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Deeply Loving 'I Am Love' (Has Anyone Else Actually Seen It?)

9/15/2014

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If there is a more tender, evocative, less cloying story about the vagaries of love and the universal truths of life than Italian director Luca Guadagnino's 2009 film Io sono l'amore (that's I Am Love for us Anglo knuckle-draggers), I'd like to know about it.

It matters not that I seem to be the only person on the face of the Earth to have actually seen this film, despite the fact that it stars the reliably riveting Tilda Swinton.

Not only is Swinton foxy beyond belief but she plays a Russian émigré. Ergo, she delivers dialog entirely in Italian as a native Russian speaker would. Despite being British. So yeah, she’s kind of unbelievably amazing and puts into perspective just how talented an actress like Gwyneth Paltrow isn’t.

But that’s only the half of it. Without stumbling or soapboxing or pandering even a smidge, I Am Love expertly explores fraught themes including – but not limited to - love, lust, death, freedom, guilt, horror and joy. And it never once feels false.

Watching it for a second time last night (blessedly, my beloved Toronto Public Library has copies available for borrowing), I was reminded of all the big huge things this little film successfully takes on, and was again flattened by its deft hand. And yeah, I cried like a hungry baby with soggy diapers at the end again.

So as not to spoil things for anyone who might want to seek out this gem, I won’t divulge plot details (and DO NOT read Wikipedia’s entry which gives it all away). But I will say this: even I can believe in love again watching this movie which, as anyone who knows me will attest, is saying something.

Of course, I don’t believe it could ever happen FOR me or TO me - and I have an unassailable track record of wicked heartbreak to prove it. But that’s beside the point. I Am Love is like a postcard soaring in on the wings of hope, but waaay less corny than that last line.

If only all movies could be so affecting.

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Calling Out the Crazies

9/8/2014

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You know what’s great about homophobia? It reveals idiots at the speed of light, sparing us all time wasted on jackasses.

Case in point: Toronto District School Board trustee Sam Sotiropoulos who was recently - and smashingly – nailed for his hateful, boneheaded tweets regarding transgendered people, gays and Toronto's Pride Parade by a tenacious Global News reporter.

Keeners will recall that trustee Sotiropoulos launched an ultimately unsuccessful bid to ban nudity at the Toronto Pride parade, intimating that pedophiles invariably people the ranks of homosexuals. Hey man, nice shot.

Anyway, back to the Global interview: When pressed about his ugly remarks – sample tweet: “Toronto Worldpride Parade 2014: Freak Show with Politicians” – Sotiropoulos prevaricated, stammered and then eventually clammed up, staring down the reporter. 

Luckily, Sotiropoulos is so far attracting exactly the right kind of publicity: the derisive kind.
Pink News quotes activist Susan Gapka as saying, “It’s very concerning that people elected to public office don’t follow or take the time to learn about our codes of conduct, about our society. I hope he doesn’t win again.”

Right. And let’s extend that hope to another high-profile homophobe (also liar) currently seeking public office in Toronto. The gauntlet is down, folks, the gauntlet is down.

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    Kim Hughes

    Here resides the random thoughts, blurbs  and dangling participles of the Toronto-based writer named above.

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