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Queer East Returns to Cinemas for Pride Season with a Special Programme

To mark this year's Pride, returns to cinemas across London with a diverse set of films from China, Indonesia, Japan, Taiwan, and the UK, exploring how culture, law, history, and social norms have shaped the current queer landscape in East and Southeast Asia.

The film screenings begin on Saturday 5 June at the Lexi Cinema with the Taiwanese award-winning blockbuster (2012), exploring the relationship between sexuality and political activism. The programme also features Toshio Matsumoto's kaleidoscopic masterpiece (Japan, 1969), Oscar-winning director Ang Lee's gay romantic comedy (Taiwan/USA, 1993), the UK premiere of (Indonesia, 2018), (Taiwan, 2021), Berlinale Teddy Jury Award-winner (China/Spain, 2019), BAFTA nominee (UK, 2014), and documentary (China, 2019).

The film screenings will be taking place throughout June and July, in the Barbican Centre, Catford Mews, Curzon Goldsmiths, Genesis Cinema and the Lexi Cinema.

Full Programme

– GF*BF
18:30 Saturday 5 June
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GF*BF charts a love triangle between three friends growing up in the turbulent 1980s, portraying the parallels between Taiwan's transition to democracy, and the characters' journeys from teenage repression to emotional maturity.
Introduction by Christopher Brown, University of Sussex

Funeral Parade of Roses
20:15 Friday 11 June
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Shining a light on gay subcultures in the 1960s Tokyo underground scene, the film is about Eddie, a transgender hostess at Bar Genet, and her involvement in a violent love triangle. Toshio Matsumoto's shattering, kaleidoscopic masterpiece is one of the most subversive and intoxicating films of the Japanese .

The Wedding Banquet
18:00 Saturday 12 June
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Ang Lee's romantic comedy is about Wai-Tung, a gay Taiwanese immigrant living in Manhattan, who resolves to marry a woman in order to appease his parents. Both farcical and touching, Lee's film is a landmark of LGBTQ+ cinema and anticipates later debates over gay marriage.
Introduction by Christopher Brown, University of Sussex

Memories of My Body

Memories of My Body (UK Premiere)
18:00 Tuesday 6 July
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This experimental biopic incorporates music and dance to explore the life of Juno, who is trained as a Lengger Lanang, a man who performs as a woman. Spanning over four decades of Indonesian history, the film makes a poetic statement on the political and artistic power of the body.
Recorded Introduction by Eric Sasono

Lilting
Sunday 20 June / Coming Soon
Hong Khaou's debut feature tells the story of a widowed mother who attempts to understand her son, Kai, after his sudden death. Unaware that Kai was gay, she finds her world disrupted by the revelations of his lover Richard. The film is a heartfelt study of grieving and loneliness.

A Dog Barking at the Moon
Late-June / Coming Soon
Returning to China, pregnant writer Xiaoyu is immediately drawn into the longstanding conflicts between her gay father and cult-obsessed mother. Zi Xiang's debut feature powerfully reveals how the misery resulting from repressive cultural norms is passed from one generation to another.

As We Like It (UK Premiere)
Mid-July / Coming Soon
A reworking of Shakespeare's play, As We Like It is set in an internet-free neighbourhood in the bustling, futuristic metropolis of Taipei. With an entirely female cast, Chen and Wei's energetic film upends the binary world through its exploration of gender politics, role-playing, and human desire.
In partnership with Chinese Visual Festival

The Two Lives of Li Ermao
Mid-July / Coming Soon
Filmed over 17 years in southern China, this intimate and heart-wrenching documentary is about Li Ermao, a transgender migrant worker who transitions from male to female, then back to male. In this touching tale, we witness Li searching for identity, struggling for love, and fighting for survival.
In partnership with Chinese Visual Festival

About the author

Adriana Rosati

On paper I am an Italian living in London, in reality I was born and bread in a popcorn bucket. I've loved cinema since I was a little child and I’ve always had a passion and interest for Asian (especially Japanese) pop culture, food and traditions, but on the cinema side, my big, first love is Hong Kong Cinema. Then - by a sort of osmosis - I have expanded my love and appreciation to the cinematography of other Asian countries. I like action, heroic bloodshed, wu-xia, Shaw Bros (even if it’s not my specialty), Anime, and also more auteur-ish movies. Anything that is good, really, but I am allergic to rom-com (unless it’s a HK rom-com, possibly featuring Andy Lau in his 20s)"

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