"For years,celebrity tits more than half of us have been excluded, unfavored, and bound by the fate of of our genders," a voice echoes in the opening seconds of In Bloom, a new film anthology released in celebration of Women's History Month. Various vignettes then appear on the screen, of women around the world. A girl holds up a sanitary pad. Another woman places figurines on a cake. A supposedly defiant teenage girl locks herself in the bathroom, refusing to come out.
The introduction to In Bloomis uplifting, colorful, and real, as are the short films that follow. Streaming on Paramount+, the anthology was born from a collaboration between MTV's Staying Alive Foundation and Paramount's Content for Change initiative, supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Bringing together five female filmmakers from five different countries, each short film lasts minutes, but probes some of the most pressing contemporary issues women face around the world.
The directors — Nicole Teeny, Priyanka Banerjee, Giuliana Monteiro, Voline Ogutu, and Dolapo 'LowlaDee' Adeleke — dissect subjects close to the cultures of their respective countries, ranging from period poverty to to unpaid care work to HIV stigma to child marriage.
Banerjee, an award-winning director from India, explains the five directors were selected by MTV's initiative and brought together into a virtual writers room in early February 2023. Their writing was bolstered with insights from lead researchers and academics who shed light on various themes of gender equality.
SEE ALSO: The women fighting to make women and girls safe in the digital age"The idea of each of our films was to speak about our topic but to make sure to speak about it from the lens of our culture," Banerjee explains in an interview with Mashable. "And while we're doing that, we're still keeping it universal so that the films can still connect to one another."
Each of the directors ventured to tell their own stories set in a distinctive cultural sphere and context, though all the films were shot over the course of a month in Johannesburg, South Africa. The stories float across genre, subject, and cause. There's a horror short based in Kenya that centers a young woman diagnosed with HIV; a comedy-drama about an American teenager who can't afford menstrual products; a drama about a Brazilian woman grappling with motherhood and mental health. The women are seen in their homes, cars, and classrooms, also in hazy house parties and busy hair salons. The issues are nuanced, as are their representations, and each speaks to a lesser-known aspect of the societies they cover.
"In Bloomconnects the dots and brings to light 'silent pandemics' that affect not just women and girls, but our global communities," says Wame Jallow, executive director at MTV's Staying Alive Foundation, adding that each project "enable[s] thought-provoking reflections on gender."
Banerjee directed Alta, a Bengali drama film based in West Bengal, starring Mazel Vyas. Sitting at about eight minutes long, the short concerns a cocoon of issues impacting young women in India, examining the worth of life and themes of trust, innocence and betrayal. In the film, a teenage girl has locked herself away in the bathroom of her home, with her helpless father trying to get her out. But things aren't as they seem, which Banerjee conveys through language both heard and seen.
"There’s something a lot more sinister going on and a lot of the relationships are not as simple as they seem," Banerjee says.
One of the connecting motifs between each film, Banerjee explains, is that of mirrors. In each film, the protagonist faces a transformative moment when she sees her face in a mirror. It is then that she grapples with the issue she is facing, one that is strikingly personal yet universal.
"Every single character in the films have a moment when they engage with themselves in the mirror, which becomes a pivotal moment for the character, where they decide: 'I’m going to do things differently', or 'I accept my fate', or 'I’m going to fight against what’s happening to me'", says Banerjee. The storytelling power of these moments is apparent in each film, when choices and circumstance come together and change, in ways both big and small, is fostered.
In Bloomis available to watch now on Paramount+ and Pluto TV.
Topics Gender Streaming
Previous:The Mismeasure of Media
Angela Flournoy on Detroit, Ghosts, Gambling, & Debut Novels'Exhausted' kid shoveling snow goes viralThe Real Pollyanna WhittierNotes on PrecocityGreece lifts decadesThe 11 best and funniest tweets of week, including Kendall Roy, cast iron, and retweetsThe Paris Review Is Going to Chicago’s Printers Row Lit FestDesigns for Motion: Jean Tinguely’s Useless MachinesInscrutable, But Beautiful—Walter Russell’s New Age DiagramsMicrosoft Surface Laptop Go 3 handsPoetry for Robots: Can We Use Verse to Teach Robots to Feel?'No One Will Save You' review: Alien home invasion horror without the tensionPhilip Larkin’s Awful VacationThe 'When We Were Young' emo music festival lineup will make you feel oldThe Trollopian Dowagers of Beverly HillsHow to not fall for fake N95 masks like Razer's ZephyrBest Amazon Fire deal: Get a kids tablet for $60 offDante Is Seven Hundred and Fifty—So Get a Selfie With HimIt's Dante's Birthday, Maybe ...Weird places to get a COVID vaccine 'Rick and Morty' co 'Fortnite' made $100 million on iOS in just 3 months Lawmakers send bipartisan letter to Google asking it to end partnership with Huawei Protesters blast audio of crying children outside Kirstjen Nielsen's house YouTube makes it easier for creators to make money without ads New malware is being disguised as Fortnite for Android 'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' cuts lesbian backstory Organic Valley tricks coffee snobs into drinking straight half Facebook lets some group admins charge members for access Google Assistant gets Continued Conversation for longer interactions 'Roseanne' spinoff 'The Conners' will bring back everyone but Roseanne Can Microsoft Cortana catch up to Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant? NASA's Curiosity rover takes Mars selfie during huge dust storm California democrat with ties to AT&T guts net neutrality legislation 'Unusual' water temps may mean a quiet 2018 Atlantic hurricane season Amazon Fire TV Cube review: Alexa hasn't killed remotes just yet Facebook launches poll, game, and monetization features for video Google is improving the Account settings app Europe considers internet copyright law that would kill your favorite GIFs and memes Inexplicable 'Game of Thrones' set changes lead to wild speculation
1.8588s , 10156.671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【celebrity tits】,Defense Information Network