As I mentioned elsewhere, I'm currently attending a film festival in Montreal. Although most of the films I'm seeing are of no interest to this forum, a few of them are very much on topic. In addition, there are occasional surprises in some of the films where I didn't expect to see any boy but they turn up in bit parts or minor roles.
I'm going to use this thread to give you brief updates on the films I see.
HUNGER (Ireland) (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)Amazing film about IRA prisoners doing a hunger strike. A topic that has been treated on film before, but never like this! Most of the film takes place in prison, so I didn't expect any boys. But in the final scenes of the film, one dying character starts to have visions of himself as a boy, and eventually goes into a flashback of a scene from his childhood.
I unfortunately didn't catch the boy's name. I expected him to be listed on IMDb, but he's not. Here's a picture, though:
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links) GOMORRA (ITALY) (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)Another really good movie. This one's about organized crime in Italy. It's brutal and realistic, and yet oddly surreal and absurd at the same time. Running at two and a half hours, it follows the parallel stories of several characters involved in organized crime, all of which are portrayed very sympathetically and, as we come to realize, turn out to be victims more than perpetrators, each in their own way.
Among these is a boy (if I remember correctly, his name is Toto). I'm not sure how old he is. Somewhere between 13 and 15, I'd say.
Not the best picture of him, but the only one I could find:
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)There are a few other boys glimpsed throughout the movie as well. Overall, though, this isn't really a movie that I suggest seeking out if you are only interested in boy content. But it's a good movie, so I recommend it anyway.
You can watch the trailer here (but not in English):
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)MUST READ AFTER MY DEATH (USA) (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)A very moving documentary about a family going through difficult emotional and psychological troubles, all of which is told through audio tapes recorded by members of the family (especially the mother) during the late fifties and most of the sixties. It's disturbing and upsetting, but also incredibly moving. You see the negative effect that psychologist and psychatrists can have on people who ultimately were probably just regular folks going through regular problems, but which were made worse by all the "therapy" they willingly (or unwillingly, in the case of the children) put themselves through.
While the audio tapes are playing, you see clips from home movies and montages of still photographs. There is no "outside" commentary or talking head interviews. It's all archival material.
They had three sons and one daughter. You see them in the movies and photographs, and hear their voices in a few places. Mostly, though, their characters are developed through the mother's accounts of their troubles.
I suspect this will be near impossible to find unless it happens to be playing at a festival near you. It's a very low budget from an unknown filmmaker who just happened to submit it to the festival and they accepted it even if he was completely unknown because they were so moved by it.
I'm just going to copy and paste my review from the profile:
I gave this film a 10 on IMDb. I'm a fan of the director and I think this was his best film so far. The reason I'm giving it a slightly lower rating here is that as a "boy movie" it's not that great. The film focusses on the entire family, so the boy is only one out of four characters. Still, though, this is highly recommended.
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More to come in the next few days.