Eye-watering tale of budding transgender ballerina is Cannes hit | Inquirer Entertainment

Eye-watering tale of budding transgender ballerina is Cannes hit

/ 07:12 PM May 17, 2018

Image: AFP

The Cannes film festival has a track record of jaw-dropping watch-through-your-fingers screen moments.

This year is no exception with a Belgian director’s debut about a transgender budding ballerina trying to force her boy’s body into executing perfect pointes drawing gasps.

Article continues after this advertisement

Based on the true story of a 15-year-old girl trapped in a boy’s body who dreams of becoming a prima ballerina, Lukas Dhont’s “Girl”, has drawn rave reviews, with 16-year-old Victor Polster hailed for his stand-out cinematic debut.

FEATURED STORIES

Dhont was still in film school when he stumbled across the true story of a non-conformist 15-year-old in the throes of gender reassignment who enrolled at one of Belgium’s top dance academies.

The ordeal of trying to bend her body to the demands of the bar is compounded by Lara’s increasingly desperate efforts — culminating in a horrific act of self-harm to hide her male attributes.

Article continues after this advertisement

Yet the film still manages an upbeat feel-good ending.

Article continues after this advertisement

“This incredibly brave internal battle profoundly moved me,” Dhont told AFP, who read about the girl’s trials in 2009.

Article continues after this advertisement

“I soon decided this would be the theme of my first film.”

Dhont, who grew up in a Flemish family where boys were expected to “be boys”, found echoes of his own childhood in the girl’s story.

Article continues after this advertisement

‘Sexual identity crucial’

“When I was little, my dad wanted me to be in the Scouts. Every fortnight, he would take my brother and me to play in the mud camp with other kids. We both hated it.”

“We much preferred theater, dance and song, where we would express ourselves. You can imagine our confusion when we learnt that these activities were seen as being ‘for girls’,” said Dhont who suspended his artistic endeavors for a few years “because I didn’t want people to make fun of me.”

Polster, a professional dancer, transformed himself physically for the role, learning to make his movements more feminine and working with a voice coach to reach a higher pitch.

“Lara’s story touched me even if it wasn’t easy to play,” said the teen from the Royal Ballet School of Antwerp, who was accompanied to the festival by his mother.

“For people whose bodies don’t conform to their identity, there is no choice. Getting their real sexual identity is absolutely crucial to them,” he said.

In a moment of life imitating art the svelte actor overcame his shyness during the photocall for the film to perform the splits on a table for the cameras.

“Girl” comes nearly two decades after Hilary Swank strapped down her breasts to play a 20-year-old woman from Nebraska trying to live like a man in “Boys Don’t Cry”.

Issues relating to gender identity have become more mainstream since then, driven by the high-profile transition of personalities like Bruce Jenner, the former US decathlete who became Caitlyn Jenner in 2015.

Dhont hopes his film — whose mutilation scene has drawn comparisons with a self-circumcision in Lars Von Trier’s 2009 Cannes shocker “Antichrist” — will further the normalization of gender fluidity.

“It’s good if my film encourages different thinking about masculinity and femininity,” he said. AB

RELATED STORIES:

Cumberbatch Cold War thriller is snapped up at Cannes

Netflix to produce Stephen King adaptation starring James Marsden

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Tom Hanks’ Fred Rogers film dated for October 2019 release

TAGS: “Girl, 2018 Cannes Film Festival, 71st Cannes Film Festival, Lukas Dhont, transgender, Victor Polster

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more here.