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XXy

XXy

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Director: Lucia Puenzo
Actors: Ricardo Daraan, German Palacios, Jean Pierre Reguerraz, Ines Efron, Martin Piroyanski
Studio: Film Movement
Category: DVD

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $20.00
You Save: $4.95 (20%)

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New (2) Used (4) from $18.84

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 10700

Format: Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc
Language: Spanish (Original Language)
Rating: Unrated
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 91
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 96502
UPC: 616892965022
EAN: 0616892965022
ASIN: B001BMN35K

Theatrical Release Date: 2007
Release Date: October 14, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
For just about everybody, adolescence means having to confront a number of choices and life decisions, but rarely any as monumental as the one facing 15 year-old Alex (Ines Efron,) who was born an intersex child (with both male and female genitalia). As Alex begins to explore her sexuality, her mother invites friends from Buenos Aires to come for a visit at their house on the gorgeous Uruguayan shore, along with their 16-year-old son Alvaro (Martin Piroyanski.) Alex is immediately attracted to the young man, which adds yet another level of complexity to her personal search for identity, and forces both families to face their worst fears. WINNER Critics Week Grand Prize & Golden Rail Award, Cannes Film Festival WINNER Golden Athena Award for Best Fillm, Athens Int l Film Festival WINNER New Director s Award, Edinburgh Int l Film Festival WINNER Association of Quebec s Cinema Critics Prizem, Festival Nouveau Cinema Montreal WINNER Three Castle Awards, Castellinaria Int l Youth Film Festival WINNER Youth Council Award, Valladolid Int l Film Festival WINNER Best Feature Film, Festival de Cinema des 3 Ameriques WINNER Quebec Film Critics Award, Montreal Festival of New Cinema WINNER Pink Peach LGBT Award, Atlanta Film Festival WINNER Audience Award for Best Feature Film, Frameline Film Festival WINNER Audience Award for Best Feature Film, Out Film Connecticut WINNER Best Feature, Reel Pride Film Festival WINNER Grand Jury Award for Outstanding International Dramatic Feature, Outfest Film Festival WINNER Best Screenplay, Providence Latino Film Festival WINNER Audience Award for Best Feature Film, Inside Out, Ottawa LGBT Film Festival WINNER Audience Award for Best Foreign Film, Pittsburgh Int l Lesbian and Gay Film Festival OFFICIAL SELECTION Argentina s entry for Best Foreign Film at the 2008 Academy Awards OFFICIAL SELECTION Best Film in Spanish at the Spanish Goya Awards (Spanish Oscars) OFFICIAL SELECTION Toronto Int l Film Festival, Munich Int l Film Festival, Reykjavik Int l Film Festival, Jerusalem Int l Film Festival, Cairo Int l Film Festival, Bangkok Int l Film Festival, Hong Kong Gay & Lesbian Int l Film Festival, Auteur Int l Film Festival (Belgrade), Bratislava Int l Film Festival, Black Nights Int l Film Festival (Tallinn), Tokyo Latin Film Festival, Ljubljana Int l Film Festival, Tapei Golden Horse Int l Film Festival, Cairo Int l Film Festival; Kerala Int l Film Festival, Palm Springs Film Festival,Santa Barbara Int l Film Festival, Portland Int l Film Festival, Miami Int l Film Festival, New Directors/New Films Festival


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Life Determining Conflict: Who Am I?   October 27, 2008
 51 out of 52 found this review helpful

The chromosomal abnormality of XXY has been labeled as Klinefelter's Syndrome, hermaphroditism, and Intersex. The 'conception' defect results in a child with both male and female organs and when detected at birth usually results in a decision between physicians and parents to surgically alter the child to be one or the other phenotypic assignments - male or female. In this remarkably sensitive film based on a short story 'Cinismo' by Sergio Bizzio and adapted for the screen by writer/director Lucia Puenzo, XXY becomes a story of understanding and acceptance of a diagnosis by both child and parents and the conflicts such gender variation can present.

Alex (Ines Efron) is the XXY patient of the story, having been raised on the isolated coastline of Uruguay as a girl with the aid of supplemental hormones until age 15, the age when her loving Argentinean parents Kraken (Ricardo Darin) and Suli (Valeria Bertuccelli) have decided she should have her 'offending member' removed, allowing her to become a completely phenotypic female. Alex is deeply conflicted about her situation, refuses to take her medications and enjoys being 'one of the boys' in secret. When Alex's parents invite their surgeon friend Ramiro (German Palacios) and his wife Erika (Carolina Pelleritti) to their home to advise them on the surgical alternatives, they are accompanied by their artistic son Alvaro (Martin Piroyansky). There is an attraction between Alex and Alvaro and this ultimately results in a crisis that results in the coming of age and self-acceptance of both youngsters.Lucia Puenzo and her fine cast sensitively explore the interaction between parents and children and the coming to grips with choice of identity. This is yet another challenging and rewarding film from Argentina, one that stands alone as a fine movie, but one that also would be wise to add to the film libraries of high school and college students and of patient resource facilities who deal with problems of gender identity. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, October 08



