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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for SQIFF
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191003T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191003T161000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190828T110549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190901T121345Z
UID:9158-1570114800-1570119000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Come Out Fighting
DESCRIPTION:Pushed into corners through marginalisation and oppression\, the characters in these short films come out fighting for their bodily autonomy\, rights\, and liberation. YaliniDream performs a poem of refugee/migrant love for self and the world. Artist Liberty Antonia Sadler uses poetry to celebrate larger bodies in a fatphobic society. In Ponyboi\, an intersex runaway and sex worker finds self-redemption and love. The Wind on your Skin sees a young Namibian woman fighting back after her girlfriend is murdered for being lesbian. Eyes explores moving through the world as a gender non-conforming person choosing between being visible versus being safe. And BLACKN3SS dives into the journey of black queer youth in São Paulo. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873611635/events/129089766′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nFilms have a mixture of English and Portuguese audio with English captions/subtitles. Hearing loop available. \nMost of the films are relatively accessible to English-speaking blind and partially sighted audiences with poetic voiceover or explanatory dialogue and majority English language and/or quite bright images. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users\, gender neutral toilets\, and welcomes assistance animals. Click here for CCA’s Accessibility Guide. \nA Quiet Space and programme content notes will be available. Click here for a list of content notes for the 2019 Festival. \nComfy seating (bean bags) are available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nI Am / YaliniDream (2m)\nDir: YaliniDream\, Krissy Mahan\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nYaliniDream — Lankan Tamil Blood\, Manchester-Born\, Texas-Bred and Brooklyn-Brewed\, performs a poem of refugee/migrant love for self and the world\, through dance and a hiphop beat. \nContent note: None. \ntenderfluid (3m)\nDir: Liberty Antonia Sadler\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nCelebrating the hypnotic plasticity of a larger body\, tenderfluid is visible softness as protest; a counterpoint to the rigidity of diet culture\, cis-heteronormativity and toxic dogmas of weight gain & queerness as failure. \nContent note: Discussion of fatphobia. \nPonyboi (19m)\nDir: River Gallo\, Sade Clacken Joseph\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nPonyboi is an intersex runaway. He works at a laundromat and hustles as a sex worker. But after a mysterious encounter with a man from his dreams\, he learns that perhaps he is worthy of leaving his seedy life in New Jersey behind. Ponyboi is a queer film about discovering self-redemption and love. \nContent note: Non-graphic sex scenes; depiction of violence including suggestion of sexual violence. \nThe Wind on your Skin (18m)\nDir: Naomi Beukes\, Country: Namibia\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: English\nA community is shaken when a young woman is murdered because of whom she loved. This is the 4th short story in the award winning series The Centre-Stories about the lives and loves of African Women in Berlin created by Namibian Filmmaker\, Naomi Beukes. \nContent note: Depiction and discussion of violence and death; discussion of sexual assault. \nEyes (5m)\nDir: Lily Ash Sakula\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nEyes is about moving through the world as a gender non-conforming person and the tension between our fierce desire to be seen and an equally strong need for safety. Both are crucial to our survival as trans people\, and yet they are often at odds: forcing us to choose. \nContent note: Depiction of mental health issues. \nBLACKN3SS (22m)\nDir: Diego Paulino\, Country: Brazil\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: Portuguese\nBetween melanin and far away planets\, BLACKN3SS proposes a dive into the journey of the black youth of São Paulo city. A documentary on blackness\, queerness\, and spacial aspirations of the diaspora’s children. \nContent note: Discussion and depiction of anti-black racism; brief visual and spoken references to sexual violence. \nMy Spine is a Beautiful Sea Monster (2m)\nDir: Theresa Heath-Ellul\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nThe idea for this film developed at a 2017 SQIFF filmmaking workshop which encouraged attendees to embrace a part of their bodies or selves they found challenging or difficult\, and to turn it into something beautiful. I have always found my scoliosis very unattractive and never wear clothing which reveals my back. However\, I do love the sea\, glitter and sequins. I therefore decided to create a beautiful\, be-sequinned sea monster out of my spine which would then dance according to my curvature. \nContent note: None.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-come-out-fighting/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Hearing loop,Intersex,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/sqiff_shorts_come_out_fighting-e1565717185697.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191003T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191003T131500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190828T110654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190906T204522Z
UID:9151-1570104000-1570108500@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Luv Sucks
DESCRIPTION:Romantic relationships can be tough. SQIFF offers up an alternative to punching walls and texting your ex when pished with these shorts from the heart – as in stomping all over it and dumping it in the trash. A bisexual trio have a bust up in a toilet. A boy in a bath pines over his unavailable roommate. A woman has a near-but-not-quite romantic encounter with a fellow deafie. The vast power of the cosmos can’t prevent a bickering lesbian couple from breaking up. A sex worker has his hopes dashed by the man he loves. And in 2033 Botswana\, a man loses his lover to dystopian despair. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873611637/events/129089814′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 15+. \nFilms have a mixture of Arabic\, English\, Spanish\, Portuguese\, and Tswana audio and BSL with English subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nMost of the films are not very accessible to English-speaking blind and partially sighted audiences with largely visual storytelling\, minimal dialogue\, and majority non-English language. