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Eat My Shorts: The Early Short Films of Bruce LaBruce and Candyland Productions

Eat My Shorts: The Early Short Films of Bruce LaBruce and Candyland Productions
Location
Main screening room
Date
October 15th, 2022
Duration
68 min
Cycle
Bruce LaBruce: Tender and transgressive

The work of Canadian Bruce LaBruce has been acclaimed in the US and France, and have been shown at prestigious festivals, but the filmmaker remains relatively unknown in the Land of the Maple Leaf. This retrospective, the largest ever organized in Canada, will allow us to measure the audacity and exuberance of LaBruce's work while depicting all the variations of sexuality on screen, from gay eroticism to transgression. Here is a subversive, pleasurable and combative queer cinema which will leave no one indifferent.

En présence de Bruce LaBruce
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Eat My Shorts: The Early Short Films of Bruce LaBruce and Candyland Productions
Directed by
Brue LaBruce, Candy Parker
Language
VOA
Actors
Brue LaBruce, Candy Parker
Origins
Canada
Duration
68 min
Genre
Experimental, eroticism
Format
Digital
Synopsis

Six short films shot in Super 8, these home movies with their punk aesthetic foreshadowed what were to become Bruce LaBruce’s signature themes: derision, irreverence, provocation, protest, political struggle, film history and self-referentiality. On the lineup: Boy/Girl (1987), Sexbombs (dir.: Candy Parker, 1987), I Know What It’s Like to Be Dead (1987), Bruce and Pepper Wayne Gacy’s Home Movies (Bruce LaBruce, Candy Parker, 1988), Slam! (1992), Interview with a Zombie (Candy Parker, 1995).

Eat My Shorts: The Early Short Films of Bruce LaBruce and Candyland Productions

Presented in collaboration with

Bruce LaBruce

Born in 1964 in Tiverton, Ontario, Bruce LaBruce studied film theory and social and political thought at York University in Toronto in the 1980s. He wrote film reviews for CineAction magazine, contributed to underground gay magazines, and shot his first super-8 films in the late 1980s. His first two feature films, No Skin Off My Ass and Super 8 ½, introduced him to specialized film festivals. Following Hustler White, Bruce LaBruce made a series of feature films known for their explicit gay sexuality, a taste for transgression and pastiche, and an abrasive sense of humor. His association with German producer Jüngen Brüning led him to direct some of his films in Germany. He has also made adult films, notably for the Erika Lust and CockyBoys studios. He shot two feature films in Quebec: Gerontophilia (2013) and Saint-Narcisse (2020), produced by 1976 productions. Bruce LaBruce also practices photography and writing, signing, for example, the collection of texts Porn Diaries (2020).

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