The Little White Cloud That Cried (film)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Little_White_Cloud_That_Cried_(film) an entity of type: Thing

The Little White Cloud That Cried is a German-Canadian experimental short film, directed by Guy Maddin and released in 2009. A tribute to underground filmmaker Jack Smith's 1963 film Flaming Creatures, it is a 16 mm film depicting a fantasia in which sea goddesses rise up out of the water to engage in an orgiastic battle. Writer and performer Lexi Tronic described the film as "the story of religious battles in an androgynous world, where everyone is trans-tabulous." It was subsequently named to TIFF's year-end Canada's Top Ten list for 2010. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Little White Cloud That Cried (film)
rdf:langString The Little White Cloud That Cried
rdf:langString The Little White Cloud That Cried
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rdf:langString Film poster
rdf:langString Evan Johnson
rdf:langString Canada
rdf:langString John Gurdebeke
rdf:langString English
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rdf:langString Eric Wood
rdf:langString Breanna Rose Taylor
rdf:langString Lexi Tronic
rdf:langString Marcia Ferreira
rdf:langString Sex Party Marty
rdf:langString Teresa Braun
rdf:langString Zsa Zsa LaBitche
rdf:langString Arsenal Institute for Film and Video Art
rdf:langString Lexi Tronic
rdf:langString The Little White Cloud That Cried is a German-Canadian experimental short film, directed by Guy Maddin and released in 2009. A tribute to underground filmmaker Jack Smith's 1963 film Flaming Creatures, it is a 16 mm film depicting a fantasia in which sea goddesses rise up out of the water to engage in an orgiastic battle. Writer and performer Lexi Tronic described the film as "the story of religious battles in an androgynous world, where everyone is trans-tabulous." The cast includes Breanna Rose Taylor, Marcia Ferreira, Eric Wood, Lexi Tronic, Teresa Braun, Zsa Zsa LaBitche and Sex Party Marty. The film premiered on October 28, 2009, at Five Flaming Days in a Rented World, a Smith tribute festival and conference in Berlin, and had its first Canadian screening on November 28, 2009, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It was subsequently named to TIFF's year-end Canada's Top Ten list for 2010.
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