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users\, gender neutral toilets\, and welcomes assistance animals. Click here for CCA’s Accessibility Guide. \nA Quiet Space and programme content notes will be available. Click here for a list of content notes for the 2019 Festival. \nComfy seating (bean bags) are available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nTo Starboard\, I Vomit (6m)\nDir: Tarek Sardi\, Country: Tunisia\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: Arabic\nZarga\, Dorra\, and Mohammed find themselves after years of separation together\, reunited in a club’s toilet. Between betrayal and unspoken truths\, the old classmates reveal their deepest secrets and taboos. \nContent note: Depiction of homophobia\, misogyny\, and violence; discussion of sex. \nYour Towel (3m)\nDir: Zhizi Hao\, Country: UK\, Year: 2017\, Language/s: English\nA young gay man and his roommate’s intimate moment in the bathtub. \nContent note: Discussion of sex. \nAlmost… (5m)\nDir: Teresa Garratty\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: BSL\, English\nA chance encounter between two girls sparks an unspoken connection. Everything seems so effortless\, so perfect… Almost. Written and directed by award winning filmmaker\, Teresa Garratty\, produced by Flashing Lights Media\, and funded by BSLBT. \nContent note: None. \nSolarity (8m)\nDir: Marianne Verrone\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nAn exploration of perception\, proximity\, and intimacy within a queer cosmos. \nContent note: None. \nLast Words [sic] (6m)\nDir: Hugo Ljungbäck\, Country: USA\, Sweden\, Year: 2017\, Language/s: No spoken language\nLast Words [sic] revisits an angry email the artist received from an ex-boyfriend. The text is taken verbatim from his goodbye-letter\, and tells a humorously painful story of lost love\, betrayal\, and desire\, as the writer grows increasingly delusional\, defensive\, and passive-aggressive with each paragraph. \nContent note: Discussion of sex. \nFree Fall (14m)\nDir: Santiago Henao Vélez\, Country: Colombia\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: Spanish\nOut of the hunting shadows of sexual underground Medellin\, sixteen-year-old Jhony is excitedly hopeful about a date with the boy he loves. \nContent note: Depiction of sex and drug-taking. \nTea for Two (20m)\nDir: Julia Katharine\, Country: Brazil\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: Portuguese\nSilvia is a middle-aged filmmaker having a life crisis. The same night that she is surprised by the visit of her ex-wife\, who left her a few years ago\, she meets another woman who fascinates her. Tea For Two is thought to be the first film directed by a trans person to ever be commercially released in Brazilian cinemas. \nContent note: Depiction of transphobia. \n2064 (12m)\nDir: Joseph Adesunloye\, Country: Botswana\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: Tswana\nDevastating population growth\, famine\, and mass internal displacement pushes Africa to the brink. Many of the continent’s animals are wiped out due to hunting\, ever-warming climate\, and a ballooning population.  A federation of African States is created and institutes an annual cull of four million men. Soon the policy is successful\, and the continent’s wildlife begins to flourish again. In 2064\, a nascent freedom movement led by the ‘Ladies in White’ is fighting for the emancipation of the condemned men and to put an end to the human cull. \nContent note: Discussion and depiction of death and suicide.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-luv-sucks/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Bisexual,Deaf,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/sqiff_shorts_luv_sucks-e1565716193434.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191002T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191002T210000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190802T105823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191001T095036Z
UID:9074-1570042800-1570050000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF 2019 Opening Night Shorts
DESCRIPTION:Sold Out – we can’t guarantee but there’s a good chance of returns if you come on the night 15 minutes before the event \nWe launch the Festival with a stellar lineup of documentary shorts focused on LGBTQIA+ community and activism. Adam and the Alphas depicts the camaraderie of gay rugby team\, the Glasgow Alphas. Bodies Like Oceans follows self-described queer fat freak and photographer\, Shoog McDaniel. I AM! We are Here! presents portraits of Queer\, Trans* and Gender Non Conforming People of Colour in the Bronx\, whilst Unspoken sees queer and trans Asian Americans writing emotional letters to their families. We Are Here follows members of the Manchester House of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence\, and Button OUT! is an animated homage to Canadian filmmaker Kathleen Mullen’s history of protest through the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives’ massive button collection. \nWe hope to welcome several of the filmmakers for a Q&A. Followed by a drinks reception at CCA sponsored by Drygate Brewing Co. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873610489/events/129085543′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nAll films have English audio with English language subtitles/captions. The introduction and Q&A will be BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nAudio description available. Films are otherwise largely accessible to English-speaking blind and partially sighted audiences with lots of explanatory dialogue and relatively bright images. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users\, gender neutral toilets\, and welcomes assistance animals. Click here for CCA’s Accessibility Guide. \nA Quiet Space and programme content notes will be available. Click here for a list of content notes for the 2019 Festival. \nComfy seating (bean bags) are available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nBodies Like Oceans (13m)\nDir. Kat Cory\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nA dreamy portrait of photographer Shoog McDaniel\, a self-described queer fat freak\, whose work with fat bodies in nature transgresses reality. \nContent note: Discussion of racism\, misogyny\, and fatphobia. \nAdam and the Alphas (12m)\nDir. Stuart Thomas Graham\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nMade by students on the 2019 Documentary Production course at Stirling University. \nContent note: Discussion of homophobia. \nI AM! We Are Here! (7m)\nDir: Seyi Adebanjo\, Country: USA\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: English\nI AM! We Are Here! multimedia project documents the vitality and spirit of Queer\, Trans* and Gender Non Conforming People of Color in the Bronx. \nContent note: None. \nUnspoken (17m)\nDir: Patrick G. Lee\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nUnspoken is the collective outpouring of six queer and