Dont you worry, it will probably pass

Dont you worry, it will probably pass (2003)

At age 14 Cecilia sent a letter to ”Okej” (a music magazine for teenagers) seeking contact with other bisexual 14-year-old girls. She got 20 replies from girls in Småland, Dalarna and Norrland… The letters could be despairing, humourous, romantic but common for all of them was their deprivation of contact.

Produktionsfakta svenska:
Svensk Distribution Folkets Bio
Kontakt: rosemarie.strand@folketsbio.se 073-6827530
Boka visning: bokning@filmlagret.se Telefon: 040-12 00 82
Don´t You Worry it´ll Probably Pass 
Production fact english:
Svensk Filmdatabas

Internationell Distribution:
International Festivals
Swedish Film Institute +46 8 665 11 00
Svensk Filmdatabas
Bookings: Kajsa Hedström: +46 8 665 11 22
email: kajsa.hedstrom@filminstitutet.se

MY: >> Tell them? When am I to tell them? No, never! Do you know how big my family is? My mum has six brothers, my dad has two brothers. Everyone has at least two children, and then the wives, and granny and granddad and a couple of their friends. All of them gather. Am I to get up in front of 40 people and say:

”Well, I’d just like to tell you I’m gay”… I can’t possibly do that. It’s fucking awful!<<

JOPPE: >> I haven’t told my parents yet, although I think they know, because I’ve had girlfriends. I’m almost sure my parents have seen us kiss. I was also going to tell them why I had the camera, but I haven’t been able to, and I don’t know why. But they presumed I had it for school purposes, and I just didn’t feel like telling them the truth.<<

NATALIE: >> The first time I ever kissed a girl, it felt like…it was as if… Wow, this is what kissing should be like! Everything sort of fell into place and I felt: this is right for me!”<<

Synopsis

”Du ska nog se att det går över” (Don’t you worry, it will probably pass) is a feature-length documentary about three teenage outsider girls’ desires, forbidden feelings and fears.
It is also a deeply personal film as it tells the story of director Cecilia Neant-Falk’s own life and the common experience shared by of all  teenagers who discover that their feelings maybe, but only maybe, mean that they are bi- or homosexual.

”Everybody has a problem, but I have an extra burden. That’s the way it is” (MY, one of the interviewees in the film)

The interviewees in ”Don’t you worry, it will probably pass” was contacted through the same ad that Cecilia Neant-Falk had put in ”Okej” more than 10 years ago. They are all different in temperament, interests and background. Most of them live in a Swedish provincial towns or small communities. When the film starts, they still haven’t told ”it” to their friends and parents. The camera works as a secret video diary where feelings and thoughts about identity are documented. The girls themselves film sequences with parents, siblings and schoolmates in order to give a background and understanding of the values of the family.

”Don’t you worry, it will probably pass” was recorded during four years, and is the result of a unique project with material straight from the darkest corners of the teenage closet. My, Joppe and Natalie locked the door, turned on the camera and revealed everything. About mum and dad who know nothing, about the science teacher who says homosexuals have a genetic flaw, about living in a community where everyone knows everything about everything and everyone. About ”Fucking Åmål”, but for real! About growing up as a gay spy in a straight world.

The film is a bold collage of techniques and media, such as DV-cam, old archive footage and Super 8 accompanied by a huge soundtrack of artists like Stina Nordenstam, Ani Di Franco and Eva Dahlgren. The onlooker is invited into a varied teenage scenery of fear, anger, alienation, and above all courage and desire. It’s about having confidence in your own will and sense. To take it seriously even when it means defying those around you and their conventions.

Priser och Visningar

Special Mention by the FIPRESCI jury
the International Federation of Film Critics, Sidney International Film Festival, 2003
“Don’t You Worry…” is a documentary that teenage audiences, regardless of sexual inclination, can embrace as being a truthful account of their generation, as told by their peers. Within Queer Cinema, “Don’t You Worry…” also represents an exciting stylistic breakthrough that separates it from the many worthy but unadventurous entries in the “coming out” sub-genre.
… this (film) leaps from the screen and invigorates its audience with irrepressible energy…”
/B. Ruby Rich, FIPRESCI jury 2003.

Chicago International Film Festival 2003

Guldbagge Award
Best Swedish Documentary of 2003, aka Swedish Oscar awards 2004
Prix AFJ, Association des Femmes Journalistes

Créteil International Women’s Film Festival

Festival International de Films de Femmes de Créteil, France 2004
Audience Award
Turin International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, Italy, 2004
Honorable mention
Turin International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, 2004