Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Sisterhood
  • Y
  • Tell Me That You Love Me
  • Last Exit Gran Canaria
  • Come See Me in the Good Light
  • 3000 km by Bike
  • Aurora
  • Saving Etting Street
  • Good Child (A)
  • Pawesome!
  • My Brother
  • Girls Like Us
  • Summer School, 2001
  • Wolf Among the Swans (A)
  • Secret of Me (The)
  • Camp
  • Explode São Paulo, Gil
  • French Italian (The)
  • Fuck My Son!
  • La 42
  • Wild Foxes
  • We're So Dead
  • Fraternity
  • Pillion
  • Strike (The)
  • Four Stars
  • Children of Silver Street (The)
  • Spying Stars
  • Weightless
  • Foreign Lands
  • Dinner with Friends
  • Other 300: Army of Lovers (The)
  • All There Is
  • Last Night I Conquered the City of Thebes
  • Until the Silence
  • Sun Ra: Do the Impossible
  • Revelations of Divine Love
  • Red Mask (The)
  • Queer as Punk
  • Skiff

This is My Face

Country: Chile | UK, Language: Spanish, 57 mins

Original Title

Esta es Mi Cara
  • Director: Angélica Cabezas Pino

CGiii Comment

Reading the blurb...you would be forgiven in thinking that this film is going to be a bit of a trek.

It's not.

What it is...is a fantastic demonstration on how art can help. Yes, of course, there is soul-searching, painful memories and regret...but, all this reflection culminates into something so joyous and healing...it really does take your breath away.

In many countries the stigma surrounding HIV/AIDS is still [firmly] in place. These men - of varying ages - have crossed their own self-drawn line. Their new-found-freedom, their release from judgment...is an absolute wonder to witness.

Whoever thinks that there is no power, no therapeutic value in art...really, ought to watch this film. Because, this is here is the proof. Happy and HIV/AIDS are rarely companions...this is a happy film about men living with HIV.

Well done.


No trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

In Chile, people living with HIV fear stigma, and often conceal their condition and remain silent about what they are going through. This is My Face explores what happens when a range of men living with the virus open up about the illness that changed their life trajectories. It follows a creative process whereby they produce photographic portraits that represent their (often painful) memories and feelings, a process which helps them challenge years of silence, shame, and misrepresentation. A lesson in the power of collaborative storytelling.