Fronteras inteligentes thanks Les Roka for this review of 'Transmormon':
‘The most striking thing about the crowd is their ordinariness:
just a bunch of earnest suburban moms and dads, accompanied by young children
still so androgynous-looking that the trans kids are indistinguishable from
their non-trans siblings.’ -- Sabrina Rubin Erdely, Rolling Stone Magazine,
Nov. 7, 2013
Eri Hayward, the young Utah woman at
the heart of the short film ‘Transmormon’ – a magnificently understated
statement of human sincerity and spirituality – articulates perfectly the
epiphany of her story. ‘I don’t think I succumbed to my body. I think I succumbed
to my spirit and what it needed.’
‘Transmormon,’ an OHO Media
production directed by Torben Bernhard and featuring the work of collaborators
Travis Low and Marissa Lila, will be part of the Big Sky Award competition slate
at this year’s Big Sky Documentary Film Festival, which runs Feb. 15-23 in
Missoula, Montana.
The film emerges as a prominent piece
of story-telling as the transgender movement has reached a watershed moment of
awareness throughout the entire nation. Filmed last summer in Orem, Utah,
‘Transmormon’ features Hayward, a woman in her twenties, just days before she
traveled to Thailand for her sexual reassignment surgery.
The film was produced under the
auspices of the VideoWest venture sponsored by the KUER public broadcasting station
in Salt Lake City and Doug Fabrizio’s RadioWest program.
However, as central as Eri’s journey
from male to female matters in the 15-minute film, the pure demonstration of
unconditional, affirmative love and the aspiration for spiritual acceptance within
the Mormon faith from Eri’s parents and loved ones envelops and deepens the
takeaway themes from ‘Transmormon.’
The film is disarming in its
naturally unfolding capacity to change mindsets. On one hand, it stands to
unsettle and certainly frighten the keepers of the status quo who are
determined to take a divisive, increasingly ugly cultural war to a bitter end.
On the other hand, the film brings forward the stories of Eri and other
transgender individuals as real loving people that eradicate the once
mainstream yet absurd stereotypes that The Atlantic’s Conor Friedersdorf described
once as serving to frame ‘abstract others who are easily stigmatized and
demonized by virtue of being made into untested caricatures.’
Prior to filming, which began during
last year’s Independence Day holiday period, Bernhard had read an extended blog
post by Eri’s father [Ed Hayward] along with a recently published interview
with Eri. ‘The comfort in telling their story is partly a product of the struggles
they have faced as a family,’ Bernhard explains. ‘Our fifteen-minute film
shares a small fraction of a multiple-year process to come to acceptance with
Eri’s gender. When people have confronted misunderstanding for years, yet have
the desire to communicate their experiences, I think they learn to relate their
stories to those who will listen. I knew they had clearly articulated their
stories before, so I saw my job as simply making them feel comfortable and
trust us enough to freely share their experiences with the cameras on. They
were extremely warm and opened up to us almost immediately all while preparing
to leave the country in a matter of days for Thailand.’
The making of ‘Transmormon’ coincided
with numerous development in the transgender movement. Last summer,
California Gov. Jerry Brown signed the nation’s first statewide law dealing
exclusively with rights for transgender students, which went into effect last
month. Likewise, legislation or court cases in at least three other states –
Maine, Massachusetts and Oregon – extended similar sorts of rights protections.
Also, in a case followed across the country, the Colorado Civil Rights Division
ruled a Colorado Springs school district had violated six-year-old Coy Mathis'
rights by denying her access to the girls' restroom. Focusing on the growing
number of pre-teen children who are going through gender transitioning, the
American Psychological Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics disavowed
the previously accepted forced-conformity approach for gender-dysphoric children.
However, ‘Transmormon’ transcends the
sociopolitical boundaries, becoming an outstanding example of how art truly can
be transformative on a major social issue without injecting politics. In the
film’s last five minutes, the more elemental lesson comes into focus. A family
seeks to sustain its allegiance of faith, hoping the church will reconsider its
stance barring some members from participating fully in the rights accorded to
all Mormons of good standing. Eri's story, of course, comes from courage - not
just from her but also quite impressively from her family.
The most compelling undercurrent in
‘Transmormon’ arising without explicit articulation but more powerfully through
the story of Eri and her family is that the bloc of diehard sincere
traditionalists is shrinking at an accelerating pace. The fight to block
acceptance has ended because an exceptionally overwhelming majority of families
now readily identify with Eri's family as a loving, faith-abiding example that would
be welcomed in any denomination.
‘I believe that the most powerful
stories are already charged, by their very nature, with the richness of the
broader political dialogue,’ Bernhard explains. ‘I think the greater challenge
is finding the stories that innately illustrate the existing tension. The
stories that most interest me, and the one's I aspire to tell, are the ones
that are packed with meaning otherwise contrived. The camera is an excuse to
invite myself into their lives so I can learn from them. Once I'm there, it’s
important for me to attempt to approach the stories people share without
judgment. I want to understand what their experiences are like for them.’
Bernhard, Lila, and Low were assisted
by Andrew James, a Salt Lake City filmmaker who is completing the much
anticipated feature-length “Street Fighting Man’ documentary about residents in
a Detroit neighborhood. Music for the short was provided by Ryan Morse, Gillicuddy,
Bill Wolford, and Pitx. The score is full of smart choices – a crisp, clean,
minimalistic collage with an especially appealing bit of acoustic guitar.
This is the fourth straight Big Sky
appearance for the OHO Media creative team. In each of the three previous
appearances, films from the forthcoming Lost and Found Series were featured – a
collection of five short films representing stories from Missouri, Utah, and
Thailand.
‘Transmormon’ will screen Monday,
Feb. 17, at 10 a.m. at the Wilma 1 venue. For more information about the
festival see http://www.bigskyfilmfest.org/bsdff/ and for OHO Media, see http://vimeo.com/ohomedia.
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