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A wonderful post from St. James Church…

We had a great screening last Wednesday for St. James Church in Stratford, CT.  Thanks to Alex Zamachaj for the warm response from his experience:

This past Thursday I watched a movie with 65 other men about male relationships. Now don’t go building any opinions yet, let me explain. The movie night was sponsored by the men’s group at my church. Yet, despite the fact that all the men who gathered were religious, the movie was not. The sole purpose of the movie was to delve into male relationships and society’s perceptions of them versus what male relationships really look like or could look like. Now your probably thinking, what do men need to know about male relationships? Personally, I feel men have a lot to learn about what a male friendship looks like. But then again, that is my personal opinion that may or may not be shared by other men out there. The movie itself is relatively new and is called “Five Friends” by Hank Mandel. (Check out the trailer here) So that no one is left in the dark, let me give you a very brief synopsis of the movie. As a documentary, the movie goes into Hank’s life and looks at five male friendships that he has. It talks about the intimacy that Hank has with these other men and how each of their lives benefits from the friendship. Now I used the word intimacy, scary for most men, yet I use it only in the sense of revealing one’s life, one’s issues, one’s concerns with another. In an effort to get you to check out the trailer, I will end my synopsis there. (There is a reason I am not a film critic). Yet, despite the short synopsis, I feel I have given enough information that the rest of what I talk about should make sense. If it doesn’t, check out the trailer.

There are a lot of aspects about the movie that I could delve into and talk about and probably will over the course of a few weeks. What I wanted to talk about today was a comment that was made by one of the men after the movie finished. This young man, probably about my age in the military, asked if there were plans to make a movie about the friendships or bonds between men in the military. He asked this because he couldn’t formulate a friendship outside the military as strong as he could with men in the military. I started thinking about this and drawing connections with the movie. One of the themes that the movie talks about as being integral in any deep relationship between men is trust. There must be a sense of trust between two people if their relationship is to gain any kind of substance. If we don’t trust someone else, how can we talk honestly with them about our lives, our concerns, our excitement? In short, we can’t. If you think about the military, they are trained to trust each other, to place their lives in someone else’s hands, to depend utterly on the men (and women) they are in service with. The trust that men in the military have with each other goes above and beyond the trust that almost anyone else ever experiences. The majority of the population never has to place their life in someone else’s hands or depend upon someone else to save them or watch over them to the extent that people in the military do. It is most likely because of this deep seated trust that there is such a strong bond between people in the military, especially between those who serve in the same unit. For the majority of us, trust is fleeting, hard to earn, and easy to break. Out of everything the military does, perhaps the one thing that I have just recently come to appreciate is their ability to forge such a strong bond between people; based on trust. No wonder it is hard for this man to build friendships as strong as the one’s he has with his fellow soldiers. If he can’t trust someone else with his life, how can he trust them with simple information about himself? He probably feels that he can’t.

We could all do with a little more trust, especially men. To take this idea and apply it in a broader sense to men, lets look at society and what society expect in terms of trust. If you watch the news or listen to the radio, you have probably all heard about the Homeland Security saying, “If you see something, say something”. (I also talked briefly about this Monday). The whole campaign by Homeland Security is built on eliminating trust. We are not supposed to trust anybody or anything anymore, but rather report them if they look suspicious. It goes beyond that, however, to the media and persistent relaying of incidents that degrade any trust we might have for someone else. How are we supposed to move past this issue of lack of trust in society and build trust between one another? Its not easy, in fact, it is probably one of the most difficult things we will do in our lifetimes, build trust between us and someone else. Some of us are able to trust others without question, yet I feel these people are few and far between as compared to the majority. For most of us, it takes time and effort to expose our inner feelings and desires to someone else, especially man to man. For many men, it never happens and they live their lives closed and without any meaningful male relationships. I personally have a few friends that I can claim I am intimate with, that I can claim I can tell anything and have no worries about how they will take it or respond in kind. How many friends do you have that you can say that about? Maybe its time for men to shed their facade of toughness and imperviousness and seek to trust other men with their feelings and emotions. I know, I know, men are not supposed to have feelings and emotions, but I have news for you; they do and they are not going away. Let us all work on trust this week and see if we can’t build a level of trust between us and someone else that will allow us to truly deepen a friendship with them.

Alex’s Blog here


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Great workshop feedback…

Hi everyone, just returned from the 20th American Men’s Study Association Conference in Minneapolis where I ran a screening of “Five Friends” and workshop for 7 hours with a wonderful group of participants from all over the country – both men and women participated.  We shared the film “Five Friends” discussed the importance of male relationships and used the Quality of Male Relationships Workbook to dive into the importance of intimate male connections.  Here is what the participants said about the workshop during their verbal evaluations:

EVALUATION COMMENTS:

1. It helped me look at mens’ friendships from a different view.

2. It was open and welcoming in establishing relationships.

3. Being aware of a man’s life journey is very important

4. The movie starts important conversations  about relationships.

5. The best workshop I have ever been in. (4 people)

6. The balance between the theoretical and personal was good. (2 people)

7. My head is spinning through this experience. This was not an empirical experience and I enjoyed it immensely. I can make a list of things that I never thought about much before this workshop. It was great!

8. Listening to each male voice, the sharing is very magical. Diversity is wonderful.

9. Tremendous enjoyment. I found a voice in this group. I was a bit un-settled about the confidentiality. The self-reflection vs academic/therapeutic work was a surprise.

