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Imagine a baby is born. Is naked and has something different... We can’t answer the classical question: Is it a boy or a girl? What happens when we can’t physically define someone as male or female? Why do we have these two options only? And... Why do we have to decide? This is the heart of my feature film Me,  Impossible.

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A religious dressmaker loses her virginity. Penetration is a knife that rip her and makes her think that something happens to her body. Suspicions increase when she have to do an unusual treatment: use a dilator to expand her vagina. Only the arrival of a woman who shake her sexuality, will make her discover the truth: she was born with ambiguous genitals and being a baby, she was submitted to several surgeries to make her a woman. This truth will challenge her to make a decision: to remain a socially accepted but oppressed woman or choose to be a free and inconvenient intersexual and face the moral judgement of  the society.

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Me Impossible talks about the search for identity. Like thousand of children that have normalization surgeries in my country and so many people who have had this experience in the world and want to tell their story. Like me, like you. Because being ourselves is the hardest battle we must fight every day.

Me, Impossible

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