“Another Man”, interview with director David Moragas
David Moragas discusses "Another Man" at Lovers Film Festival, exploring desire, identity and generational crisis.
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"The Activist", interview with director Romas Zabarauskas Federica Scarpa
Presented at the Lovers Film Festival, “The Activist” marks the fifth feature by Lithuanian filmmaker Romas Zabarauskas. Set in Kaunas, the country’s second-largest city, the film follows Andrius, a young man investigating the murder of his partner Deividas, an LGBTQ+ activist organising the city’s first Pride event.
What begins as a personal quest quickly expands into a broader political inquiry. Andrius infiltrates extremist groups connected to neo-Nazi networks, uncovering a web of hostility and institutional indifference. Romas Zabarauskas situates the narrative within a contemporary European context in which far-right ideologies are gaining visibility and influence.
While the film directly confronts extremist violence, its scope extends further. Zabarauskas deliberately critiques not only the far right but also the shortcomings of liberal institutions. “We have to look at what doesn’t work,” he explains, emphasising the importance of self-reflection within progressive movements.
The director frames the film as ultimately optimistic, reaffirming the value of democratic systems while acknowledging their fragility. Media, political structures, and law enforcement are depicted as necessary yet imperfect mechanisms that require active civic engagement to function effectively. This layered perspective avoids cynicism while maintaining a critical edge.
Andrius serves as an unconventional entry point into the narrative. Initially distant from activism and still grappling with his own identity, he stands in sharp contrast to his partner’s public commitment. This distance allows the character to evolve organically throughout the film.
“He starts in the closet and doesn’t support his boyfriend’s values,” Romas Zabarauskas notes. As the investigation progresses, Andrius confronts societal indifference and personal grief, gradually embracing the ideals he once resisted. This transformation is designed to resonate with audiences beyond activist circles, expanding the film’s emotional accessibility.
Drawing on the tradition of film noir, Romas Zabarauskas reinterprets the genre through a contemporary and queer perspective. He recalls how mid-20th-century crime melodramas, later defined as noir by French critics, reflected societal anxieties of the time, particularly around gender roles.
In “The Activist”, this framework is updated to explore fears surrounding LGBTQ+ visibility. The director introduces characters that occupy morally ambiguous positions, including queer figures who challenge conventional representation. “Queer people can be anything across the spectrum,” he states, rejecting reductive portrayals limited to victimhood or moral virtue.
Romas Zabarauskas positions his work against a tendency in arthouse cinema to adopt overtly educational tones when addressing queer themes. While acknowledging the value of films such as Milk, he advocates for a broader narrative range.
For him, true equality in representation lies in complexity. By allowing queer characters to be both protagonists and antagonists, “The Activist” embraces the diversity of human behaviour. This approach reflects the director’s personal experience, having publicly come out in Lithuania in 2011, when visibility remained limited.
Looking ahead, Romas Zabarauskas signals a shift in focus. While continuing to explore themes of power and relationships, his upcoming work may move beyond explicitly queer narratives. Among his current projects is a miniseries dedicated to Jonas Mekas, the influential Lithuanian filmmaker and co-founder of Anthology Film Archives.
Developed within the framework of a PhD at the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Theatre, the project reflects a long-term commitment to cinematic history and experimentation. It also suggests an expansion of Zabarauskas’s artistic scope, bridging personal, political and historical dimensions.
In Kaunas, Lithuania, activist Deividas is organising the first Pride event in the city’s history, despite intimidation from far-right groups. His partner Andrius has always struggled to accept such commitment (“I’m tired of sleeping with the problems of Lithuanian gay people,” he tells him). One evening, returning home after a heated argument, Andrius finds Deividas dead. After the initial shock, a grim realisation sets in: neither the police nor the institutions that ostensibly support the event show any real interest in identifying those responsible for the brutal murder. With no other option, Andrius begins infiltrating the various organisations—often with neo-Nazi ties—that had opposed the Pride parade. With The Activist, director Romas Zabarauskas returns to the Lovers FF with a stark, brooding political thriller that probes what lies behind the growing spread of far-right intolerance—though not only—in Eastern Europe.
Written by: Federica Scarpa
Guest
Romas ZabarauskasFilm
The ActivistFestival
Torino Lovers Film FestivalDavid Moragas discusses "Another Man" at Lovers Film Festival, exploring desire, identity and generational crisis.
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