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Infrarouge

Revenantes

Mon, Jan 15, 2018
Young French women who came back from Syria, and others who almost left for the Middle East countries, recount their journey without pretense.
0 /10
Ni d'Eve, ni d'Adam: une histoire intersexe
Deborah, 25, and M, 27, are living in bodies that Western medicine - and often society - deems taboo. Like an estimated 1.7 percent of people, they were born with variations in their sex characteristics that were different from classical understandings of male or female. For M, growing up intersex has also meant grappling with the fact that she underwent medically unnecessary surgeries to "normalize" her body as a very young child. But when M finds Deborah online, she is introduced to new voices, language, and representations that allow her to expand her understanding of who she is beyond medical terms. This beautifully crafted, poetic documentary joins brave young people as they seek to reappropriate their bodies and explore their identities, revealing both the limits of binary visions of sex and gender, and the irreversible physical and psychological impact of non-consensual surgeries on intersex infants.
7.3 /10

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Hoeksche Waarde

Hoeksche Waarde

DE HOEKSCHE WAARD The unique island of Hoeksche Waard is located close to Rotterdam and is part of it of the open delta to which it also provides access. The island is about the size of Vlieland, more than 32,000 hectares. The polder landscape consists mainly of meadows and some peatlands, creeks and small woodlands. The Hoeksche Waard is characterized by a long horizon, constant headwind, nature and culture. The Hoeksche Waard was created after 1421 when the Sint Elisabeth Flood flooded the area and the watercourses in the existing delta area changed drastically. The newly born island continued to survive because users and residents responded to changes. Farmers, entrepreneurs and citizens have left their mark on the island for centuries. Fourteen villages, surrounded by fields and meadows, peatlands, creeks and vegetation give the Hoeksche Waard its own character. The endless polders provide wide views that are only interrupted by a dike, a village or a row of trees. There is peace and quiet. The island is an important agricultural area but also has great natural wealth. The mole, weasel, ermine and polecat feel at home here, there are bats and the little reed warbler, grebe, coot, pheasant, chiffchaff, willow warbler, wild duck, robin and wren breed here. There is also a rich aquatic life and special wild plants grow there. Hoeksche Waarde is an online and TV series about the Hoeksche Waard; the people who live and work there and how they relate to nature and the landscape. In 2023, the Hoekschewaards Landscape will celebrate its 50th anniversary. With this series we map the area and convey how valuable nature is and can be. For everyone; resident or visitor, young and old.

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