Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Silencio
  • Cum As You Are
  • I Wish You All the Best
  • Deaf
  • Toxic Avenger (The)
  • Nature of Us (The)
  • Many Deaths of Nora Dalmasso (The)
  • Dreamers
  • Winter Rain (The)
  • Wave (The)
  • Girls We Want (The)
  • My Sweet Child
  • It Needs Eyes
  • Bookish
  • Hurt
  • Mysterious Behaviors
  • Snare of Evil
  • Cuidadoras
  • First Lady (The)
  • Noah's Arc: The Movie
  • Franklin
  • Thunderbolts*
  • Krishna Arjun
  • Eva i Bea
  • Velvet Vision: The Story of James Bidgood and the Making of Pink Narcissus
  • Man with Sole: The Impact of Kenneth Cole (A)
  • Only Good Things
  • Transaction
  • Lioness
  • On the Streets (of Lagos)
  • Then & Now
  • Christmas Reunion (A)
  • Songs Inside
  • We Exist
  • Side Effects
  • Loulou
  • Murderbot
  • VIH: La causa justa
  • Teacher's Pet
  • More Perfect Union (A)

Moucle's Island

Country: Canada, Language: English, 12 mins

  • Director: Mike Hoolboom

CGiii Comment

For those who appreciate 'experimental' - this is a wet dream!


Watch...

Moucle's Island (1998) from mike hoolboom on Vimeo.

The(ir) Blurb...

"Poignant and playful, Moucle's Island features Viennese filmmaker Moucle Blackout in a reverie which combines an older woman relearning childhood gestures with a nostalgic lesbian idyll." Ken Anderlini, Vancouver International Film Festival


“Panic Bodies consists of six parts or chapters, varying in length and style. Each suggests a new approach to these returning questions: what does it mean to have a body; to be a body, and what does this body want? Hoolboom appears in the framing chapters, and in between others take his place, submitting their bodies to a probing research. The treatment and effects of AIDS reform these subjects, but also the sexual body with all its desires and questions, and the almost dying body that can temporarily leave the world to be absorbed by what is called ‘the white light’ in Eternity… The fifth chapter is entitled Moucle’s Island and features Vienna avant filmmaker Moucle Blackout. It rhymes her movements with the gestures of a small child, and then projects her into a dreamy sexual reverie.” Esma Moukhtar, Montevideo Catalogue