Saturday, July 12, 2025

Liz Patrick | HIV Commerical / 2023 [TV (SNL) episode]

a bad dancer and a homophobe enter a gay bar…

by Douglas Messerli


Alison Gates, Streeter Seidell, Kent Sublette and others (writers), Liz Patrick (director) HIV Commercial / 2023 [4 minutes] [TV (SNL) episode]

 

If you’re thinking that my title might be the first line of a hilarious joke, maybe you should immediately stop reading and take up another book. I definitely suggest that you don’t visit a gay bar. And surely you won’t be satisfied by the Saturday Night Live episode of January 21, 2023.

      If the 1985 HIV skit on Saturday Night Live was not carefully thought out, at least it had a presumed target of satire. I don’t quite know to whom or what the 2023 HIV Commercial sketch was even directed. Perhaps the pharmaceutical company that responsible for the production of Dovato (a drug produced and sold by ViiV Healthcare), whose advertisements focus on supposed HIV-positive individuals who find that they have been helped with no harsh reactions from the drug.


     If drug companies were the intended target, however, the episode quickly lost its focus as the script shifted to basically to two characters, a dancer named Tommy, and an actor named Jamal (Devon Walker), who, rather homophobic, does not want to be identified as gay, even though he is participating in an advertisement that argues precisely that. He eventually gets fired along with the incompetent dancer, Tommy (Mikey Day). So, is their acting skills or their refusals to properly get into their roles that is being satirized? There seems to have been a series of such sketches in which individuals keep adlibbing their lines to the distress of both the director and the other actors involved. But why include such a sensitive topic in such a trivial series of one-liners?

   In this sketch, in which Aubrey Plaza is directing the HIV commercial, there appears to be no real subject, which perhaps accounts for the reason that I found it without any humor whatsoever.

Aubrey, “threw her breakfast,” so she’d like to finish up before lunch since she’s hungry, she declares.


    The shoot begins with Tommy dancing (a full room of real dancers behind him) as he speaks the line:Living with HIV, I learned I could stay undetectable with fewer medicines.”  Mario (Marcello Hernandez), sitting at the bar with a friend (Michael Longfellow) pours his himself and his friend a drink while saying: “Most HIV pills have so many medicines, but Dovato has less and it’s just as effective.”

     Jamal follows with the closing line: “That’s why I switched to Dovato HIV treatment.” But he also adlibs at the end: “I’m ain’t gay though.”


    Audrey is not impressed with Tommy’s dancing, but she is far more disturbed by Jamal’s adlib, addressing him down for something he denies before they try another shoot.

    This time Tommy dances just as badly, if not worse, and Jamal goes even wilder: “That’s why I switched to the bottle HIV treatment. Fact you can get HIV from a girl. That’s how I did it.”

     Audrey finally asks if he has a problem with the script, and Jamal admits: “I just feel like it’s not clear that my character’s a straight, respectfully.” Aubrey and answers, “Okay, well, he’s not. This scene takes place at a gay club.”

     But this time Jamal goes even further: “Facts. There’d be mad straight girls at the gay club and they’d be ready and that’s where I come in.”

     Mario intercedes: “Dude, it’s just acting bro. I’m not actually gay either.”

     When Audrey finally yells cut again, a conversation ensues:

 

 “Aubrey: Jamal, if you’re uncomfortable, we can just give your lines to Mario.

   Jamal: Okay, do I still get paid the same?

   Aubrey: No, you don’t get paid. You just go home.

   Jamal: But I really need this job.

   Aubrey: Okay, then say the lines.

   Jamal: Okay, what if my guy got HIV from basketball like Magic Johnson?

   Aubrey: No. Look, I appreciate you coming down but clearly you’re not mature enough to handle this role.”

   And soon after she fires both Tommy and Jamal.  

   Commentator Ted Kerr hints at some of my numerous questions:

 

“Of the 3 male performers, only Jamal is bothered that he is being asked to be gay. Mario states he is straight. This ends with a laugh. With Tommy, the only issue is his bad dancing. So, even though the sketch is rooted in AIDS, in the logic of this scene living with HIV is not an issue. The issue is around the performance of sexual identity. The laughs are at the expense of how they fail: Tommy can't dance, Mario´s straightness is a joke, and Jamal doesn 't want to be seen as gay.

