Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Your body, your choice
MARIA DUARTE welcomes a campaigning film that aims to raise awareness of intersex people

Every Body (12A)
Directed by Julie Cohen

 


 
“WE live in a society that’s so binary... and so for me as an intersex person, where do I fit, where do I belong?” asks one of the key protagonists in Julie Cohen’s powerful and insightful new documentary which shines a much needed light on a little known group of people who are often told to keep quiet about their bodies. 
 
The film opens with a loud and colourful montage of over-the-top gender-revealing ceremonies, set to “Be My Baby” by The Ronettes, before it takes an in-depth exploratory dive into the lives of intersex people. It follows the stories of three individuals who talk openly and frankly about their experiences of being born between two sexes, and whose childhoods were marked by shame, secrecy and non-consensual surgeries. Then as adults they decided to come out as their true selves. 
 
Actor and screenwriter River Gallo (they/them), political consultant Alicia Roth Weigel (she/they), and Ph.D. student Sean Saifa Wall (he/him), are brave and impressive, and are at the forefront of a growing movement to make people aware and better understand the intersex community and to end unnecessary operations. 
 
“Our very existence proves that there is no pure male and female,” states Alicia who outwardly looks like a woman. She reveals how although she was born with a Y chromosome, she has a vagina but not a womb or uterus. Plus she had testes internally which were removed without her consent, thus castrating her. All this makes dating tricky, she admits.  

She, along with her fellow activists, affirm how they were advised not to say anything to anyone about their intersex traits. 
 
Alongside their moving tales the film interweaves the shocking case of medical abuse in the 1960s, featuring exclusive footage from the NBC News archives, which explains the treatment of intersex people today. It is absolutely jaw dropping. 
 
Cohen’s detailed and gripping documentary, which claims that an estimated 1.7 per cent of the population has some intersex traits, is truly eye-opening. Hopefully this will be the springboard for much needed discussion and understanding. This is a must see. 

Out in cinemas today

Ad slot F - article bottom
More from this author
Cinema / 14 November 2024
14 November 2024
Emotional repression in Hong Kong, emotional repression in the UK, swords and sandals and a forgettable family reunion: reviews of The Last Dance, Silent Men, Gladiator II and Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point
Film of the week / 7 November 2024
7 November 2024
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE recommends an unlikely tale of friendship between an Israeli and a Palestinian in the midst of West Bank ethnic cleansing
Cinema / 17 October 2024
17 October 2024
Serial killer dating; courtroom charm; synaesthetic inspiration and jungle book robotics - The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Woman of the Hour, The Crime is Mine, A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things and The Wild Robot
Film of the week / 17 October 2024
17 October 2024
MARIA DUARTE recommends a biopic of the US presidential candidate that explores his relationship with gay communist-basher Roy Cohn
Similar stories
Music / 5 August 2024
5 August 2024
New releases from Why?, Johnny Blues Skies and Chris Cohen
Cinema / 4 July 2024
4 July 2024
Trans perspectives, opposites attract, washed-out noir and white-knuckle fridging: the Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Orlando, My Political Biography, The Nature of Love, What Remains, and Kill
Cinema / 8 March 2024
8 March 2024
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews of Copa 71, Vindication Swim, Frida, and High and Low: John Galliano
Cinema / 22 February 2024
22 February 2024
Cleaning toilets, troubled souls, Mexican gun-crime and women swearing badly: MARIA DUARTE reviews of Perfect Days (★★★★), Memory (★★★★), A Wolfpack Called Ernesto (★★★), and Wicked Little Letters (★★★)