trans Asian Americans as they grapple with their queerness and consider what family acceptance might look like. The interviewees hail from across the Asian diaspora—from Sri Lanka and Myanmar to China and South Korea. Some are not yet out to their parents\, and this film is their way of doing so. \nContent note: Discussion of homophobia and transphobia. \nWe Are Here (12m)\nDir. Ellie Hodgetts\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nThis documentary follows members of the Manchester House of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence – a worldwide order of Queer nuns whose motto is to promulgate universal joy and expiate stigmatic guilt – as they continue to take a stand against ignorance and spread love wherever they go. \nContent note: Discussion and depiction of homophobia and transphobia\, including scenes of violence. \nButton OUT! (4m)\nDir: Kathleen Mullen\, Country: Canada\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: English\nButton OUT! is a lively animated personal homage to the filmmaker’s own history of protest and the wider story of LGBTQ2S+ experiences contained in the collection of over 1200 buttons housed at the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives in Toronto. \nContent note: Reference to sex\, homophobia\, transphobia\, and racism.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-2019-opening-night-shorts/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Audio description,Bisexual,BSL,Documentary,English language,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/opening_shorts-e1564741728235.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191002T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191002T193000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190802T105844Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190922T110341Z
UID:9078-1570041000-1570044600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Autism-friendly Opening Night Shorts
DESCRIPTION:We are putting on an autism-friendly screening of our Opening Night Shorts programme. Autism-friendly screenings are designed to make the cinema more inclusive and accessible for people with sensory sensitivities\, and others who can benefit from this environment. We will not book the cinema more than half full. Lights will be left on low and sound turned down. People are welcome to make noise and move around. We will have a Quiet Space in the Intermedia Gallery on the top floor of CCA available for anyone to take some time out. \nThe programme features a stellar lineup of documentary shorts focused on LGBTQIA+ community and activism. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873610490/events/129085544′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nAll films have English audio with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms are largely accessible to English-speaking blind and partially sighted audiences with lots of explanatory dialogue and relatively bright images. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users\, gender neutral toilets\, and welcomes assistance animals. Click here for CCA’s Accessibility Guide. \nA Quiet Space and programme content notes will be available. Click here for a list of content notes for the 2019 Festival. \nComfy seating (bean bags) are available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nBodies Like Oceans (13m)\nDir. Kat Cory\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nA dreamy portrait of photographer Shoog McDaniel\, a self-described queer fat freak\, whose work with fat bodies in nature transgresses reality. \nContent note: Discussion of racism\, misogyny\, and fatphobia. \nAdam and the Alphas (12m)\nDir. Stuart Thomas Graham\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nMade by students on the 2019 Documentary Production course at Stirling University. \nContent note: Discussion of homophobia. \nI AM! We Are Here! (7m)\nDir: Seyi Adebanjo\, Country: USA\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: English\nI AM! We Are Here! multimedia project documents the vitality and spirit of Queer\, Trans* and Gender Non Conforming People of Color in the Bronx. \nContent note: None. \nUnspoken (17m)\nDir: Patrick G. Lee\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nUnspoken is the collective outpouring of six queer and trans Asian Americans as they grapple with their queerness and consider what family acceptance might look like. The interviewees hail from across the Asian diaspora—from Sri Lanka and Myanmar to China and South Korea. Some are not yet out to their parents\, and this film is their way of doing so. \nContent note: Discussion of homophobia and transphobia. \nWe Are Here (12m)\nDir. Ellie Hodgetts\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nThis documentary follows members of the Manchester House of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence – a worldwide order of Queer nuns whose motto is to promulgate universal joy and expiate stigmatic guilt – as they continue to take a stand against ignorance and spread love wherever they go. \nContent note: Discussion and depiction of homophobia and transphobia\, including scenes of violence. \nButton OUT! (4m)\nDir: Kathleen Mullen\, Country: Canada\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: English\nButton OUT! is a lively animated personal homage to the filmmaker’s own history of protest and the wider story of LGBTQ2S+ experiences contained in the collection of over 1200 buttons housed at the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives in Toronto. \nContent note: Reference to sex\, homophobia\, transphobia\, and racism.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/autism-friendly-opening-night-shorts/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Autism-friendly,Bisexual,Documentary,English language,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/opening_shorts_autism-e1564742015859.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191002T153000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191002T165000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190828T110726Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190906T122302Z
UID:9147-1570030200-1570035000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:LUX Scotland presents: where did we land + Fi Dem I & II
