While an impoverished Muslim Kashmiri boat man and a middle-aged, 
closeted homosexual dairy farmer in the Netherlands would seem to have 
little in common, two films featuring such characters share overlapping 
themes of sexual longing against a backdrop of death and decay, as well 
as uncommon insights into the human condition.

“Valley of Saints”, which opens today at the Quad, tells the story of 
Gulzar, a twenty-something man who dreams of escaping the economic 
misery and wartime hardships of Kashmir. Death is all around him, either 
the mounting casualties imposed by an occupying Indian army, or the 
slowly dying lake upon which he plies his trade, taking European 
tourists around to see the sights.

Also opening today at the Anthology Film Archives, “It’s All So Quiet” 
is about the main character’s troubled relationship to his father, who 
is bedridden, virtually paralyzed, and close to death. The son, named 
Helmer, is duty-bound to look after his father, feeding him, bathing 
him, and cleaning his soiled bedclothes but all the while looking so 
balefully at him that the father asks whether he can’t wait for him to die.

full: http://louisproyect.org/2015/01/10/valley-of-saints-its-all-so-quiet/
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