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First umbrella LGBTI organisation to fight homophobia in Turkey

A new umbrella organisation has been established in Turkey to encourage LGBTI websites, groups and organisations to work together to fight homophobia and transphobia in the Islamic country that straddles Europe and Asia.

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TURKEY LGBTI UNION has been in existence for just two months and was created to ensure unity and solidarity among LGBTI groups, websites and organisations in Turkey.

Burçin Bordanacı from Turkey LGBTI Union, said: “Because Turkey is an Islamic country, although not in the same league as Saudi Arabia, Syria and Iraq in its vehemently anti-LGBTI stance, there is need for togetherness and solidarity among LGBTI groups to counter the homophobia and transphobia that exists in Turkey today.”

The new organisation, is based in the Turkish capital of Ankara and was founded by gay activist Nikopol who in 2006 was instrumental in forming the Turk Gay Club, an LGBTI community club dedicated to safeguarding the rights of the LGBTI community in Turkey and helping individuals come together and meet in a safe environment.

To view the website. CLICK HERE:

 

McKELLEN supports LGBT film to tackle homophobia in football

Sir Ian McKellen is supporting a Kickstarter Campaign to raise funds towards the production budget of a new film called WONDERKID.

Sir Ian McKellen and Rhys Chapman
Sir Ian McKellen and Rhys Chapman

HE APPEARS in the promotional video for the project which is also being supported by the The Kevin Spacey Foundation and LGBT anti-violence and hate crime charity Galop.

WONDERKID, is an LGBT short film directed by Rhys Chapman that wants to tackle homophobia in football, provide an insight into the trauma caused by homophobic stigma and challenge preconceptions about what it is to be ‘masculine’.

The film is the ideal format to start addressing the very common issues of homophobia in society with the scope to reach a wide and varied audience.

It’s a great time for LGBT cinema at the moment, with the recent release of Pathe’s Pride and rise in LGBT Film Festivals as well as generally a more widespread awareness of LGBT issues, particularly recognisable in the recent Stonewall #Rainbowlaces campaign.

WONDERKID through their collaboration with LGBT anti violence and hate charity Galop, plan to screen the film in schools and talk to young people who may have or may come to experience these issues.

The director Rhys Chapman is actively working with anti-homophobia charities and marched this year at both London Gay Pride with the Gay Gooners and Brighton Pride. He began his film career whilst he was studying Arts Management at University alongside his part time job at Office. Throughout the course, Rhys worked with LAW magazine which gave him the chance to start directing and editing films. After graduating the London Southbank University in Arts Management, he began work with her Films, a small production company based in Soho where he began making music videos and commercials for brands such as Sony and sofa.com as well as record labels; Southern Fried Records, Eton Messy Music and Freestyle Records.

To donate to the Kickstarter Campaign, CLICK HERE:

 

 

PREVIEW: Miss Behave’s Gameshow

A renegade gameshow for the austerity generation. Part gameshow, part variety show, part disco…  Everyone’s a winner! Fifty minutes of games, acts, dancing, fun and phones!

Miss Behave's Gameshow

IN A reaction to the slick and earnest high production populating the world of entertainment today, Miss Behave presents a deliberately lo-fi, silly and audience-centric bag of fun.

Star of award winning La Soiree, ground-breaking producer from hit variety show The Crack to Mavericks, her cult tent in Glastonbury, Miss B continually hits the zeitgeist. She has been seen and heard by millions on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Guinness World Records, and BBCs Women’s Hour and many other TV and radio shows.

Ably assisted by her glamorous assistant Harriet (youtube star and dance sensation Harry Clayton-Wright), Miss Behave creates a world of anarchy, chaos and fun for all audiences.

Terms and Conditions: Bring your phone. Keep it ON. Think for yourself. Use your initiative. Life’s not fair. Nothing means anything. There are no rules.

“Absolutely charming, startlingly entertaining, and with a hugely enjoyable “Aargh” factor” The Independent, UK

Cardboard and glitter for one night only at The Marlborough Theatre, that’s how Pink Fringe likes a gameshow.


 

Event: Miss Behave’s Gameshow

Where: Marlborough Theatre, 4 Prince’s St, Brighton, East Sussex BN2 1RD

When: Friday, November 21

Time: 8.30pm

Tickets: £7 (£5 concs) are available from the bar in cash, by telephone on 0800 411 8881

To book online, CLICK HERE:  

Pink Fringe makes Queer & LGBT culture in Brighton. They produce theatre, performance, dance, immersive art and entertainment. Our aim is to challenge perceptions around diverse work, specifically art created by and about Queer & LGBT people, placing it multiple contexts, some familiar, some new and unusual, with the aim of attracting new audiences.

For more information, CLICK HERE:

FILM REVIEW: The Way He Looks

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Daniel Ribeiro’s film, based on his earlier short, is a bright, sunny coming-of-age drama. In a Q+A session after the screening the director said that one of the motivations behind making his movie was to empower the gay children who would see it. This is laudable, and absolutely makes for a great tool for teachers to tackle homophobia in schools, but doesn’t necessarily make for a great movie. It’s sweet, and likeable, but sits uneasily with the Eyes Wide Open’s remit of ‘exploring queer cinema’. This isn’t the damning criticism it may at first seem, but if Disney made a gay movie it would look like this.

Leonardo (Ghilherme Lobo) is blind and like any teenager feels he wants to gain independence from his parents who, because of his disability, are protective almost to the point of smothering him. When he says he wants to go on an exchange visit to the US his mother, somewhat tactlessly, asks ‘who’s going to take in a blind kid’ as if a blind teenager travelling to another country is science fiction. He has a best friend Giovana (Tess Amorim) who loves him, but their friendship is put under pressure with the arrival of new classmate Gabriel (Fabio Audi). Will Leo end up getting the girl, or the boy? And no, there are no prizes for guessing the right answer.

The performances are uniformly excellent. Ribeiro certainly gets the most out of his actors, with all the main characters being instantly natural and likeable: from the leads to Leo’s parents, to his grandmother, they all seem possessed of an innate warmth. But no one seems to experience any pain, or any real conflict – a few quickly resolved arguments notwithstanding. I certainly enjoyed it, and even got a bit choked up as the movie made its way to its happy ending. You could no more dislike The Way He Looks than you could dislike a video of a puppy giving a ride to a slightly smaller puppy.

Perhaps it comes down to personal taste, but whilst watching it I couldn’t help but compare it to Presque Rien; another film about a gay teenager’s first love but one with brimming with intensity, rage, passionate sex and a suicide attempt. Of course there’s room in cinema for stories which are, as Ribeiro’s short was described, ‘too kind and too nice’ as well as ones which are dark and troubling. But given the choice of a romance with attempted self-murder, or one which ends with the happy couple going on a midnight bike ride, I’ll always go for the former.

The film was presented by Eyes Wide Open Cinema which explores the past, present and future of queer cinema.

For more information click here.

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