Horrible ad for the radical liberal agenda of destroying modern civilization by letting children decide their own sex and then mutilating them.
When all this madness will have passed (fueled mainly by the Chinese money that were poured into US movies after 2008, as part of their well-thought arrangement which they forced down the US establishment's throat) I hope all this horrible unspeakable garbage will be thrown away.
How on Earth would anyone let a child decide it's own gender I really don't know. They are not given permission to vote, but they can choose their own gender. How much do the parents need to be brainwashed before agreeing to this completely Satanic way of thinking?
They
2017
Action / Drama
They
2017
Action / Drama
Keywords: woman directorlgbtgender dysphoria
Plot summary
Fourteen-year-old J goes by the pronoun 'They' and lives with their parents in the suburbs of Chicago. J is exploring their gender identity while taking hormone blockers to postpone puberty. After two years of medication and therapy, J has to make a decision whether or not to transition. Over this crucial weekend while their parents are away, J's sister Lauren and her maybe/maybe-not Iranian partner Araz arrive to take care of 'They.'
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.WEB 1080p.WEBMovie Reviews
Horrible
Nice cinematography
Nice camerawork but lot's of mumbling throughout this film. The main character mumbles and it's distracting and alienating.
Not really about gender identity
This is a strange film that purports to be about gender identity but didn't seem to be about gender at all. The lead character J happens to be non-binary but the film is mostly about all kinds of other experiences in J's family, particularly about J's sister, an artist, getting married to a man from Iran, who is having issues with his own family. J's medical transition seemed to be a secondary plot and J seemed to be more concerned about not wanting to grow up at all rather than being concerned with gender.
I wonder whether the director thought the gender issue was just a trendy way to pitch the film. I also wonder whether the director was trying to show that gender is the least important thing to worry about in life.
This is the kind of film that would make me want to attend a question and answer session with the director.