10. The workshop has changed my life. (4 people)

11. We can not ask these questions enough to ourselves and each other.

12. Let us do this workshop again next year!


If you are interested in a screening and workshop, let us know.

-Hank


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Philly, Film & Fabio

Hank and I just returned from an amazing time with wonderful people in ‘The City of Brotherly Love.’  I’m sure I had learned Philadelphia’s tag from Trivial Pursuit or somewhere else along the way, but I had forgotten and was ironically reminded of it when we traveled there to do three screenings of Five Friends.  After all, it is probably a brotherly love movie before it’s anything else.  We were greeted with warmth, enthusiasm, thoughtfulness and a surprise ending to our trip!  But I probably already gave that away in the title.

BMFI

To begin, we arrived in Philly (Hank by train, me by plane) just a few hours before a screening at the Bryn Mawr Film Institute.  BMFI is a part of Bryn Mawr College and they are a true indie art house that provides a platform for films as big as ‘The Artist’ and as small (though growing!) as Five Friends.  I must say it was wild to see Five Friends in the evening on the same screen they had shown ‘The Artist’ just hours before.  I’ve never considered myself a fancy director-type, probably due to the fact that I’m not.  I’ve really only made this one modest documentary.  But don’t tell the Bryn Mawr folks that because they treated me and Hank with such respect and attention.  They were considerate in every detail and made sure we felt very much at home in their venue.

Nervous Anticipation

But, in spite of the warm reception, we were also greeted by an unpleasant surprise.  The box office had only pre-sold 10 tickets by that point.  Ugh.  This was going to be one of those you-could-shoot-a-canon-through-this-place kinds of experiences and, I have to admit, it took the wind out of my sails for a moment.  We remained hopeful and Hank and I took off for a bit to catch some air.  We had dinner with our Philadelphia friends that we had met the previous year at the American Men’s Studies Association Conference for our premiere in Kansas City.  Good food and good wine with good people always takes the edge off.  And by the time we got back to the theater, just a few minutes before show time, they had sold 75 tickets!  Now, that may not seem like a lot, but for a little movie in a new city, it exceeded our expectations.

The movie looked beautiful in its full Blu-Ray glory with sound to match.  After the credit roll there was a warm applause, but I’m still always a bit nervous about how people actually feel about the film.  I mean, they knew we were in the room, they kind of have to applaud, don’t they?

The Panel

But the discussion that followed overwhelmed us with a sense of people really getting what we’re trying to do: create a platform for men to talk about relationships.  And they did.  Women also jumped into the mix and for over an hour we explored what it means to be a man, what keeps men from being intimate with each other, their wives, their children and how we are on the verge of what appears to be…dare I say, a movement.

The following day, we embarked on a mission to check a very important Philly box and that is the cheesesteak.  As Hank and I ventured naively into some fairly, uh, ‘lively’ parts ofPhiladelphia, we passed over one spot that seemed life threatening.

Philly Gold

Then we finally landed at ‘Larry’s Steaks’ for a taste of the local flavor.  It was a sublime meld of steak, onions, mushrooms, grease and fries…so sublime that I devoured half of it before I stopped to snap this photo.

Onto Widener University for two screenings, ending in the “Deepening Men’s Relationships” Conference.  The graduate students on Thursday night were insightful and intelligent, challenging us with probing questions and showering us with beautiful praise.  It was humbling and enlightening.  Most of these students were studying sexuality…hello?  I did not know this was an option when I was in school!  Two-year intensive study of sex?  Outstanding.  It was a sharp group and really set the stage for our final screening on Saturday.

Again, what began as 20 registrations at the beginning of the week turned into over 60 by Saturday and it was a passionate group.

The Fish Bowl

At one point, we did a ‘fish bowl’ where five guys and a therapist (sounds like the set up for a joke) sat in a circle and the rest of the group sat in a circle around them.  They then began to tell their own personal stories followed by a discussion facilitated by the therapist.  It’s amazing when you start to see how the lives of people have been so uniquely and powerfully impacted by the male relationships in their lives.  It gave me renewed vigor to keep raising awareness around men talking about these things.  Why are male relationships so important?  What do they mean to men? And how does it inform what it means to be a man?  That last question leads me to a most wonderful final punctuation on this Philadelphia adventure.

After my trans-continental flight, I stumbled groggily out of LAX to catch my shuttle to the parking lot.  My head was still swirling with a week of male relationships, men and masculinity when, low and behold, I had what appeared to be a…vision of sorts.  It was a certain kind of man, a prototype one could say, and something to behold.  It was Fabio.  Yes, that Fabio, of 90s romance novel fame.

Fabio at LAX

It was astonishing, really.  I snapped this photo surreptitiously so as not to spook the fellow…he kind of looked a little spooked already.  Was it a sign?  Did it point to bulging pectorals and the conquest of women as the indelible picture of true masculinity?  I chuckled at considering that explanation to the various feminists I encountered on my trip.  My answer was, in fact, no, but this sighting was nonetheless a gift.  I realized that, outside of his hulking stature, chiseled jaw-line and incomparable hairdo, Fabio and I are exactly the same.  We both need the love of other men to make our life complete.  Yes, Fabio, even Fabio.  And so we continue.  To challenge, encourage, love, live and celebrate men and their relationships with each other.

Thanks Philadelphia, may you always remain the City of Brotherly Love.


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