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2010-05-17 Lithuanian Filmmakers among the Names Mentioned in the Subtitles of “Schastye moe”, a Film in the Official Selection of the Cannes International Film Festival
2010-05-17 “The River” (Upė), a Film by Julija and Rimantas Gruodis, Awarded the First Prize at the Festival Dokumenta Madrid 10
2010-05-06 Five Screenings of Lithuanian Feature Full-Length Films during the One-Day European Film Festival "EuroCine"
2010-05-06 “You Am I” Directed by Kristijonas Vildžiūnas Was Screened During a Festival in Sheffield, United Kingdom
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Fateful meeting
2001, 15 min., color, video , Nominum
The Collectress
2008, 80 min., color
Nude
2000, 35 min., black and white, 35mm , Studio „2000“
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2004 / Two on the Bridge Two on the Bridge Lietuviškai »
 
2004, video , VG studio


Director : Valdas Navasaitis, Marius Ivaškevičius | Screenplay : Marius Ivaškevičius | Cinematographer : Dmitrijus Gribanovas, Audrius Kemežys | Sound director : Saulius Urbanavičius | Producer : Valdas Navasaitis

One of the oldest bridges across the Neris River in Vilnius was fully renovated in 1952. On that occasion, four sculptural compositions were erected on its four corners following the canon of Soviet realism and illustrating the corner-stone symbols of Soviet ideology: soldiers, scientists, farmers, and workers. Four pairs of sculptors were entrusted to create them. Even the title of this sculptural ensemble, “Industry and Building”, speaks of the aesthetics of the time.
Now they are, perhaps, the only remaining monuments of the Soviet era in Vilnius, yet untouched. One of the reasons is that they are not related directly to the sadly famous personalities of that period, although feelings concerning the destiny of these sculptures rise and fall periodically even now.
Today they came to the focus of society because of…the gay community. After having looked for their own symbol in Vilnius for a long time they decided that the monument corresponding most exactly to their worldview is the “Two Workers”. Arguing that this is the only sculpture representing two young men together they have chosen this monument as a symbol of their struggle for their rights.
The 82-year-old sculptor Bronius Vyšniauskas, the author of this sculpture, has called the choice of gay people “absurd and offensive”. The old man cannot understand what homosexuals and his work have in common, especially because he does not like them.
A third party has joined the argument: Soviet sculptures should be taken down and thus all disagreements would be solved.
We can listen to all of them without comment: the leaders of the gay rights movement in Lithuania who feel foreign and rejected in this heterosexual world; the old sculptor for whom the Soviet ideals he was making monuments for are sacred and who is feels grief because his work is rejected together with the former ideology; the new ideologists who think that it is necessary to replace all Soviet “dinosaurs“ with the new national ones. The monument, standing for more than fifty years, was erected in one of the busiest places in Vilnius. Thousands of people pass it everyday without even noticing that it is still there. Perhaps, they are going to notice it soon because the gay movement is going to parade and place flowers at this monument that is taking on a new meaning.



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