DESCRIPTION:London-based curator and artist Rabz Lansiquot screens their new moving image essay where did we land\, an ongoing experiment interrogating the effect of images of anti-black violence produced and reproduced in film and media\, and parts 1 and 2 of artist Zinzi Minott’s Fi Dem Series\, a continued investigation into Blackness and Diaspora made annually on the anniversary of the Empire Windrush docking in the UK on June 22nd 1948. The screening will be followed by a discussion with Rabz Lansiquot about their research on moving beyond representation and towards liberation in Black film\, and how queerness informs their approach. \nIn partnership with LUX Scotland\, a non-profit agency dedicated to supporting\, developing\, and promoting artists’ moving image practices in Scotland. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873611638/events/129089883′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nFilms have a mixture of English and Patois audio with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. If you would like to attend this event and require BSL interpretation for the discussion\, please email access@sqiff.org at least 2 weeks in advance. \nFilms are not very accessible to English-speaking blind and partially sighted audiences with mostly image-based ideas. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users\, gender neutral toilets\, and welcomes assistance animals. Click here for CCA’s Accessibility Guide. \nA Quiet Space and programme content notes will be available. Click here for a list of content notes for the 2019 Festival. \nComfy seating (bean bags) are available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nLUX Scotland is a non-profit agency dedicated to supporting\, developing and promoting artists’ moving image practices in Scotland. Working at the intersection of the contemporary visual arts and film sectors\, its core activities include public exhibition and touring projects\, learning and professional development for artists and arts professionals\, distribution\, commissioning and production support\, research and sector advocacy. From its offices based in Glasgow\, it works with a growing network of national and international partners\, including museums\, contemporary art organisations\, film festivals and educational institutions\, to deliver its programme. Established in 2014\, LUX Scotland is a part of LUX and is supported by Creative Scotland.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/lux-scotland-presents-where-did-we-land-fi-dem-i-ii/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Discussion,Films,Hearing loop,Non-narrative,People of colour,Shorts,Working class
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/lux_scotland-e1565715172800.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191002T123000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191002T135000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190828T110818Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190909T123927Z
UID:9129-1570019400-1570024200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Intimacies
DESCRIPTION:Touch\, connection\, sensuality\, bonding. Sharing of solidarity\, friendship\, grief\, and (com)passion. This selection of short films from the UK\, US\, Brazil\, and the Amazon trace intimacies between friends\, family\, communities\, and lovers. The revolutionary potential of femme for femme relationships. Upholding trans and immigrant identities and memory across generations. Busting childhood isolation and fear of being queer. Leaving your life behind due to youthful yearning. A slow-paced and tactile assortment of stories embracing many different faces and places. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873611641/events/129089955′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nFilms have a mixture of English\, Persian\, French\, Spanish\, and Portuguese audio and ASL with English captions/subtitles. Hearing loop available. \nMost of the films are not very accessible to English-speaking blind and partially sighted audiences with largely visual storytelling\, minimal dialogue\, and majority non-English language. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users\, gender neutral toilets\, and welcomes assistance animals. Click here for CCA’s Accessibility Guide. \nA Quiet Space and programme content notes will be available. Click here for a list of content notes for the 2019 Festival. \nComfy seating (bean bags) are available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \n#Familiar #Touch #Lost #Figures (13m)\nDir: Katy Jalili\, Country: UK\, Year: 2017\, Language/s: English\, Persian\n#Familiar #Touch #Lost #Figures is an exploration of queer ancestry and diaspora\, the hybrids between cultural traditions and contemporary queer identity. It explores brown bodies and femme for femme intimacies\, and the feeling of being between a search for home and finding home in a familiar stranger. \nContent note: Depiction of nudity. \nSilvia in the waves (13m)\nDir: Gio Olmos\, Country: Canada\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: French\nNoa struggles to honor the identity of his recently deceased parent while his mother tries to uphold the appearance of a conventional family. Grief and fantasy entwine to reveal the complex relationship between history and erasure\, identity and memory. \nContent note: Depiction of queerphobia. \nWelcome to the Ball (5m)\nDir: Adam Vincent Wright\, Country: USA\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\, ASL\nA child learns sign language in hopes of making a new friend. \nContent note: None. \nMy Grandson\, Charlotte (13m)\nDir: Tyler Pierreson\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nA transgender teen and his immigrant granddad\, a Sapeur from the Congo\, bond over their shared understanding of the importance of identity and of always being true to one’s self. \nContent note: Depiction of death. \nCarlito se va Para Siempre (13m)\nDir: Quentin Lazzarotto\, Country: UK\, Year: 2018\, Language/s: Spanish\nIn the Amazonian jungle\, the village of Palma Real resists the modern world. Carlito\, a silent young man\, decides to leave. On the muddy bed of the immense river\, an encounter reveals the secret that Carlito has hidden from his community. \nContent note: None. \nInfinite While It Lasts (19m)\nDir: Akira Kamiki\, Country: Brazil\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: Portuguese\nAfter falling in love at a party\, Danny and Seiji just want to be together. However\, their differences might prove stronger than their feelings. A fiction film about asexuality. \nContent note: Reference to sex.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-intimacies/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Asexual,Deaf,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/sqiff_shorts_intimacies-e1565713848146.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190823
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190827
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190710T135110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190710T135856Z
UID:9054-1566532800-1566791999@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF at Jupiter Rising
