Sailor
Sailor
| 01 April 1998 (USA)
Sailor Trailers

A teenager adores his sailor friend. He dreams about the exotic countries, marvellous starry skies and the inevitable homesickness that would bring his friend back to him. In a colourful series of mythical referential images, his fragile dreams get so unreal, that the enthusiasm for seeing his friend again turns into anxiousness.

Reviews
Kirpianuscus

first, it is a delicate time travel. because, from the musicals of 1950 to Tom of Finland, everything seems be present. it is a pure gay movie, remembering Querelle atmosphere. in same measure, it is the right story about dreams, fantasies, gifts, ideals and sweet poetry. so, a great show. not only for the green screen, for the scene on the beach or for music but for admirable performances. a sort of fairy tale. and, no doubt, a film preserving the flavor of a noble feeling, unique state of soul and fine definition of illusion. so, real good.

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reviewerinoimdbino

This is a candy colored, stunningly photographed wordless romance between a young man living in Belgium and a Dutch sailor or 'matroos.' The man in Belgium is played by Joram Schurmans, who is called Joram Roodhooft. The sailor is played by Tom de With, who uses his own name for the role.Some have compared the look of the film to the work of the French photographers Pierre et Gilles, and there is a lot of that hot house atmosphere and those saturated colors here, but the look of the film, I would say, is more like the initial, nonsexual scenes in a Tom of Finland comic book--stalwart, stunningly handsome young naïfs in a clean-lined 1950s world.A lot of the scenes are clearly filmed against a green screen or a back projection. And other scenes are clearly in beautiful sets. It is beautiful and theatrical, like a more delicate version of 'Querelle.' The boys kiss on the beach, two stunningly handsome young men. As the sailor travels to exotic climes, such as Ecuador, they send to one another an erotically suggestive tropical flower, and then, over and over, the same chocolate bar.In the end, when they feel they must go their separate ways, drifting apart and fearful of the world in which they live, the scenes take place very much in the real world, at a dock and its attendant sheds. Yet the look of the film--the colors and the grain of the film stock, look like authentic 1950s documentary footage--real yet artificial, still beautiful.

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