They Are Lost To Vision Altogether

USA, 1989
Length
13 minutes
Director
Tom Kalin
Cast

    Content

    A poetic portrait of sex in the age of AIDS.

    THEY ARE LOST TO VISION ALTOGETHER presents a disappearing act, a steady sleight-of-hand which erases the not-so-distant past. (Television flickers, revealing a seamless, yet slivered visual history punctuated by news stories, old movies, commercials: an unending flow which speaks to the non-existent "general population.”) THEY ARE LOST TO VISION ALTOGETHER recognizes our bodies as the ultimate site of control, a location in which the construction of identity meets the surveillance of the physical. The tape refuses to leave lesbians and gay men unseen while troubling the act of seeing itself. It also acts as erotic retaliation on legislation such as the Supreme Court sodomy ruling - declaring the private bedroom as open target for the State - or the Helms Amendment - the U.S. government's refusal to fund explicit AIDS prevention information for gay men, lesbians and IV drug users. It is an attempt to reclaim eroticism and to address the contradictions of sexuality and romance in the face of a monolithic and culturally compulsory heterosexuality. They Are Lost To Vision Altogether finds queer history where it can and invents the rest. Perhaps most of all, it freely admits ambivalence and attempts to "not be lost or pushed into the sea of what others believe to be our collective history. The language of mass media, the gesture of medical examination, and the intimacy of conversation all act as shorthand to insist upon a politic which resides in every social interaction. Defying the reduction which would suppose that lyricism and didacticism are irreconcilable, THEY ARE LOST TO VISION ALTOGETHER invites a reconsideration of the ways in which we view the impact of AIDS on daily life." (Tom Kalin)

    Gallery

    Credits

    Production company
    Tom Kalin
    Original title
    They Are Lost To Vision Altogether