3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most entertaining, powerful and inspiring Queer (3) films at We Are Moving Stories. These include documentary and drama, shorts and feature length about coming of age, diversity, faith - and drag.

Total length of this section: 23 films.

<COMING OF AGE>

Erin’s Guide To Kissing Girls - Erin, a spunky twelve year-old, attempts to woo the coolest girl in school with the help of her best friend, Liz. Length: 14 minutes 50 seconds. Writer/Director Julianna Notten:

In many ways I wrote this film as a love letter to my younger self, I wish I could have been as unapologetically myself as Erin is at that age. That’s partly why this story was so important for me to tell, so that young queer kids (or anyone for that matter) could watch this film and hopefully feel inspired by Erin to be their most authentic self.

Virgin Territory - a queer, questioning coming-of-age story about a teenage girl’s sexual awakening and exploration. Length: 14 minutes 50 seconds. Writer/Director Emily Robinson:

Virgin Territory was made as a response to the lack of sex-positive coming-of-age stories from the female perspective.

Prom Night - Billie, a 17-year-old non-binary teenager, prepares to attend a formal for underage queer youth for the first time. As they choose their outfit and get their hair dyed, they reveal how they navigate the awkwardness of adolescence while also dealing with the anxieties that come with being young and queer. Length: 10 minutes 47 seconds. Director Sam McGowan:

Being a teenager, going through puberty and growing up can be really difficult experiences, and all of this is magnified when you’re queer. I wanted this film to show people how growing up queer comes with its own unique hardships as well as its own unique beauties, and I also wanted to really celebrate the resilience of the kids that go through the worst possible stuff every day, but still manage to shine so brightly and bring so much colour to the world.

Loretta’s Flowers - On a long summer’s day in Toronto, a young queer woman cycles between increasingly intimate encounters with three diverse individuals, but remains trapped in a pattern of insatiable longing. Length: 15 minutes. Writer/Director Brendan Prost:

I’m interested in making the film part of a broader conversation about alienation and how society is inflating our expectations for connection via advances to communication technology, growing urban density, and sexual liberalization. What reason is there to feel alone, when you can communicate with anyone at the push of a touch screen? Why do we still experience unrequited cravings for intimacy in an increasingly sex positive culture? Why do we experience solitude, when we’re constantly surrounded by other people? Loretta’s Flowers is a film that grapples with these apparent paradoxes.

Girl Talk follows 20-something Mia, as she explores the disparity between emotional and physical intimacy, coming to a head when she meets an intriguing couple. Length: 17 minutes. Writer/Director Erica Rose:

Girl Talk is a film centered around the complexities of sex, love and intimacy through the lens of Mia, a young and queer-identified protagonist. Girl Talk is about the in-between. It is not the coming out story, it’s not about a secret affair, no one dies at the end. We’re showing queer stories that are happening now, that represent the stories we’ve experienced and the stories of our young queer community. My goal with Girl Talk isn’t to proselytize a rhetoric, but to show female characters with agency, complexity, faults, and triumphs. Showing queer women take their sexuality into their own hands is not just a radical act, but a story that our culture needs and wants to see.

Crazy House - After the suicide of his best friend, a teenage boy is forced to deal with his guilt and sexuality in this surrealist psychodrama. Length: 18 minutes. Director Aaron Mirkin:

We never intended Crazy House to be an issue film, but there are issues that the core that I feel need to be discussed. Despite all the amazing strides that have been made in recent years towards acceptance and inclusion of sexual minorities, LGBTQ+ youth are still more than twice as likely to try to commit suicide as their heterosexual peers, according to the CDC.Similarly, with all the strides we’ve made towards destigmatizing mental illness, I think we still have a long way to go. I think our society would be a lot healthier if we spoke more openly about our feelings and did not feel the need to repress them.

<DIVERSITY>

Public Intimacy (Intimidade Pública) - You cannot live someone else's life. Four seasons. Four stories. Four couples. Four tangled desires. A bathroom pickup burns on its own homophobia. A street walker succumbs to a lover. Blackmail and queer romance walk a dangerous path together. Madness takes over a woman’s libido. Length: 70 minutes. Director Luciana Canton:

If after watching Public Intimacy you look at your desires and beliefs in a slightly different way, that would be a lot. If the movie helps you confront your prejudices and hidden weaknesses, than I would be so happy. I believe movies should serve to make our lives, and our hearts, better.

