Change Your Image
kingwalker
Reviews
Tarnation (2003)
Deeply affecting
Jonathan Caouette's life is one of those that most people don't want to see on screen. He was born to a woman still suffering the after effects of being placed into shock therapy by her parents, after they accused her of faking a paralysis. He endured a catalog of abuses both physical and mental at the hand of people who were charged with his care. The film shows the consecutive events of Jonathan's life to the age of 30, using super 8mm, cine and digital footage, photos and captioning.
No-one in this film is acting, there are moments which bring on tears, terror and intense discomfort, such as an excruciatingly long sequence showing Jonathan's mother Renee rambling after suffering brain damage from a lithium overdose. There is also humour and a sense of resolution by the end of the film, though as the director himself assures us, the end of the film was not the end of the trauma for any of those shown on screen.
I saw this with a talk from Jonathan Caouette, he couldn't really add anything to it, which I think is indicative of the tell-all nature of this film. It isn't a documentary, it isn't comfortable to watch, it isn't objective or thoughtful, it's like having a friend crying uncontrollably on your shoulder.The scrapbook format of the film and the fact that all the events are presented chronologically means that the viewer is pulled along with the narrative. In the sad moments of Jonathan's life we are crying with him, and at the happy times, we smile. I would urge people to see this film, if only to better understand the medium as a form of expression.
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy (2003)
How 'reality' shows should be.
QE is an interesting and markedly different way of looking at the Reality and Makeover subgenre.
The so-called 'victims' appearing in QEFTSG appear willingly, and despite being harangued in a playful manner over their cleanliness, fashion sense and the contents of their fridge, they emerge from this show as more confident and more mature people. This is a show with lasting effects, not just for the wardrobe and the home, but for the lifestyle.
The Fab Five are not about tearing a person's confidence to shreds and dressing them like a doll, as we have seen in some of the lesser makeover shows (What Not To Wear, Extreme Makeovers). The subjects are listened to, they are counselled and delivered back to their partners and friends as better versions of themselves. No more bad haircut, no more dangerous living conditions. Think of the difference between wearing makeup and wearing a mask. This is the difference between QE and other makeover shows.
Thom Filicia in particular, handles the design of the subjects home in a way that no other reality show decorator does. His designs, furniture and decor choices reflect the person living in them. He extols the virtues of using your living space as you want to use it. Don't eat at the the table? Then don't have a dining room. Use the computer a lot? Put it in the lounge. And always, put your personality and your own stamp on the rooms. Watch Thom work a room, and you will forever see Changing Rooms and other interior makeovers as severely lacking.
QE never has one of those awkward 'reveal' moments where you can tell that someone hates what the makeover team have done. They are roundly thanked, sometimes tearfully, by the straight men they transform from ugly ducklings to 21st century swans. I have yet to see one person show any distaste at the changes made to their life. The response is always, as it should be. A heartfelt 'thankyou'.