After the fun many of us had recently presenting our favourite 12 films, I’m starting a festival of
films that one would like to be made. Based on Robert Redford’s
Sundance festival, this'll be a chance to see offbeat stories that might never get shown in your local multiplex. I hate inaugurating things – simply because they so often fail – but if others would to present their own film wish-lists then
please do.
Das Boot: The Musical
It’s getting tense inside
U-96 at 280 meters deep with the hull starting to crack, but what better moral booster could there be than
a song and dance number! The guys fix the leaks whilst belting out the catchy “
Ach mein Gott, das Boot ist bald kaput!”, leaping around and banging their spanners rhythmically on the pipework. Not much romance here for the ladies, you might think, but there’s time for a love duet between
Chief Mechanic “I Hate Fresh Air” Johann and the sub’s beautiful
Germaniawerft M6V 40 diesel engine.
Gandhi 2
The
Mahātmā's back and this time it’s personal!! But unfortunately he’s been reborn
as a slug because the
Brahmins administrating the reincarnation process are pissed that he tried to subvert the Indian caste system. The new-look Gandhi gets straight back on the campaign trail, organising fellow slugs, snails, and other gastropod mollusks to hustle for a new world order. However, they become seriously “unstuck” when they try to recreate the famous
Salt March.
My Right Foot
The Eric Bristow Story. A boy born with 6 toes on his right foot finds solace in the game of
darts and overcomes ridicule and adversity when he finds that his “disability” actually gives him extra balance on the
ockey. The film follows his rags-to-riches story, the four world titles, the decade of being world no. 1, and culminating in the seemingly
de rigueur allegations of domestic assault. Like
My Left Foot - the story of the handicapped Irish poet Christy Brown – but in this film
the poetry’s all in Eric’s throwing.
Hedd Wyn and the Angry Inch(I haven’t really done the “storyboard” for this yet, to be honest, as I’ve never seen the
musical about transexuality set in an Berlin drag club, nor been able to find many poems in English by the
Merionethshire bard killed in the WW1 trenches. But if somebody with less respect than I would like to take up the challenge, please be my guest).