EKAJ - A gritty and truthful portrait of a young man searching for purpose and love. Length: 80 minutes. Writer/Director Cati Gonzalez:

Ekaj is not just a film about a gay kid, it could be any kid. It’s about the emotions a lot of us have experience as a teen, first love, rejection, feeling inadequate and being innocent. Ekaj experiences lots of rejection while being so beautiful it’s devastating. It’s also a look into how drugs form a part of every young person with problems in life. We are so used to it that we don’t make it an issue. It’s just a part of life.

The FIVE Provocations is a performance-driven realist drama about four intertwined stories of love, loss and unexpected confrontations by women too provocative to ignore. Length: 94 minutes. Producer, Writer, Director Angie Black:

I wanted to make a feature film that was as unexpected as life with a narrative that explores the complicated moments and experiences of everyday people familiar to me in my culturally diverse queer world. It still surprises me that depictions of women, let alone queer or ethnically diverse people are not common on Australian screens.

The Dances of Ed Mock - A survey of the life and times of Ed Mock: Black, queer, San Francisco based choreographer and performance artist - spanning from his arrival to the Bay Area in the late 60s until his death of AIDS in 1986. Length: 1 hour 11 minutes. Writer/Director Brontez Purnell:

It is our duty as queers to not only learn but want to learn about histories of ours that were silenced or erased. This film covers so many topics: AIDS, secret performance art histories, secret Radical Black histories, and a portrait of California artist life from the Free Love era until the Regan era.

<FAITH>

Ablution - The bond between a disabled Muslim father and his son is tested when love is pitted against religion. Length: 15 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Omar Al Dakheel:

The story can be personal to those who identify as religious and LGBT and their struggle to reconciles these intersecting identities. The film is also universal to anyone who struggled with following their father’s rules growing up, or had a different interpretation of their religions that caused family problems.

Starboy - When a young Hasidic man turns to the study of the Kabbalah and Quantum mechanics, his pious young wife doesn’t understand why there are suddenly so many unorthodox books in their cramped London’s Stamford Hill flat. What is he trying to tell her? As he increasingly doubts his identity, his gender and the nature of being, their conflict grows - with irreparable and shocking consequences. Length: 17 minutes 23 seconds. Writer/Director/Editor Joelle Bentolila:

Starboy is the story of a very religious, very spiritual young man who questions who he is, his gender, his essence - which triggers heart-wrenching conflicts with his very pious young wife and his religious community.

Mama Bears (work-in-progress) is a feature-length documentary work-in-progress about the many ways in which the lives of conservative, Christian mothers are radically transformed when they decide to accept their LGBTQ children. Length: 1 hour 30 minutes. Director Daresha Kyi:

I was so deeply inspired by the radical change Kimberly Shappley underwent as she transitioned from a Tea Party Republican to a fierce LGBTQ activist that I started making a feature film about her and other mothers like her whose love for their children caused them to change their conservative, Christian views on sexuality. When the ACLU put out the call for films about transgender rights, I pitched Kimberly and Kai’s story and they loved it. I consider Texas Strong a proof of concept for my feature documentary, Mama Bears.

Out Of Order is a groundbreaking feature documentary revealing the complex and painful struggles faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) faith leaders as they confront entrenched bigotry and work to build loving support within their churches. Length: 60 minutes. Writer/Director Amanda Bluglass:

I want the film to be a catalyst for a conversation about what it means to be truly welcoming. This means being able to say, “you are not only welcome but you may lead this group of people.” If the film can have that role, it will be a powerful tool in a progressive argument that wishes to include, not exclude. That is one conversation that I feel it urgent in the current political climate.

AN ACT OF LOVE - In 2013, Rev. Frank Schaefer was put on trial in the United Methodist Church for officiating his son’s same-sex wedding. The Schaefer family was pulled into a movement for LGBTQ equality in the U.S’s second largest protestant denomination. An Act of Love follows Rev. Schaefer’s journey from small-town minister to outspoken advocate. Length: 86 minutes. Director Scott Sheppard:

Rev. Frank Schaefer has said that when he officiated his son Tim’s wedding, it was not an act of defiance against the United Methodist Church, it was an act of love for his son. It’s a beautiful sentiment and 100% true.