5 out of 5 stars 'Why do I have to choose?'   October 8, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

15 year old Alex (Ines Efron) was born intersex; she resembles a female (and takes hormones to enhance this), but has male genitals. As she has grown older, her parents moved her from her home in Buenos Aires, Argentina, to an isolated fishing village on the coast of Uruguay, to avoid the questions of friends and relatives. Her mother is desperate for her to become wholly female, and invites a plastic surgeon (along with his wife and son) to their village to discuss surgical options. The son, Alvaro (Martin Piroyansky), is questioning his own sexuality...which becomes all the more confused as he and Alex grow attracted to one another.

XXY (Spanish, English subtitles) deals with age-old themes (social stigma, parental conflict, societal demands for sexual conformity) in a refreshing context. What does it mean to be 'male' or 'female'? Is the pressure to choose one gender or another innate, or socially-enforced? Are the neuroses that young people suffer wholly attributable to parental desire for social orthodoxy? A post-op female-to-male acquaintance of Alex's father advises: "Making her afraid of her body is the worst thing you can do to a child"...(oddly reminiscent of Van Dijk's classic quote: "Sexuality is something granted to everyone, and to teach a child to abstain from this evident intimacy is perhaps the first form of sexual violence to which it is subjected"). XXY does not seek to resolve these (perhaps unresolvable) questions, but does an excellent job of casting light onto such neglected areas of social life.

The acting is remarkable for what must have been challenging roles; completely natural and unselfconscious. The lead characters do a superb job of conveying (frequently through body language and eye movement) the turmoil that they undergo, but credit also to an exceptional supporting cast, including the powerful performance of Ricardo Darin in the role of Alex's father. The camera work and lighting combine with these other aspects to result in a moody, poignant and most memorable film. Highly recommended.



5 out of 5 stars Making choices when there is no choice   September 26, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Being adolescent is hard enough. This film touches up on much more complex issues. What can parents do to help their child choose his/her sex when that child has both? When a person is born with both sexual organs, most parents decide the sex of the child shortly after birth. But Alex's parents felt that is should be their child who should decide their sex. Alex is raised as a girl. But puberty is bringing some hard decision for Alex, her friends and family. Shall Alex remain a girl and have an operation to remove her other organ? This would be easier to answer is Alex knew her sexual preference. She feels she is a boy but there is a fragility in her that is very obvious. There is a moment in a film that I found heartbreaking. Alex sits with her closest friends: high school girlfriend who is sexually active,intrigued and not frightened about Alex's body; Alex's best friend from the local schoool who was stunned to discover that Alex is not just an ordinary girl. Alex's accidental lover, a slightly older boy who discovers after being with Alex that he is really gay - to the shock of his own parents. The bravest decision Alex can make is to acknowledge publicly what she is, not have any surgeries and let time show on who her live partner will be as the time goes by when she can sort out her own emotions. This film is like no other film I have seen so far. It will get you thinking about how complex human sexuality and our emotions really are.


5 out of 5 stars Making a Choice--An Amazing Film   September 16, 2008
 4 out of 9 found this review helpful

"XXY"

Making a Choice--An Amazing Film

Amos Lassen

If you have a chance to see "XXY", make sure you grab it. It is one of the amazing films I have ever seen and it will make you think. For almost all of us adolescence is a difficult time. We have to face decisions and make choices but I'll bet that none of us have had to make the decision that Alex (Ines Efron) was faced with. Alex was born as what is known as an intersex child which means that he/she was born with both male and female sexual organs. Beginning life as a girl, Alex at 15 years of age was wild-eyed and she had a secret--that she is intersexed. Her parents kept her hidden from the general population by raising her in a small costal village in the hope that she would not have to face the cruelties of the modern world. The fact that she was isolated and living with an imposed gender caused her sense of self-esteem and spirit to erode. As Alex reached puberty, she became severely depressed and withdrew. She refused to take the medication that would stop her from developing masculine traits.
Alex's mother invited a top plastic surgeon from Buenos Aires to come visit with hopes that he could persuade Alex to go through gender reassignment surgery and become a female completely. Alex's father becomes irate when he considers that someone is convincing his daughter to do something that she is not sure of.
When the surgeon arrives, he does not come alone but brings his wife and teenaged son with him and Alex is thrown into a sea of conflict. To make things even more complicated is that Alvaro, the surgeon's son who is questioning his own sexuality is attracted to Alex and Alex is attracted to him. What lies ahead for the two teens is a period of heartache and problems.
Lucia Puezno in his debut film as director gives us a coming-of-age story like no other and he does so in a beautiful film that looks at sexual duality in a tender and beautiful way.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent   September 3, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

The best intersex film I've ever seen. Very current and intelligent. Everyone should see XXY.

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