Brotherly (short film): Difference between revisions
New page: Based on a true story of two brothers in 1970's Ohio. It tells of their abandonment by their alcoholic parents and how the brothers turned to each other for support. Director: J.C. Oliva ... |
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Based on a true story of two brothers in 1970's Ohio. It tells of their abandonment by their alcoholic parents and how the brothers turned to each other for support. | Based on a true story of two brothers in 1970's Ohio. It tells of their abandonment by their alcoholic parents and how the brothers turned to each other for support. | ||
In a house ruled by two alcoholic adults, these underage kids find a special comfort and refugee in one of western civilization’s oldest taboos: incest. There is an in-between area of sexual ambiguity, do they experience sex as a manifestation of carnality or rather as the one instance in which they can redefine their roles without fears or worries about the specular images of adulthood (their parents), and by extension, society? Carefully devised, J.C. Oliva’s short film circumvents controversy by offering us poetic images and flashbacks sequences that makes us understand why these characters do what they do, without judging them or exploiting them.<ref>http://orvel.me/brotherly-2008/</ref> | |||
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Kevin Fabian, Malcolm McRae, Mathis Fender | See full cast and crew | Kevin Fabian, Malcolm McRae, Mathis Fender | See full cast and crew | ||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
==External Links== | |||
[[category:film]] | [[category:film]] |
Revision as of 10:57, 15 May 2013
Based on a true story of two brothers in 1970's Ohio. It tells of their abandonment by their alcoholic parents and how the brothers turned to each other for support.
In a house ruled by two alcoholic adults, these underage kids find a special comfort and refugee in one of western civilization’s oldest taboos: incest. There is an in-between area of sexual ambiguity, do they experience sex as a manifestation of carnality or rather as the one instance in which they can redefine their roles without fears or worries about the specular images of adulthood (their parents), and by extension, society? Carefully devised, J.C. Oliva’s short film circumvents controversy by offering us poetic images and flashbacks sequences that makes us understand why these characters do what they do, without judging them or exploiting them.[1]
Director: J.C. Oliva Writer: Joe Brouillette (screenplay) Stars: Kevin Fabian, Malcolm McRae, Mathis Fender | See full cast and crew