<HORROR>

High Fun - (commonly known as 'Party and Play' or 'Chemsex' in the west) is a queer-themed horror film about living with your demons. Length: 14:59 minutes. Director/Producer Adesh Prasad:

I am glad that in spite of this film being so morbid, my audience so far has picked on the subtle humor laced throughout the film and I like the fact that I get all the reactions that I was aiming for at different points in the film. I don’t think I can ask for anything more than that.

<DRAG>

Better Known as Peaches Christ - Drag icon Peaches Christ offers a rare, intimate glimpse into her process of transformation, and describes the path from stifled teen to brazen cult hero. Length: 3 minutes 45 seconds. Writer/Director/Producer Nate Visconti:

Drag is as important and relevant as ever now. It’s a subversive act that is also a profound celebration of identity. I think a lot of people, especially in the past year, have felt like their identity has been under attack. We wanted to make a film, and actually a series of films, that celebrates diversity in thought, experience, and identity.

Miss Guided - A young straight filmmaker confronts his anxieties by getting to know the local drag scene and overcomes them by flaunting what he got. Length: 12 minutes 33 seconds. Director Hugo Vadasz:

Miss Guided was created around our producer Alan Jones, who is a part of the LGBTQ community. We had many doco ideas we wanted to explore through Alan’s connections, but we had to find a way that was respectful and engaging at the same time. We thought the Louis Theroux approach would be the best because I really did not know much before the doco and want to create a genuine experience for the viewer. So when I learn something about the community, I hope they learn too.

Life's A Drag - Alexis and Bettina, two ageing drag queens, take us on a journey with more twists and turns than a set of hot rollers. Writer/producer Victoria Wharfe McIntyre:

When I first moved to the big smoke from the country I lived with a bunch of gay men who broadened my mind in the most fun filled and beautiful ways. We would have ‘drag’ parties just for the fun of it and it turns out drag is a way to be incredibly honest with each other around highly charged emotional issues in a way that is both confrontational and acceptable and hilarious.

God Save The Queens - An audacious candy-colored dramedy that follows a quartet of down-on-their-luck Drag Queens who end up stuck at the same therapy retreat. Together they face their respective plights with rapid-fire wit and a dash of the divine to discover common ground. Length: 1 hour 27 minutes. Writer/Director Jordan Danger:

I wanted to write and tell a story that allowed us to see drag queens in their truest form when they’re without makeup and out of the stage lights. I was always intrigued by the at-home / family existence we’re not usually shown in other reality shows and scripted narratives.

Blue Square Heart - A drag queen is forced to reconsider his shockingly violent art when his estranged, conservative mother makes a surprise appearance at his show in an attempt to reconnect. Length: 31 minutes 3 seconds. Writer/Director William Means:

I think there are lots of life factors that can force us into a “box” that’s more comfortable than fulfilling—what our parents/friends want for us, where we’re raised, how much money is being offered to us, etc. The point of this film was to show someone blowing up that box they’re put in—even blowing it up in front of their own mother—and to hopefully inspire audiences to do the same, or to even become more aware of the forces that form their own box.

Alaska is a Drag - Tough, but diva fabulous, Leo, an aspiring drag superstar, is stuck working in a fish cannery in Alaska. He and his twin sister are trapped in the monotony of fist fights and fish guts. Out of necessity, Leo learned to fight back, which catches the attention of the local boxing coach. When a new boy moves to town and wants to be his sparring partner, Leo has to face the real reason he's stuck in Alaska. Length: 88 minutes. Writer/Director Shaz Bennett:

I’m drawn to and obsessed with the flamboyance and bravado of boxers and drag queens – they are the fun house mirrors of each other. One is wholly female and the other wholly male – in a way that doesn’t always exist in real life. The actors and I talked about the innate sensuality and vulnerability of two men boxing that informs the relationship of Kyle and Leo and later Declan and Leo. At its core, the film is about survival and friendship.

Rebels On Pointe is the first cinema verite film ever made about the notorious Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, the all male, drag ballet company founded in New York City in 1974 on the heels of the Stonewall riots... and who now have a cult following around the world. Length: 90 minutes (there is a 52 minute version as well). Writer/Director Bobbi Jo Hart:

It’s a film for all ages that gives audiences permission to laugh at the absurd while weaving a narrative that makes you want to cheer for the characters and the company. And given the troubling political climate in the USA, we need films that remind of of our shared humanity and celebrate the underdog more than ever before!