This Hindi movie is a pretty straightforward slice-of-life story that tries to give a modern look at what it's like to be a single, professional gay man. It dives into how he understands who he is, the chances he missed out on, and the personal choices he’s made along the way. The director used three parallel timelines to tell the story, which honestly didn't make much sense to me. While the core idea was actually pretty interesting, I really feel like this would have worked way better as a short film considering the point it was trying to make. Still, it wasn't a bad watch. The plot centers on Rachit, a city professional, and his friend Shikhar as they hang out for an evening. Rachit is a polished, urban guy, while Shikhar has more of a "small-town" rustic vibe, and you can really see the contrast between them when they talk. As the night goes on, Rachit starts thinking back to some old memories from a long time ago. He remembers being an intern after college in ...
Making autobiographical movies is never easy. You have to decide what portions of their life to keep, what to not and you always risk giving an episodic feeling rather than a free flowing narrative to the film. retraces the life of Mario Mieli, among the founders of the Italian Homosexual Liberation Movement, created at the beginning of the Seventies.
Mario Mieli was born in 1952 to a rich upper class family. He was obviously gay and no one besides his mother ever tried to keep a cordial relationship with him. He loved to cross dress and regardless of the family's hostility, Mieli lacked for neither money or material possessions. When he went to London, he took active part in London Gay Liberation Front and back home in Italy, he was also responsible for the first homosexual demonstration at a Congress. Even though he was the founder of Italy's first major gay-rights group in 1972, he left it 2 years later since he thought the gay movement should remain independent of political parties. We see him meeting innumerable suitors and many times equating gay rights to women rights. His fiercely bright intellect empowered his contributions to the gay rights movement but his personal life was a mess. He found love many times and eventually with Umberto but his bipolar intensity drove him away too.
Mario killed himself in 1983, before turning 31. He was an activist, a writer and a performer and a key figure in the Italian cultural panorama at that time along with his friends. He was a communist and also an intellectual who was as interested in the philosophy of change as in the reality of achieving it. He liked to provoke and to innovate but either he always went over board or was always not understood and it is this behavior of his over a period of time that drove more and more people away from him. I wonder, if Italians would find more connect with the story and the history which is paramount to the gay freedom and liberation that our generation is enjoying today. The performances by everyone in the film is almost pitch perfect, although its a first where I think the real person was much better and good looking that the reel equivalent.
This is an intriguing account of a slice of LGBTQ history that not many of us know about, and it is always rewarding to discover queer pioneers to whom we should feel indebted. I may have not connected with the topic personally but it doesn't take away from the fact that these important stories need to be told, so we don't take things for granted. (5/10)

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