Google apps
Main menu

Post a Comment On: TransGriot

"Paper Dolls"

7 Comments -

1 – 7 of 7
Blogger Véro B said...

My partner and I saw that documentary some months ago (on DVD). We liked it a lot. I recall a particularly touching relationship between one of the women who worked as a caregiver for an elderly man. She was almost like a daughter to him.

9:40 AM

Blogger Monica Roberts said...

Looks interesting Lady V. I'll have to check it out.

11:40 AM

Blogger little light said...

The really heartbreaking thing, Veronique, is that the woman you mention--Sally Camatoy--who returned to the Philippines at the end of the film? She was murdered shortly afterward, and her name was added to the Day of Remembrance list.

It's a good documentary, Monica, though hard to watch in some places--especially for me as a Pinay. There's a place where an exploitative venue makes the troupe dress as geisha because hey, Asians are all the same, despite the really horrific history of Japanese occupation in the Philippines, and it got me out of my seat I was so upset at the way they were treated.

4:52 PM

Blogger little light said...

Another thing to look out for as far as I remember it--just as a warning--is that the filmmaker is a cissexual queer man who consistently treats the trans women in the film as a sort of exotic foreign species of queer man rather than as women, and while he's kind, he's quite clueless.

4:59 PM

Blogger Monica Roberts said...

little light,
Thanks for the heads up on that.

I had a Pinay coworker who was old enough to remember the Japanese occupation and told me some stories.

8:23 PM

Blogger little light said...

Yeah, my grandfather and great-grandfather were guerrillas in the resistance and the insurgency afterward, and my grandmother spent large sections of her childhood in a hidden basement hearing people screaming outside. I had family in the Bataan Death March. It's...not a pretty history at all.
On the bright side, my great-great aunt, who was trans, met an American soldier and left to travel the world, so that was all right, I guess.

2:27 AM

Blogger Monica Roberts said...

Little Light,
My coworker Ron told me about a time they were hiding a relative who was in the resistance and his family from the Japanese soldiers that were looking for them.

The Japanese broke into the house while Ron and the relative were in the hidden basement. Ron was scared and about to start crying, which would revealed the hidden basement and condemned everybody to death.

Ron told me that the relative covered his mouth and quietly shushed him to get him to calm down long enough until the Japanese soldiers gave up and left.

9:23 AM

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

This blog does not allow anonymous comments.

Comment moderation has been enabled. All comments must be approved by the blog author.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.
Please prove you're not a robot