COMPANIONS – Tales from the Closet
”They didn’t say homosexual in those days; they said pervert”
IN THIS FIRST swedish film about lesbian love, five women 70-year old women tell their life long way from self loathing and forbidden love, to liberation and openess. In humurous and sensitive way, they talk about budding loveand meetings with women, but also about secrecy and loneliness, living with their ”companion” in the closet, or as ”old maids”.
They all have had to question their own fear of being different, risking losing friends, relatives and colleagues for something that is important and beautiful for them, but sometimes ugly and strange for others.
Many things have happened since. In 1995, two women portrayed in the film were the first female couple to register partnership in Sweden… Portrayed in the film as also Kerstin, a minister in the Swedish Church.
Companions –Tales from the closet is a beautiful , humourous and moving documentary about liberation and daring choosing a life of one´s own. The film is also a piece of contemporary scandinavian history, a portrayal of a country in change.
Companions –Tales from the closet has recieved several awards, and has been highly acclaimed by the swedish press, when screened at SVT2 (The Swedish National Public Television) and in theatrical distribution.
”An extraordinarily beautiful and moving documentary, Companions –Tales from the Closet introduces us to five Swedish lesbians, ages sixty-five to seventy-five, who candidly recount their lives and love from the 1930s onward. Telling stories of their isolation, self-loathing, secrecy, comromise, and eventually ”coming out”, the film traces how perceptions of lesbians have changed since the days when, as one interview puts it, ”They didn’t say homosexual, they said pervert”.
Combining interviews with slice-of-life footage and archval materials, filmmakers Cecilia Neant-Falk and Nina Bergstrom evoke an unusually poetic sense of reflecion and remembrance. Ultimately a film about liberation, Companions – Tales from the Closet is a thoughtful and uplifting celebration of lesbian life and love”
/Text in cataloguge in the New Festival New York L&G Film Festival