PODCAST| Matt Micucci interviews José Celestino Campusano, director of the film Men of Hard Skin.
An interview with filmmaker José Celestino Campusano. Last year, the International Film Festival Rotterdam featured a whole retrospective of his work. This year, it featured his new film, Men of Hard Skin, in its Deep Focus strand. The film is set in the countryside and talks about the difficult sexuality within the rural context, particularly revolving around a young man’s sexual discoveries through a relationship with a pedophile priest. In this interview, he Campusano talks about his interest in sexuality, his familiarity with the countryside setting and also tells us a bit about the VR project that was also presented at this year’s IFFR, La Secta del Gatillo.
Men of Hard Skin: The power of this Argentine drama is shrouded in modesty. Through the prism of only two relationships, José Celestino Campusano sketches the difficult way sexuality is treated in different layers of Argentine society. Ariel is a good-looking farm boy who lives with his father and sister in a rural part of Buenos Aires province. He has become familiar with sex thanks to Omar, a priest with whom he has a secret affair. The film begins when Omar ends their relationship. Campusano, to whom IFFR dedicated a retrospective in 2018, sketches a complex but unsentimental and realistic picture of sex and abuse. He shows how the church tries to hide transgressions; how priests themselves have sometimes been the victims of this; how people regard prostitutes as a remedy for homosexuality. Despite everything, Ariel starts to trust his own body more, and trusts the patriarchal world around him less.
The Lovers Film Festival celebrates 40 years with 70 films from 26 countries, international guests and tributes to LGBTQI+ cinema icons. Directed by Vladimir Luxuria, from 10 to 17 April at the Cinema Massimo in Turin.