Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Fraternity
  • Pillion
  • Strike (The)
  • Four Stars
  • Children of Silver Street (The)
  • Spying Stars
  • Weightless
  • Foreign Lands
  • Dinner with Friends
  • Other 300: Army of Lovers (The)
  • All There Is
  • Last Night I Conquered the City of Thebes
  • Until the Silence
  • Sun Ra: Do the Impossible
  • Revelations of Divine Love
  • Red Mask (The)
  • Queer as Punk
  • Skiff
  • Come Together: Art's Power for Change
  • Ayô
  • House of Guinness
  • Rob & Rylan's Passage to India
  • Place Where I Belong (A)
  • House with Two Dogs (A)
  • Drea & Cloe
  • We Put the World to Sleep
  • Snare of Evil
  • Martinez, Margaritas and Murder!
  • Julian
  • Home (The)
  • Before/After
  • Our Wildest Days
  • Renaître
  • Mag Mag
  • Boalândia
  • Brave the Dark
  • Alphabet Soup
  • Queens of the Dead
  • Marc by Sofia
  • Dolores

Two Spirits

Country: USA, Language: English, 56 mins

  • Director: Lydia Nibley
  • Writer: Russell Martin; Lydia Nibley
  • Producer: Henry Ansbacher; Peggy Ensign

CGiii Comment

Lydia Nibley has taken a fascinating subject and delivered an inept film.
 
Possibly, the ineptness is due to budget and time constraints...but, surely, given the subject matter - she could have come up with something far better than this sloppily pieced together jigsaw.
 
What was the point of the murder reconstruction? It serves no purpose.
 
Some of those interviewed were irrelevant and inconsequential to the story - serving simply as padding.
 

The 'two spirit' philosophy is intriguing - as is native American culture...this film is an amateur snapshot into a culture that would be a magnificent film when put into competent hands.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Filmmaker Lydia Nibley explores the cultural context behind a tragic and senseless murder. Fred Martinez was a Navajo youth slain at the age of 16 by a man who bragged to his friends that he 'bug-smashed a fag'. But Fred was part of an honored Navajo tradition - the 'nadleeh', or 'two-spirit', who possesses a balance of masculine and feminine traits. Through telling Fred's story, Nibley reminds us of the values that America's indigenous peoples have long embraced.