2009-04-16

Life Imitates Art in Gay Mockumentary


Hollywood stuntwoman-turned-director Alison Reid /Lee Hyo-won photo

Imagine a world where children are fatherless in the procreative process. In the mockumentary ``The Baby Formula,’’ a lesbian couple succeeds in conceiving children of its own genetic mix.

The film’s notion of creating fake sperms from a woman’s skin particle, however, isn’t completely outlandish. ``Baby’’ is the classic mix of fiction and reality.

``The science is actually accurate and was successful in tests with mice. The (actresses’) pregnancy was real, too,’’ Alison Reid, the veteran Hollywood stuntwoman-turned-director, told The Korea Times in a recent interview. The Canadian filmmaker has been touring the festival circuit with her feature film debut, and was in town for the 11th International Women’s Film Festival in Seoul (IWFFIS).

``Until recently, it has been impossible for gay couples to conceive of the idea of being able to combine their genetics and have their own biological children. That has always struck me as sad. When I read an article about some science that made it possible to create offspring from two female mice, it resonated with me, and inspired me to make this film,’’ Reid said in a statement.

The director spoke with scientists all over the world involved in the research. ``For the purposes of the story, we have assumed that the science is further along than it is in real life, however the scientific explanations are accurate. This scientific backdrop becomes a pallet for a story that is ultimately about family, and the common ground facing us all despite our diversity,’’ she said.

``Succubus,’’ the short prequel to ``Baby’’ that was screened at last year’s IWFFIS, traced the efforts of the same two characters, Athena and Lileth, to have their own biological child. Interestingly enough, both actresses became pregnant _ though happily married to men in real life, they conceived children in the traditional way. The film assumes that such lesbian mothers can only have daughters, and both actresses gave birth to the baby girls that appear in the movie.

``Life was imitating art,’’ said the director. ``We were able to take advantage of the pregnancy and show the 10-month period and the real babies at the end. When we were rehearsing the scene where Athena’s water breaks, Angela Vint (who plays Athena) actually had her water break,’’ she said.

The science may be stranger than fiction, but the movie’s utter believability shines through. Effervescent characters drawn in viewers into the story, which has no male bashing, ``feminazism.’’ In ``Baby,’’ two geek stem cell specialists claim that their breakthrough scientific experiment is not trying to ``make men obsolete’’ but rather simply render them ``unnecessary.’’ One day, women may become unnecessary in procreation, they add.

``The film is done in a non-threatening way so people wouldn’t be putt off by it,’’ said Reid. The delightful, ticklishly funny mockumentary drew packed screenings in Seoul, and one middle-aged male audience member found the story pleasantly surprising despite the fact that he came from ``a different generation.’’

The warm reception is great, said Reid, but she was actually hoping for a little negativity. ``Right wing protesters would be good PR for the film,’’ she said, smiling. The director hopes to start a TV series starring the same actors.

Will her next feature film be another dramedy? ``No, it won’t be as funny,’’ she said. But it will involve a love triangle set inside, rather appropriately for the stunt speicialist, ``a crazy, extreme stunt world.’’

Reid coordinated stunt sequences in major Hollywood films such as ``Blindness’’ and doubled for Monica Bellucci in ``Shoot ‘Em Up.’’ She said she vigorously pursued the ``excitement and the adrenaline’’ ever since doing her first stunt when she was 17. Getting caught in explosions and car crash sequences ``had its moments,’’ including neck and knee injuries and burns, but provided insight into the world of directing.

For more information about ``Baby,’’ visit thebabyformulamovie.com.

The IWFFIS comes to a close today. The closing ceremony at 7 p.m. at Artreon in Sinchon will feature the award-winning films of the Asian Short Film & Video Competition. Visit http://www.wffis.or.kr/.

No comments: