At 18-years-old, Sven and Gijs are best friends on the cusp of
adventure: clubbing, meeting girls, planning their trip to South America
on motorbikes. No one can stop them. But just like that, the fragility
of life rushes towards them when Gijs is put into a coma after
intervening in a fight to protect Sven.
Even Cowboys Get to Cry illustrates the rapid and ruthless
coming-of-age for the boys, propelled into adulthood by an accident that
brings fear, guilt, anger and the precariousness of their friendship.
It’s the graduation film of Amsterdam-born Mees Peijnenburg of the
Netherlands Film Academy, exploring the reality of friendship, growing
up and painful emotion.
“I recalled a sentence my best friend told me when we were
12-years-old,” says director Peijnenburg. “He told me back then that if
you never cry, your tears will dry and so you could never cry again. As a
12-year-old I really thought this could be true, since I didn't cry so
much.
When life gets real, and pain is around the corner, everybody is
swiped away by tears. Even cowboys, the symbol of the alpha male.”
Peijnenburg captures a story close to him, that happened to people he
knew. While playing with the plot, the ‘emotional rollercoaster’ that
he witnessed is raw and real.
Sven and Gijs find each other again, but the journey ahead is long.
“I wanted to make an homage to friendship,” he explains. “Show people
the fighting spirit inside people’s emotions when it comes to those you
really care about.”
via Dazed
via Dazed