DESCRIPTION:We are really pleased to be taking part in Jupiter Rising music festival with 2 programmes of short films during the 3-day festival. Jupiter Rising takes place at Jupiter Artland near Edinburgh 23 to 25 August with a line-up including music\, performance\, film and moving image\, artist-led workshops\, wild swimming\, and more! \nTo find out more about Jupiter Rising and how to book tickets\, click here. \nFor information about Jupiter Artland\, how to get there\, and access information\, click here. \n  \nACCESS \nJupiter Rising is an outdoor festival\, two stages are undercover in large marquees\, one stage is located in the woods. \nEach stage will include a reserved viewing area for wheelchair users and their carers. Other areas include a bar\, cinema\, workshops and activities tent\, all of which are wheelchair accessible and undercover. \nThe ground at Jupiter Artland is grass\, paths\, natural woodland and meadow\, which can sometimes be uneven underfoot or for wheelchair users. \nAccessible camping is located in a meadow\, a short distance away from the main stages. An accessible toilet is provided. \nA quiet space will be provided throughout the event and will be highlighted on the site map. \nThere will be gender-neutral toilets and two accessible toilets located in various locations\, highlighted on the site map. \nAssistance dogs are welcome provided they are on a lead (Jupiter Artland has livestock on site). \nPlease get in touch to let us know if you require a large print version of the printed programme\, which will be available to pick up from the Box Office. \nEar plugs will be available from the Box Office. \nStrobe lighting may feature in some performances and film screenings. \nSQIFF film screenings are in a variety of languages with English language captions for D/deaf and Hard of Hearing audiences. Many of the films are based largely on visual ideas with little spoken language. \nJupiter Rising is committed to improving accessibility. If there is anything we can do to make it easier for you to attend\, or if you have any questions\, thoughts or feedback about access for this event\, please email enquiries@jupiterartland.org or call 01506 889900.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-at-jupiter-rising-music-festival/
LOCATION:Jupiter Artland\, Bonnington House Steadings\, Near Wilkieston\, Edinburgh\, EH27 8BY\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Deaf,Disability,Documentary,Films,Gay men,Lesbian,Non-narrative,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Black-is-me_ElliotBlue2-e1562766476648.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190601T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190601T210000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190527T204803Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190527T204803Z
UID:9022-1559415600-1559422800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Portraits of Artists as Young Men (& Women & Other)
DESCRIPTION:SQIFF curates a screening as part of Glasgow School of Art’s Degree Show programme\, Dress Rehearsal. Portraits of Artists as Young Men (& Women & Other) takes a look at the earlier\, formative days of queer artists who have gone on to make significant bodies of work. Featuring documentation and experimental meanderings by and/or about photographer Ajamu X\, circus performer Jennifer Miller\, and filmmakers Thomas Allen Harris and Barbara Hammer\, amongst others. Common themes emerge of hitting back against oppression and searching for identity through the creative process. \nThis event is free and unticketed. Just come along on the night. \nClick here for GSA’s full Dress Rehearsal Degree Show programme. \nACCESS \nFilms are in the English language with English language captions. \nFilms are experimental so some are quite visual-based but there is a relatively good amount of explanatory dialogue for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nThe Art School has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/portraits-of-artists-as-young-men-women-other/
LOCATION:The Art School\, 20 Scott Street\, Glasgow\, G3 6PE\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Documentary,English language,Films,Free event,Gay men,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/60781531_2435987289786519_2320778272654229504_o-e1558990069228.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190222T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190222T210000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190215T155854Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190216T182329Z
UID:8967-1550862000-1550869200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:QTIPOC shorts for LGBT History Month
DESCRIPTION:For LGBT History Month\, SQIFF and the Coalition for Racial Equality and Rights (CRER) are partnering to showcase short films focusing on QTIPOC representation and ideas. \nMy Loneliness is Killing Me features a femme man of colour who invites a white man to his apartment for a hook-up\, unexpectedly unearthing a dark emotional connection. Clash is a short experimental documentary by queer Iraqi non-binary filmmaker Amrou Al-Khadi critiquing the lack of diversity in on-screen representation in Britain today. Iconic transgender artist and activist\, Marsha “Pay it No Mind” Johnson\, and her life in the hours before she ignited the 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City are depicted in Happy Birthday\, Marsha!. \nThe event will be hosted by Samar Ziadat\, curator\, activist\, and co-founder of Dardishi\, with a discussion with local QTIPOC artists and activists following the screening. \nFREE ENTRY (no need to sign up\, just come along on the night) \nACCESS \nFilms in the English language with captions for Deaf and Hard of Hearing access. BSL interpretation for the discussion. Our venue\, Kelvin Hall\, is wheelchair accessible with accessible toilet facilities. For more information on the venue\, click here. Please get in touch via helen@sqiff.org with any questions about access. \nContent note: reference to violence and scenes of a sexual nature.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/qtipoc-shorts-for-lgbt-history-month/
LOCATION:Kelvin Hall\, 1445 Argyle Street\, Glasgow\, G3 8AW\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:BSL,Discussion,English language,Films,Free event,Gay men,LGBT History Month,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Clash-e1550246322786.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190209T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190306T230000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20190116T172150Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190303T162705Z
UID:8914-1549717200-1551913200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts on Tour
