As usual I preferred the rare, strange or experimental.
Warhol’s Lonesome Cowboys: slow and disjointed and just a bit boring even though very funny at points. Horridly sexist too. There was only one woman in the film I didn’t appreciate the way she was portrayed or the way she was treated by the men.
Blood, tea and red string: a very strange and slightly disturbing stop motion animation. Very enigmatical, but also rather good.
Thundercrack!: so rare there are only 4 or something copies in the world, which makes sense since they say it’s the most walked out off film in the history of cinema. It’s also one of the oddest. It’s a comic horror bi-sexual porn b-movie! Black and white seventies on top of all that. It was hillarious!
The pervert’s guide to the cinema: two and a half hours (with no break) of Slavoj Zizek analysing the cinema through a lacanian view at breakneck speed. Very interesting, but too much too fast.
The Queen: a rare little documentary about a drag queen beauty contest in 1967.
Scorpio Rising: a Kenneth Angers film with 50s rock and roll sountrack motorcycles, leather, religious parallels and nazi flags. Odd and disjointed as
Pink Narcissus: about the strangest film I saw in the festival. And maybe the gayest. For 71 minutes you see a beautiful boy meandering around over decorated settings, undressing, fantasising, touching himself etc. Most of it with a pink wash over it.... Odd and mesmerising.
Obviously there were "mainstream" films too. I only saw two memorable ones though.
Shortbus: by Cameron Mitchel (he of Hedwig and the angry inch). It was supposed to contain nothing but sex, but there is much more to it than that. It's about people and relationships and sex. It's sweet and beautiful and quirky and I thoroughly recommend it.
Laitakaupungin Valot (Light at dusk): by the finnish director with the japanses name (Aki Kaourismaki). Really, really atmosphric. Is Helsinki REALLY like that? It was like going back in some type of timewarp. Dysfunctional people and 60s electrical appliances in the most depressing areas of the city and with such an unbelievable LOSER as the hero that you almost believe he deserves what he gets. Not as good though as The man without a past.
And finally what would the festival be without the prerequisite musical documentaries?
Air Guitar Nation: hilarious, hilarious documentary about the world air guitar competition. There are people out there that take air guitar very very seriously. As one guy said :To air is human, to air guitar divine.
LoudQUIETloud: the Pixies reunion tour. Why did I see that film? The Pixies are good but I'm hardly a fan and would someone please tell me why Kim Deal is god?
Glastonbury: more my think. The history of the Glastonbury festival in two and a half hours. Really good and really informative. Why, why, why have I never been to the festival?
The 12th International Film Festival of Athens as I saw it...
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