Ballade pour un homme seul
Lionel Soukaz
Fiction : 18' / Utopia, Landscape

“My first film was about my childhood friend who was like a brother, the neighbour's son. I played Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony, I think. He was running down the hill at full speed, it was a kind of race, a travelling... He fell into a field of poppies and you didn't know whether he was dead or alive. It was a hymn to nature, we were all ecologists at heart because we were suffering so much from the concreting of cities”. (Lionel Soukaz, France Culture)

QL - Retrospective
http://gstphn.net

/ Details

Year: 1969

Country: France

Language: no dialogues

With: Pascal Gaétan

/ Direction

Lionel Soukaz

France


Lionel Soukaz (1953-2025, France) was one of the pioneers of French queer cinema. The first phase of his work synthetises the various avant-garde movements he was drawn to in the 1970s and 1980s. Affiliated with the activists and intellectuals of FHAR (the Homosexual Front for Revolutionary Action) and the magazine Gai Pied, such as Guy Hocquenghem or Copi, he was also active within the experimental film scene, and organised the first Gay and Lesbian film festival in Paris, Écrans roses et nuits bleues, in 1978. His films, rediscovered in 2004 thanks mainly to the advocacy of French critic Nicole Brenez, display an uncompromising commitment to self-narration and the expression of desire, and embody his unlimited craving for freedom – as a result of which his work has often faced censorship.

 

 


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