    So, why include HIV? In his attempts to rewrite the script, Jamal suggests his character got HIV like Magic did, from basketball (impossible); or from a woman (rare in terms of what we may consider typical vaginal sex). So that leaves me wondering what is so funny about transmission? Is Jamal´s problem being seen as a bottom? Is the rectum a punchline?”

 

    What is the point, accordingly, of this humorless sketch. Jamal is clearly a homophobe. But then even Mario, Aubrey’s most beloved actor, admits that he’s straight. Couldn’t the casting director find gay men to play these roles? Moreover, Tommy’s being fired for his not being able to dance seems to be placed on the same level as Jamal’s obvious homophobia.”

     It’s apparent that the writers, in this case, don’t even care a fig about those who truly are HIV-positive, who still must face the fact that they may die if they don’t take drugs such as Dovato. Nor do they apparently care about gay men and women. The joke is supposedly that the actors are not ready to play the roles to which they have been assigned. Not a very funny premise, particularly when it’s tossed up in a stew of a very serious issue such as AIDS, which has killed more people that almost any other pandemic.

     I hope in the future SNL, which generally has become in the past few years less and less fun and funny, cuts AIDS off of its list of possible subjects to exploit. It’s no joking matter.

 

Los Angeles, July 12, 2025

Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog (July 2025).

George W. Hill | The Flying Fleet / 1929

something special

by Douglas Messerli

 

Richard Schaver (screenplay, based on a story by Frank Wead and Byron Morgan, with titles by Joseph Farnham), George W. Hill (director) The Flying Fleet / 1929

 

I have to admit that upon reading about George Hill’s The Flying Fleet of the same year, I almost skipped it. Commentators described it—rightfully so—as being more like a hiring commercial for the US Navy, which sanctioned the making of this film. And the film focuses mostly on two students training from the Naval Academy to San Diego and Pensacola, Florida as they and four of their close friends all attempt to “get their wings,” allowing them to become Navy pilots—allowing little room for any suggestion of feelings, let alone psychological revelations.

      Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times didn’t help the matter, arguing “the story is sometimes quite a bit too melodramatic,” although he appreciated the “thrilling stunts,” and “spending sequences devoted to an airplane carrier.” More recently critic Dennis Schwartz demurred that at least "the authentic looking plane stunts and test pilot sequences make the film a winner, as the tepid romance story flags."


     The major adventure of the film involves an early Navy flight from San Diego to Honolulu, originally assigned to Tommy Winslow (Roman Novarro) to pilot, but when he, in zealous reaction their competitive maneuvers, buzzes his partner after he lands (a scene quite similar to that in Capra’s Flight) is reassigned to that friend Steve Randall (Ralph Graves) whose plane crashes due to weather, the film shifts. The search for him by his best friend Tommy becomes the major and closing event of the work. So on the surface, at least, there is not a great deal of even possible gay context.

        And much of the rest of the films concerns how the other three friends are excluded from the goal sought by all five of them. Dizzy (Edward J. Nugent), arriving back to the dorm after hours drunk the night before graduation, is expelled from the Academy. Kewpie (Sumner Getchell) panics on his first flight, forcing his instructor to knock him out to regain control of their trainer biplane. And Tex (Carroll Nye) loses control and crashes evidently losing his life. Specs is rejected as a pilot because of his sight, although he does become a navigator who is terribly hurt in Steve’s crash, and knowing he’s about to die, purposely slips off to his death from the plane’s wing where Steve and two other airmen wait to be rescued.

      The only obvious love aspect of the film involves a girl, Anita Hastings (Anita Page) who both Steve and Tommy meet in San Diego, and almost the rest of the film is motivated by their attempts to exclude the other from her company while both attempt to court her. It was far too early in film history for the writers to truly engage their characters in a true ménage à trois, but as in Flight, feelings are hurt and consequences arise from their competitive interactions regarding this young girl who seems unable to make up her mind about which one she likes better. But as in Flight, their heterosexual romance is primarily a ruse to cover up the real center of this film’s romantic concerns: their deep love for one another.

      When they first catch a glimpse of Miss Hastings waterskiing, one says to the other “Seafood.” Now that may be a common heterosexual term men apply to women in the water, but I’ve never heard it, and it is far more commonly applied by homosexual men to Navy boys.