DESCRIPTION:We present on tour an inclusive selection of LGBTQ+ short films from our 2018 Festival Opening Night. Headlining the programme is VISIBLE\, created by Campbell X and Kayza Rose\, who explore QTIPOC (queer\, trans\, and intersex people of colour) histories\, challenging mainstream perceptions and sanitisation of legacies\, and celebrating complexity\, multiplicity\, myths\, gossip\, and legends. Also featuring a lesbian sports star coming out\, being gay in the Maldives\, queer working class vulnerability\, and more. \nScreenings are taking place across Scotland for LGBT History Month. We are pleased director of VISIBLE\, Campbell X\, will join us for Q&As in Dundee\, Hawick\, Ayr\, Edinburgh\, and Stirling. \nSupported by Film Hub Scotland\, part of the BFI’s Film Audience Network. \nTo book\, see list of screenings and booking links below. \nCCA\, Glasgow in partnership with STUC LGBT+ Committee\, Saturday 9th February\, 1pm. Tickets offered on a sliding scale of free to £8. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873601860/events/128926862′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nDundee Contemporary Arts\, Wednesday 13th February\, 6.15pm. Tickets £5-7.50. To book\, please use the button below or call DCA box office on +44 (0)1382 432 444. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.dca.org.uk/whats-on/event/sqiff-shorts-on-tour’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nThe Byre Theatre\, St. Andrews part of Queerfest with Saints LGBT+\, Friday 15th February\, 6pm. Tickets offered on a sliding scale of free to £8. To book\, please use the button below. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/queerfest-sqiff-shorts-on-tour-tickets-55762679676′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nCornucopia\, Hawick in partnership with Scottish Borders LGBT Equality\, Saturday 23rd February\, 4pm. Free\, unticketed – just come along. \n  \nAyr Town Hall in partnership with Ayr Film Society and Ayrshire LGBTQ\, Sunday 24th February\, 6.30pm. Free\, unticketed – just come along. \n  \n50 George Square\, University of Edinburgh with MSc Film\, Exhibition and Curation\, Tuesday 26th February\, 7pm. Tickets offered on a sliding scale of free to £8. To book\, please use the button below. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sqiff-shorts-on-tour-in-edinburgh-tickets-55762331635′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nMacrobert\, Stirling in partnership with Stirling University LGBTQ+ Society\, Friday 1st March\, 7.30pm. Tickets £6. To book\, please use the button below or call Macrobert box office on +44 (0)1786 466 666. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://macrobertartscentre.org/event/sqiff-2018-opening-night-shorts-on-tour/’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nEden Court\, Inverness\, Monday 4th March\, 6.15pm. Tickets £3.50-5.50. To book\, please use the button below or call Eden Court box office on +44 (0)1463 234 234. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://eden-court.co.uk/event/sqiff-shorts-on-tour’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nBelmont Filmhouse\, Aberdeen in partnership with Grampian Pride\, Wednesday 6th March\, 7.30pm. Tickets £5. To book\, please use the button below or call Belmont Filmhouse box office on +44 (0)1224 343 500. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.belmontfilmhouse.com/showing/kino-bar-sqiff-shorts-tour’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nRound One (4m)\nDir: Ella Sowinska\, Year: 2017\nRound One creates a portrait of Nicola Stevens\, who played in the first professional Australian Football League women’s game in 2017. \nThere You Are (15m)\nDir. Lisa Donato\, Year: 2018\nA trans woman must dress like a boy to say goodbye to her dying grandmother. \nBlooming Night (9m)\nDir. Bell Zhong\, Year: 2017\nMesmerised by a pair of red heels\, a lonely street guy in Shanghai follows their owner into a club\, where he discovers a forbidden community that he has never experienced before. \nMedulla Oblongata (8m)\nDir. Roberto Nascimento\, Year: 2017\n“Life can be horrible. But it also can be beautiful. Really f***ing beautiful.” Abraham Naim aka drag queen Medulla Oblongata relates their story of escaping persecution for being gay in the Maldives and finding acceptance and community. \nCrashing Waves (4m)\nDir. Emma Gilbertson\, Year: 2018\nTwo young working-class men explore the intimacy and vulnerability of relationships in a combative dance against the backdrop of an inner city estate\, risking all under the scrutiny of a tight-knit community. \nTop 10 Places to Visit in São Paulo (14m)\nDir. Akira Kamiki\, Year: 2018\nOn a dreamy Sunday\, two photographers walk around São Paulo trying to connect with the city\, and slowly fall in love with each other. \nVISIBLE (20m)\nDir. Campbell X\, Year: 2018\nVISIBLE digs in and shreds misconceptions that LGBTQ+ people of colour have no history – and no story to tell. Weaving together the tales of inspirational ancestors\, contemporary artists\, political activists\, and community leaders – VISIBLE challenges mainstream perception and the sanitisation of LGBTQ+ legacies by celebrating complexity\, multiplicity\, and the myths\, gossips\, legends\, and truths of QTIPOC histories.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-on-tour/
CATEGORIES:Films,Gay men,Lesbian,LGBT History Month,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director,Working class
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/CRASHINGWAVES_STILL02-e1547659300214.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181209T201500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181209T212500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T081849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T223503Z
UID:8427-1544386500-1544390700@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Tender Anguish
DESCRIPTION:Harika Özer is an impoverished trans sex worker whose family sought refuge from Siirt to Manisa in Turkey in the 80s. Raf\, a young queer man in the UK\, struggles to find his place amongst the crowd in a dive gay bar. Icarus arrives in a new city in Brazil and begins an affair with a man that soon goes agonisingly wrong. Real historical figure Mary MacLane cuts a forlorn queer figure in her lonely Montana hometown at the turn of the 20th Century. And Fetish is a Black man in the streets reclaiming his body through magic\, fire\, and defiance. Each character experiences pain and vulnerability and must negotiate how to cope in these stories of tenderness and anguish. