Being Impossible (2018) Poster

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6/10
Insight into the thoughts of an unknown world
thenextrushmagazine7 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The further down the LGBTIQA acronym we go, the awareness and issues surrounding sections of our community could arguably be scarce. Being Impossible ('Yo Imposible') demystifies the world of the "I" in that acronym. Patricia Ortega's film unlocks the world of the gender diverse community. The fictional story will resonate with many as it voices the choices denied to a generation unable to fully make sense of who they are.

"It is hard to fit in a world where nobody is like you. Where you don't understand what happens with your body. And you wonder why your body doesn't work like everyone else's."

In Venezuela we meet Ariel (Lucia Bedoya) who works as a seamstress by day and nurses her mother on her death bed in the evenings. The film opens with an uneasy intimate encounter with her boyfriend spurring questions throughout the film in a puzzle of discombobulation. Interlaced between the slow paced interactions with her mother, co-workers and love interests, are segments (clues) with subjects vocalising the seeming betrayal and deception Ariel appears to be feeling.

"It's hard to understand society and to fit in a world of incomprehension, of intolerance. Sometimes I've felt trapped in the wrong body. A cage." Ariel's physician reveals that when she was born, she was raised a boy until it was discovered her chromosomal makeup was female and she possessed female reproductive organs. Her mother made the decision to raise her as female with the Doctor re-enforcing the idea saying she would "live a more viable life as a woman".

Though explicit when her initial medical condition sets her on the path of revelation, Bedoya's portrayal of the sadness and insecurity many in the intersex community might feel, does not rely heavily on the dialogue. Her demeanor and interaction with the other characters speaks volumes and is a testament to the embodiment of Ariel.

"They insist on changing, cutting us... " Patricia Ortega uses Ariel's personal journey to challenge the prescribed roles of binary gendertypes in society and culture. By putting the spotlight on the intersex voice, we're told many were forced into surgeries, some not aware they had it, being mutilated as an infant and the impact and stigma that can result.

The film is a very deep contemplation of self which doesn't rely on situational catalysts to propel the story. It allows the undertones of shame and embarrassment depicted to be resolved in an empowering conclusion when Ariel is asked if she felt like a man or a woman.

Her response, "I am what I want to be"
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1/10
A film resting on its subject
patrickfilbeck19 November 2021
Apparently it is not possible to write a lasting (negative) review of this film without moral guards approving it for deletion. How come? Because this is about the issue of a "deviant" sexual identity? Like with "The Danish Girl"? A film that I liked very much because it had cinematic and storytelling qualities and wasn't completely resting on a topic that was just hyped? I'll say it again: I don't care about people's sexuality as long as it is not overbearing or attacking or endangering other people. When I watch a film or a work of art about it, I first look at the topic neutrally. This film didn't manage to give me a feeling that made it cinematic. Inflationary dramaturgy, the already mentioned resting on a trendy topic, boring cinematography, mediocre to poor acting performances etc. Left me disappointed with this film. But hey, it seems hard to express an opinion like that, right? Because the current misunderstanders of morality, ethics and justice obviously cannot deal with opinions on works of art, because they believe that it is useful to play the arrogant and uninformed moral police on every bad product that affects one of their beloved trend topics. Unfortunately, democracy will probably not work with such people in the long term.
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