films, which you can catch on our YouTube channel: For more details on the TEDDY AWARD 2018, check out our programme magazine
Bixa Travesty (Tranny Fag)
Director: Claudia Priscilla, Kiko Goifman Brazil 2018, 75′, Portuguese
Contra-Internet: Jubilee 2033
Director: Zach Blas, USA/Great Britain 2018 29′, English, Spanish
Der Himmel auf Erden (Heaven on Earth)
Director: Reinhold Schünzel, Alfred Schirokauer Germany 1927, 113′, German intertitles
Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot
Director: Gus Van Sant USA 2018 113′, English
Escape From Rented Island: The Lost Paradise of Jack Smith
Evidentiary Bodies
Director: Barbara Hammer USA 2018, 10′, Without dialogue
Game Girls
Director: Alina Skrzeszewska France/Germany 2018 90′, English
Garbage
Director: Q India 2018 105′, Hindi
High Fantasy
Director: Jenna Bass South Africa 2017 74′, English
Je fais où tu me dis (Dressed for Pleasure)
Director: Marie de Maricourt Switzerland 2017 17′, French
Juck
L’ Animale
Director: Katharina Mückstein Austria 2018 97′, German
In Austria the final school exam is known as the ‘Matura’. Unlike the German word ‘Abitur’ (from the Latin ‘abire’ meaning ‘to walk away’), the Austrian term also includes the notion of coming of age. Mati wants to become a veterinary doctor, like her mother, and therefore leave the confines of her small-town universe for Vienna. But is she ready for this future? Standing in her ‘Matura’ dress with her long hair scraped back into a tight bun and her neck hair shaved bare, she’d be the first to admit she looks like a clown. Mati loves to spend time with the boys bombing around the quarry on her motocross bike. When one of the girls from her school resists when one of Mati’s mates begins sexually harassing her at a disco, Mati spits in her face. But, just like her parent’s marriage, Mati’s motocross gang also ruptures once notions of friendship, love and sexuality become more pressing. In her second feature-length drama, Katharina Mückstein uses clear words and images and cool synthesiser beats to tell the story of an inscrutable young woman on the brink of ‘walking away’. Her parents’ silence tells us that being mature and facing up to the future doesn’t have anything to do with your age. Info: http://teddyaward.tv/en/archive?a-z=1&select=L&id_film=780
Las herederas (The Heiresses)
Director: Marcelo Martinessi Paraguay/Uruguay/Germany/Brazil/Norway/ France 2018, 95′, Spanish
Ludwig der Zweite, König von Bayern (Ludwig II of Bavaria)
Director: Wilhelm Dieterle Germany 1930, 132′, German intertitles
Malambo, el hombre bueno (Malambo, the Good Man)
Director: Santiago Loza Argentina 2017 71′, Spanish
Marilyn
Director: Martín Rodríguez Redondo Argentina/Chile 2018 80′, Spanish
Mes provinciales (A Paris Education)
Director: Jean Paul Civeyrac France 2018 136′, French
Obscuro Barroco
Director: Evangelia Kranioti France/Greece 2018 60′, Portuguese
Onde o Verão Vai (episódios da juventude)/ Where the Summer Goes (chapters on youth)
Director: David Pinheiro Vicente Portugal 2018 20′, Portuguese
Para Aduma (Red Cow)
Director: Tsivia Barkai Yacov Israel 2018 90′, Hebrew
Pasolini
Pop Rox
Director: Nate Trinrud USA 2017 14′, English
Retablo
Director: Álvaro Delgado-Aparicio L. Peru/Germany/Norway 2017 101′, Quechua, Spanish
River’s Edge
Director: Isao Yukisada Japan 2018 118′, Japanese
Shakedown
Director: Leilah Weinraub USA 2018 82′, English
The Happy Prince
The Silk and the Flame
Director: Jordan Schiele USA 2018 87′, Mandarin, English
Three Centimetres
Director: Lara Zeidan Great Britain 2017 9′, Arabic
Tinta Bruta (Hard Paint)
Director: Marcio Reolon, Filipe Matzembacher Brazil 2018 118′, Portuguese
Touch Me Not
T.R.A.P
Director: Manque La Banca Argentina 2018 16′, Spanish
Tuzdan kaide (The Pillar of Salt)
Director: Burak Çevik Turkey 2018 70′, Turkish
Yours in Sisterhood
Director: Irene Lusztig USA 2018 101′, English