Yesterday was the last day of !f Istanbul Film Festival. For us it was a total success!We saw 5 movies and all of them were perfect. The organization was great with all the parties , workshops and some screenings with the attendance of the directors of the movies. We had chance to meet Eytan Fox , Israeli director of Bubble and Yossi & Jagger.Well this is a looooong post but we're sure you are gonna enjoy it...

| Director : | Eytan Fox | |
| Screenplay : | Eytan Fox, Gal Uchovsky | |
| Cinematography : | Yaron Scharf | |
| Music : | Ivri Lider | |
| Editing : | Yosef Grunfeld, Yaniv Raiz | |
| Cast : | Ohad Knoller, Alon Friedman, Daniela Virtzer, Yousef ‘Joe’ Sweid, Miki Kam, Shredi Jabarin | |
| Producer : | Ronen Ben Tal, Amir Feingold, Gal Uchovsky | |
| Production Co.: | Uchovsky Fox |
Bubble opens at a checkpoint on the Israeli-Palestinian border; this is where Noam and Ashraf meet for the first time. Noam is on reserve duty and Ashraf is on the other side, helping a woman forced to give birth at the roadside. The connection between the two is instant. Noam lives with roommates Lulu and Yali in downtown Tel Aviv's Sheinkin Street - a sexy, cosmopolitan urban landscape, a bubble of a neighborhood filled with hip Israeli lefties. When Ashraf enters Noam’s life, he is also welcomed in this bubble, he begins to live in their apartment and work at Yali’s trendy cafe, though without a permit. But of course, the animosity that belies Israelis and Palestinians is constantly in the background; the tender and erotic relationship between these two loveable and imperfect characters invariably harbors its pain and tension. Though well-meaning, Lulu and Noam’s involvement in a young anti-occupation group organizing a "Rave for Peace" seems flimsy as Ashraf has to flee back home to Nablus on short notice. Bubble constantly reminds the viewers that it will -it has to be- pricked eventually. The exquisite love scenes, the dreamy romance and the tenderness that envelops Ashraf and Noam only make it harder to anticipate the inescapable doom.

“Tel Aviv is a socially and culturally vibrant city. But Tel Aviv is a bubble, cut off from the harsh realities of the Middle East.” Eytan Fox (director)
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| Director : | Q. Allan Brocka | |
| Screenplay : | Q. Allan Brocka, Philip Pierce | |
| Cinematography : | Joshua Hess | |
| Music : | Ryan Beveridge | |
| Editing : | Phillip J. Bartell | |
| Cast : | Derek Magyar, George Jonson, Patrick Bauchau, Darryl Stephens, Peyton Hinson, Jonathon Trent, Kyle Santler, Emily Brooke Hands, Matt Riedy | |
| Producer : | Stephen Israel, Philip Pierce, Victor Simpkins | |
| Production Co.: | Tla Releasing |
Adapted from Matthew Rettenmund’s novel, Boy Culture is a sexy, funny and sharply written gay comedy. In his second feature film, Brocka introduces us to an unconventional gay family: 'X' is a high-priced 'hooker with an exclusive client list which consists of 12 rich men at any one time and never has sex with a guy unless it’s for cash. He is secretly falling in love with his beautiful flatmate Andrew, who is experimenting with his newly discovered gay sexuality while waiting for the right man. And Andrew thinks a hustler is not the right man. Then there's their young sexually voracious 17-year-old Joey, who has fallen hard for X. The sexual tension between three men is very intense. To complicate matters, X meets the 79-year-old loner, Gregory, a replacement for a client.
Boy Culture is a fun and sexy film that will get you hard and make you think.We've seen Brocka's Eating Out couple of years ago at Out Istanbul GLBT Film Festival and adored it. Here is another great one from him. It was sexy , intimate and hilarious.