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598286′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms are in English\, Portuguese\, and Turkish languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely a lot on visual material to convey ideas and/or are non-English language\, so are less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nThe Wonderful Affair (5m)\nDir: Tahir Ün\, Year: 2016\nHarika Özer is a child whose Kurdish family sought refuge from Siirt to Manisa at the end of 1980s. In his own words\, he is a transsexual feeling female spirit in his own body since early childhood. He has lived in Izmir since 2000 and makes a living through prostitution. This work is a documentary project realised by Harika (literally translated as ‘wonderful’)\, posing for the camera with all his self-confidence and courage. It gives the audience a non-judgemental stance against homophobia. \nFour Quartets (10m)\nDir. Marco Alessi\, Year: 2018\nOver the course of a night out in a gay dive bar\, Raf struggles to find his place amongst the crowd. Four Quartets is a short film about queer community\, and how the anxieties and conditioning we face sometimes stop us from letting ourselves belong. \nAdeus Estrada de Tijolos Amarelos (19m)\nDir. Hiran Matheus\, Year: 2018\nIcarus arrives in another city to try life as a telemarketer\, but when he goes out at night he is caught by a boy. Screenplay based on a Elton John song and filmed with a cell phone. \nBetween my flesh and the world’s fingers (31m)\nDir. Talena Sanders\, Year: 2018\nMary MacLane\, the Wild Woman of Butte\, Montana\, published her diaries in 1902 and 1917. As an out queer and proto-feminist at the turn of the century\, MacLane became notorious upon the publication of her 1902 diary\, I Await the Devil’s Coming. She was whisked away from the industrial hellscape of her copper mining Montana hometown to a life in the public eye as an author\, journalist\, female film pioneer and always a provocateur – sending up social norms throughout her career\, with a special focus on staid notions about women and sexuality. \nBetween my flesh and the world’s fingers is an experimental essay and diary film primarily based on her published diaries and her film work. \nFETISH (16m)\nDir. Topher Campbell\, Year: 2018\nThe character of Fetish is a representation of so many things. He is at once a clear form – a body – and formless\, like the bodies of Basquiat. As a Black man in the streets\, he is both positioned by othering and places himself in a world of looking\, power\, strength\, harassment\, fashion\, sexual objectification\, invisibility\, visibility\, admiration\, CCTV\, selfies\, vulnerability\, humour\, performance\, protest\, danger\, violence and humour. If you have ever been stopped by police for being Black\, embarrassment\, futility and vulnerability are at the apex of the experience. Or\, as is the case with Tamir\, Philando\, Freddy\, Sandra and so on\, being dead and treated like shit is what happens. Fetish in this film experiences and represents this painful embarrassment and vulnerability. It’s hard to watch and painful to experience. \nBy the end of the film through magic\, through fire\, through defiance\, through being a multi-dimensional being in touch with the elements\, Fetish reclaims his body and stands like a colossus in The City.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-tender-anguish/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Documentary,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director,Working class
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/still_01-e1540470245873.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181209T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181209T170000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181002T184621Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T223559Z
UID:8286-1544367600-1544374800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Gay as in Hysterically Funny
DESCRIPTION:What does it mean to make fun of yourself and your community as an LGBTQ+ person? This programme examines queerness and onscreen comedy\, including short films by Raymond Yeung\, Jordan Firstman\, and Alli Logout\, and episodes from Ingrid Jungermann’s classic webseries\, F to 7th. Featuring self-loathing and loathable gay men\, butch lesbians in denial\, and queer femmes in their own carefree universe. \nFollowed by a panel discussion on queerness and comedy featuring comedian Rosie Jones and more guests tbc. \nScreening as part of QFN’s Gay as in Hysterically Funny tour for BFI Comedy Genius.  \nComedy Genius is a celebration of comedy on screen\, led by BFI\, the Independent Cinema Office and BFI Film Audience network\, supported by funds from the National Lottery. QFN is a strategic Film Hub Wales project and receives support from the BFI Film Audience Network.  \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sqiff-shorts-gay-as-in-hysterically-funny-tickets-50921241805′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms are in the English language with English language subtitles/captions. BSL interpretation for panel discussion. \nFilms contains some visual ideas but have a lot of dialogue\, so are relatively suitable for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nScottish Youth Theatre has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nYellow Fever (27m)\nDir: Raymond Yeung\, Year: 1998\nA fun and astute look at the self-imposed prejudices of a gay Chinese-British man. Anglophile Monty is looking for his perfect man\, but only white British men need apply. That is until the attractive Jai Ming moves in next door and the two men seem to connect. Can Monty overcome his prejudices? Writer-director Raymond Yeung’s debut short is a light-hearted comedy of manners. \nF to 7th: Season 1\, Episode 2 “Tweener” (5m)\nDir. Ingrid Jungermann\, Year: 2013\nAn internally homophobic gay struggles to find herself in a world where sexuality and gender have left her old-fashioned lesbianism behind. In “Tweener\,” Ingrid tries to deny her butchness when barred from a lesbian bachelorette party\, whilst cheering on her softball team\, the Wet Lips\, alongside her misogynistic dyke friend.  \nCall Your Father (20m)\nDir. Jordan Firstman\, Year: 2016\nOn Josh and Greg’s first date\, they quickly realize that the generational divide between them is the least of their worries. The infuriatingly mixed messages from a cute but potentially sociopathic millennial force an older man to choose between hopping into bed with him and bailing\, in this darkly comical satire on entitled twenty-somethings. \nF to 7th: Season 1\, Episode 3 “Interchangeable” (12m)\nDir. Ingrid Jungermann\, Year: 2013\nGeeky and sensible Ingrid meets a woman online\, who invites herself over for a hot night of passion\, but what happens when both of them want to ‘be the man’? \nLucid Noon\, Sunset Blush (32m)\nDir. Alli Logout\, Year: 2015\n17-year-old bb gay Micha has just moved into The Palace – a basement full of queer femme Dominatrix\, lovers and misfits. They are beautiful\, carefree and as young as the night. An alternative\, comedy narrative of queer sex workers of colour.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-gay-as-in-hysterically-funny/
CATEGORIES:BSL,Discussion,English language,Gay men,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Web series,Woman director
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Screen-Shot-2016-08-10-at-5.27.00-PM-e1538505443299.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181208T210000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181208T230000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T083917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T222429Z