      In Flight, however, that sort of love was demonstrated simply through the two central male’s physical contact, while here—particularly since the narrative was based on the war hero Frank Wead’s story—screenwriter Richard Schaver and director George Hill coded that relationship through bits of language and images, like the “seafood” allusion, that could in context be read on two levels. For example, quite early in the film when their return to get out of the Navy Whites in their everyday uniforms, Steve, almost a self-enchanted poseur as Graves plays him, opens his closet to reveal a wall plastered with headshots of beautiful women, bragging of how even the photos will miss his daily bodily appearances, he strips of his shirt and sits down on the bed to have his roommate Tommy pull off his pants. Tommy then sits down to have Steve pull off his pants as well. Presumably, this action represents a daily one, with nothing particularly being made of it. But unless I am missing some traditional military manner of dressing, it appears strange and somewhat humorous, forcing us as it does to realize that they are actively undressing one another.



     Although there is none of the homoerotic wrestling we witness in Flight, when after the pre-graduation celebration Tommy is forced to serve officer of day and Steve and Dizzy return late drunk as I describe above, their friend attempts to quiet them both down so that the Officer in Charge will not hear them. When Steve will not play along, like Panama in Flight, he slugs out his friend and carries him off to a hidden corner to take care of Dizzy, who does get caught, before lifting Steve’s body for its out-of-sight corner to return him to his bed. As in Flight, you might again describe this as a true case of “rape” if you were to use the archaic meaning.


     They begin to trick one another with regard to Anita in little ways, beginning with a series of gentle bashes and maulings of one another’s face as they both sit both with the arms around her. Soon after Steve convinces Mrs. Hastings that his friend Tommy, who at the moment is wooing Anita in the garden, is a famed bridge player who advises the Admiral, she accordingly pulling him away from Anita so that Steve can take his place. Tommy watches Steve rush off to the girl in a taxi, while he having procured his own auto speeds away to her faster that the taxi can maneuver the traffic.


     It culminates on the beach where Steve steals Tommy’s pants from his changing room, forcing his competitor to catch an ice cream wagon back to base and slip into his barracks dressed only in his underwear—an act observed by officers for which he gets reprimanded. Steve meanwhile not only gets time alone with Anita but wrecks Tommy’s car upon his return, insisting (in a lie) that he has asked her to marry him and that she has accepted. This time Tommy is sincerely hurt, but the sensitive viewer might wonder if it isn’t because he fears losing his dear friend more than the losing Anita. Read it as you will, the director and writer seem to suggest. But it is this event which ends in the royal battle between the two in the sky with Tommy, after forcing down his buddies’ plane, nosedives him, resulting in his losing the prestigious flight to Honolulu.

     But let us scroll back to the moment he first gets the news that he been assigned to that flight.

 

     Tommy Winslow: [to Steve, after hearing he is to fly to Hawaii—jumps in Steve's arms]

                                                 Oh boy! Kiss me while I'm conscious!



     You might read one such incident and imagine that you’re reading into the script but when several incidents like these occur, and the final action is devoted to Tommy, against all odds, saving the friend who has flown that fateful moment of near death instead him you have to admit that the two have something special going on in their lives—particularly when the only way Tommy can rescue Steve is to set his own plane on fire, sending out a signal to the nearby USS Langley, while parachuting down into the ocean to be with and hug closely his special friend.


      Back aboard the hospital ship, the meet up again with Miss Hastings, who chooses finally between one or the other (presumably Tommy), but it matters no more than in Mozart’s Così fan tutti, who she marries. The men are already in a relationship far deeper than the one she will attempt to claim as the writer’s and director’s required nod to a heteronormative ending. Besides the two gay boys of this film make a much more beautiful couple that Anita Page does with either of them.

 

Los Angeles, August 10, 2022

Reprinted from World Cinema Review (August 2022).

Frank Capra | Flight / 1929

i’m funny that way

by Douglas Messerli

 

Frank Capra and Howard J. Green (screenplay, based on a story by Ralph Graves), Frank Capra (director) Flight / 1929

 

      With all the coincidence and gossip regarding Hill’s and Capra’s works, it is indeed a bit difficult to know where to start in discussing Capra’s 1929 movie. Perhaps it is best to begin with how it quite radically differs from Wead’s story The Flying Feet.

       Flight begins, strangely with a very different kind of flight in motion, as “Lefty” Phelps, a college student football benchwarmer finally gets a chance to enter the game in the last few moments of a tied 0 to 0 faceoff. Simply hoping to hype up the action, the coach puts in Lefty, who is so excited he can hardly wait to run onto the field before the coach explains his decision.

      After the first hike, Phelps gains several yards, but upon the second time he gets the ball in his hands, and like football player Roy Riegels in the 1929 Rose Bowl game, he is tackled by his own players after mistakenly running to his own goal line and winning the game for the other team.


      For Lefty, the embarrassment—as the story gets carried in all the national newspapers and sports enthusiasts around the country seem unable to talk about anything else—is so difficult to bear that we see him hiding out from a news boy who has recognized him in a men’s bathroom.

      There he meets, suggestively, Panama Williams, who talking to another friend insinuates that the football player probably ran into the wrong direction purposely to get the money from a bribe. Finally fed up with the lies and taunts, Lefty dares Panama to a fight. Panama, dressed in his Marine uniform, suddenly realizing that he’s been talking to the man himself, apologizes and treats him decently, sympathizing with his hurt and anger—the first person who has shown any kindness to Lefty since the game.

      By the time Lefty is ready to leave the men’s room he has decided to join up in Panama’s Marine Air Force to study for pilot training. And when he arrives the San Diego base, he finds Panama will be his flight instructor.

      Not everything, however, goes as he might first expect it. Panama, not recognizing him, rejects his attempts to be friendly and another of his fellow trainees, Corporal Steve Roberts, having discovered Lefty’s history begins razzing and mocking Corporal Phelps.

     Roberts so spooks Lefty that a few weeks later when the men are scheduled for their first solo flights, despite Panama’s assurance to his superiors that Phelps is his best man, finds it impossible to get his plane off the ground, crashing it without even leaving earth—another example of his seeming to do everything in reverse.

      Lefty is hurt and Panama saves him from the burning plane, scorching his own hands in the process. While confined for several weeks in the hospital under the care of Nurse Elinor Murray (Lila Lee), who less loquacious Panama has long attempted to tell how much he loves her. During his hospital care, both unaware of Panama’s sentiments, Lefty and Elinor fall in love.


     Because of his failure to even get his plane to lift off, Lefty is washed out of Pilot Training, becoming mechanic for Panama. But despite the others’ rejection, Panama stays true to his friend in a manner that is fairly inexplicable given his tough man surface. And when the pilots are ordered to prepare to fly down to Nicaragua—to participate in the battle with Sandinista rebels based on the Battle of Ocotal on July 16, 1927—Panama, without telling the despondent Lefty, that he has convinced his superiors to take along Lefty as his mechanic (the role incidentally Spencer Tracy plays to Clark Gable in Test Pilot). Obviously, when Lefty discovers just how loyal his now close friend has been, he grows even more excited, writing home to his mother about how much Panama means to him, and she writing back to Panama to take care of him and treat him as a much-loved brother.

     Lefty doesn’t quite react in the same way, but clearly those are his sentiments as well, and once they arrive in the exotic setting of the jungle fight, the two men, sharing a tent, grow even closer.

Moreover, Lefty’s pattern of doing things in reverse clue us in that what we might expect, a narrative that moves forward with Lefty and Elinor’s romance will take a far different course.

      It begins to take that “other” direction when Panama admits that like Lefty he, too, has a girlfriend, pushing a picture in front of him of Elinor that he has stolen, having been too shy to ask her for one. When Lefty sees who it is, he feels his has no choice but to abandon his own feelings as it he tears up his signed version of the same photo, one that was readily given to Lefty out of her own love for him.


       Elinor and her nurse friends also show up in Nicaragua, surprised by the now cold shoulder she gets from Lefty. Panama, on the other hand, is thrilled by the surprise of her appearing at the battlefront, and the night before their mission tells Lefty that he intends to visit Elinor, tell of her of his love, and propose with a ring he’s been holding onto just for the occasion.

       The frustrated Lefty decides to take in the local bar, off limits to the Marine pilots, especially on the night before the mission. And Panama commands him to remain in the tent and work on some paperwork. Seeing how downhearted his friend is, he moves forward and begins to attempt to lift his spirits, pushing and pulling at him, and finally wrestling him into his own bed in a manner that looks far more like a sexual play than the acts of rowdy military men. That scene alone reveals that these two men can hardly keep their hands off one another.


       Yet, with Elinor, soon after, Panama is almost speechless, trying to pull out the ring but dropping it the ground in the process. Desperately, he searches for it in the dark, while trying to pretend that what he’s looking for his unimportant. But when she spots the ring and picks it up, she suddenly realizes his intentions, handing it back to him as he shuffles speechlessly off.

       By the time he returns to his tent, Panama discovers that despite his orders, Lefty has gone off to the local cantina, and races there before the police patrol can catch up with him. He brings him  back, despite Lefty’s continued protests, by picking him up the drunken marine and hauling him back over his shoulder, the very image of what, if the subject were a female, would be described as a “rape” in the original meaning of the word, “the act of seizing or carrying off by force.”

      After all, what’s a manly and horny bloke to do when the girl he’s after doesn’t warm up to his attentions and is rather plain looking, while actress Lila Lee while he bunks with a handsome gay guy like Ralph Graves? What we begin to realize that in moving in reverse, Lefty, as his nickname suggests, moves away from normalcy; and we in turn are encouraged to read the straight-forward heterosexual romance in reverse.

      Elinor, after hearing that Lefty has taken off for the wiles of the native girls, is so appreciative for Panama for having brought him safely back and put him to his bed that she awards the gunnery sergeant with a kiss on the cheek, only convincing the dumb hunk that she truly does love him.

      Realizing that Lefty is so gifted with words, Panama gets the idea for his friend to stand in for him, somewhat like Cyrano de Bergerac’s employment of Christian in the play that bears the large nosed soldier’s name. Understandably, Lefty refuses, but when he sees how sincerely he has let down his beloved partner, he takes on the task of acting out yet another “reversal,” sacrificing his own love for the wellbeing of his dear friend, a sign of a love far deeper than the romantic kind which the genre places on the surface of this film.

      Lefty does his very best, speaking gloriously of all the qualities which he, in fact, most admires in Panama, in a sense speaking out about his own love of the man in order to convince Elinor that she should love him too. At first confused, but finally able to perceive what is happening, the nurse finally admits her own love for Lefty, and two, now face to face, are lost in a kiss.

      When she tells Panama the truth, that she is in love with Lefty not him, he can only believe that his friend has utterly betrayed him. When they are reassigned due to various tropical illnesses for the day’s adventure, Panama is relieved that he is to serve as gunman and sight guide for the leader of the air force, while Lefty is assigned to Steve Roberts, his taunting nemesis.

      The US force on the ground is losing, being quickly killed off, and run out of weapons when the airplanes arrive to save the day, shooting down hundreds of native rebels and bombing the hell of them in the manner that US adventure films are so brilliant in portraying—this as part of the truly ugly history of the so-called Banana Wars and the dastardly American occupation of the Central American country.


       The lead plane, guided by Panama is about to signal a return to base when he discovers that Roberts and Phelps’ plane is missing; but he has no choice but to order the return. Back at base, most the planes are ordered to return back to the fight after refueling to see if they can find Lefty and Steve’s downed plane. But Panama does not join the group, claiming that he has a fever, but actually still angry over what he sees as his friend’s willful attempt to steal his girl.

       Elinor herself finally pays him a visit, pleading with Panama to search for him—particularly after the other planes return again without any success at locating the two missing airmen. She explains what really happened, that in fact Lefty had eloquently argued for Panama’s love, but it was she who made it clear that she loved only the man who was speaking instead of the man for whom he spoke.

        Finally convinced of Lefty’s continued love, Panama flies off alone to check the territory for himself. In the wilds where they have been shot down, Lefty, despite the man’s previous enmity towards him, has been tenderly caring for Roberts who has been severely hurt in the crash, his back apparently broken. All he can basically do reassure him and brush away the fire ants the studio had brought in without truly realizing how painful their bites were. When Roberts finally dies, Lefty puts his body in the plane, covers it with a shroud of his parachute, and burns it, cremating his body to protect it from the ants and other wild beasts of the jungle.

       Through the rising smoke, Panama locates his position and manages somehow to land safely in the deep bush. But the rebels, also attracted by the smoke, have already arrived nearby and shoot the pilot immediately after he lands the plane.

      Accordingly, Lefty finds that he must now fly the plane with Panama as a wounded passenger, pulling up immediately through the trees into the air, obviously moving forward for once with the treasure of the man we code-readers now realize is the person he truly loves.


       Lefty brings the plane back, and evidently Panama has recovered enough that he encourages him to “show off is flying skills” by buzzing the camp, taking the plane on somersaults and deep dives before safely landing it on what they now realize are only three wheels.

      The film ends, as the surface narrative has predicted, with Lefty now in Panama’s old position of flight instruction, imitating his friend and former teacher almost word for word, while Panama looks lovingly on. Elinor drives up in a new car, now as the wife of Lefty, who jumps in having never driven an auto before, and proceeds to pull away in reverse, he shouting out what has now become an almost a gay declaration, “I’m funny that way,”* while making it symbolically clear that despite Elinor’s presence, he has no intent of driving away and leaving Panama behind.

        It is fascinating that the press and even the early censors which had begun to be established by 1929 did not see through Capra’s and Graves’ coded story, the critics attacking its love scenes as did The New York Times reviewer, “melodramatic flubdub” and “tedious romantic passages,” while praising it whenever the film turned to “scenes of airplanes in formation and flying stunts.”

Even contemporary commentator Astell remains oblivious to the male / male relationship, arguing, “They go off to Nicaragua to fight the rebels, and of course Elinor Murray, the girl they both love, finds her way there too as a nurse, meaning that the whole love triangle gets a chance to come to a head. No, this one is not particularly subtle in the slightest, and in fact gets embarrassingly unsubtle more than a few times.” I guess it was subtle enough, however, along with the other films I mention above to cover the film’s “reversed” message from the US military which handed over locations and machines for the filming this and similar works.

        Seeing and writing Frank Capra’s early works such as this one and The Matinee Idol of the year before which presents a gay member of a theater company fully accepted for who he is by the others, I have had to somewhat revise my previous attitudes toward the director of his movies. Although I still flinch for his devotion to “Capra-corny” tableaus of his Norman Rockwell-like vision of family life, the common man, and the very day “American,” I now realize these were simply crowd-pleasers to convince his audience that his narratives where ordinary and believable when in fact they were almost all fables and myths of outsider males who found it nearly impossible to assimilate themselves into the social fabric of urban America.

     Played by heterosexual favorites such as Gary Cooper and James Stewart, and wrapping themselves in the US flag, their characters presented us, in fact, with adult males who survived better outside of society such as the pixilated Longfellow Deeds who preferred the simple life of a small town bachelor, Jefferson Smith, despite his position in Congress still a Peter Pan-like figure who never outgrew the Boy Rangers he represented; Long John Willoughby who desired to return with his close friend The Coronel to the hobo world from he’d been randomly pulled; and George Bailey, who attempts suicide in order to escape, I would argue, the absolute boredom of his domestic life rather than simply the sudden loss of bank monies mislaid by his equally outsider uncle.

     These men, all unhappy in so-called “normalcy,” are forced to face up to the dark realities of the real everyday man and those who would control and rule over him. If they are represented as heroes at film’s end, we know that they have sacrificed themselves to the cause of heteronormativity, a reality they know full well doesn’t truly exist in the American worlds they have been forced to encounter. My formerly least favorite of his films, Arsenic and Old Lace, has now become one of his most interesting works after recognizing just how gay the theater critic and writer against the institution of marriage, Mortimer Brewster (Cary Grant) truly was and remains at film’s end even as he finally rushes over to be with his bride in her own bedroom within her minister-father’s house, knowing that entering her domain in a religious world will be denying his entire Brewster past. Suddenly not being a Brewster seems more dangerous than having been a mad murderer.

     At times it almost appears that Capra’s cornball vision of the grand ole flag is a cover for his exploration of the dark secrets of the human heart.

                

* The same line was used in a skit by Johnny Arthur that year in the film The Desert Song, released in April, suggesting, just as in this instance, that the word “funny” meant being queer, in Johnny’s case an excitability brought on by someone putting a hand in the pocket of his pants.


Los Angeles, July 29, 2022

Reprinted from World Cinema Review (July 2022).

My Queer Cinema Index [with former World Cinema Review titles]

https://myqueercinema.blogspot.com/2023/12/former-index-to-world-cinema-review.html Films discussed (listed alphabetically by director) [For...