UID:8445-1544302800-1544310000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Luke & Jack present: Bishop Black Retrospective
DESCRIPTION:We are excited to bring Berlin-based actor and performer Bishop Black to SQIFF to present a retrospective of his amazing and varied work. Bishop has worked with some of the most prodigious and provocative directors in queer porn including Shu Lea Cheang\, Erika Lust\, Morgana Muses\, and Bruce LaBruce. He has handpicked for us a selection of films central to the development of his career and approach\, exploring his transition from gay male to queer porn and his identity as a black queer performer amongst other themes. Join us for a stimulating and seductive evening of x-rated shorts followed by Bishop in conversation about his art with Drew Bigglestone and Ian Diamond of Luke & Jack.  \nIn partnership with Luke & Jack\, Scotland’s premiere sex boutique.  \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598294′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilm in the English language with English language subtitles/captions. The post-film discussion will be BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nFilm relies on visual material to convey ideas but has a lot of voiceover and commentary\, so is relatively accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nHaving My Cake (20m)\nDir: Morgana Muses\, Year: 2015\nHaving My Cake is a sumptuous film detailing a woman’s journey to Paris where she manages to not only have her cake\, but eat it as well. Starring Morgana Muses and Bishop Black. \nDominate Me (12m)\nDir. Erika Lust\, Year: 2016\nCan you handle this one\, guys and girls? This is a story dripping with lust. A story about ecstasy in the land between pleasure and pain\, where restriction can feel like the warmest embrace\, and the lash of a whip like the softest kiss… Erika Lust’s latest release in XConfessions is a BDSM story about a man who longs to be dominated by a woman.  \nThe End (22m)\nDir. Noel Alejandro\, Year: 2018\nJavier is an obsessed artist who is grieving the end of a relationship. His sorrow comes as a combination of memories\, instinct and denial\, and the mourning’s harsh feelings will compromise his sense of reality. Surrounded by doubt\, and subjected to several addictions\, Javier fights to find peace – until his lattermost move take him to a surrealistic emotional purgatory. \nGloaming (12m)\nDir. Vex Ashley & Four Chambers\, Year: 2017\nThe period of time when the sun falls below the horizon line and tears of blue and orange gradiate the sky. I’ve always called this indigo hour but apparently it’s more commonly called blue hour and the Scottish call it the gloaming. \nThe indigo in the sky isn’t exactly black or blue\, it’s not quite day or night. It exists in a gap\, without definition. \nZombie Queer Punk Urban Post Porn Horror Show (5m)\nDir. Tchivett\, Year: 2017\nBasically a crazy romp through industrial Berlin by porn stars made up as zombies\, all of them licking and humping anything in sight like they’re fresh brains.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/luke-jack-present-bishop-black-retrospective/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Bisexual,BSL,English language,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/D_60-e1540469119873.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181208T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181208T190000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T085945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T220828Z
UID:8456-1544292000-1544295600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Deaf Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:A showcase of work by and about Deaf queer filmmakers and artists. Films include Dickie Hearts’ latest short\, zombie spectacular The Deaf vs The Dead; a documentary about Deaf gay porn actor\, Rick; a film-poem\, featuring Donna Williams\, about translation between British Sign Language and English\, Bilingual Poet’s Dilemma; and The Unlimited House of Krip\, a doc exploring the fusion of D/deaf and disabled performers with the extravagant world of vogue culture. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598305′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in English and German as well as British\, American\, and German sign languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely to some extent on visual material but most have explanatory dialogue and voiceover\, so are relatively accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nThe Deaf vs The Dead – Episode 1: “Outbreak” (7m)\nDir: Dickie Hearts\, Year: 2017\nWhen the undead apocalypse breaks out in Los Angeles\, an out Deaf man must find a way to survive and protect his loved ones\, even if it means teaming up with some unlikely people. \nRick (16m)\nDir. Jan-Peter Horstmann\, Year: 2017\nRicco Muller was crowned Mr Gay Switzerland in 2009 and now finds a home under the bright lights of the adult film set as Rick Louis\, coming into himself away from the limitations that society has tried to put on him as a gay\, D/deaf person. \nBilingual Poet’s Dilemma (4m)\nDir. Sandra Alland & Ania Urbanowska\, Year: 2017\nDeaf poet Donna Williams playfully shows the difficulties of translation between British Sign Language and English. Poem in English and BSL by Donna Williams; reading of poem by K. Yvonne Strain. Part of Stairs and Whispers: D/deaf and Disabled Poets Write Back (Nine Arches Press\, 2017)\, edited by Sandra Alland\, Khairani Barokka and Daniel Sluman. \nThe Unlimited House of Krip  (26m)\nDir. Garry Robson & Jane Farley\, Year: 2018\nExploring the fusion of D/deaf and disabled performers with the extravagant world of vogue culture. Fittings Multimedia Arts formed a “House” of Deaf performers to walk in the Legendary House of Suarez Vogue Ball and the process – from auditions to performance – was recorded as a celebration of diversity.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-deaf-perspectives/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,BSL,Deaf,Disability,Documentary,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/06jpgRICK2-e1540475407573.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181208T153000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181208T171000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T091127Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190326T112300Z
UID:8462-1544283000-1544289000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Queer Scotland
DESCRIPTION:Our 2018 Scottish shorts programme contains another exciting range of work by and about LGBTQ+ people and communities within our (un)fair land. Among the imagery and themes included are the search for community and intimacy\, trans embodiment\, anti-queer conditioning\, erotic fantasies in rural landscapes\, lost love\, spinsterhood\, tarot cards\, crayfish\, and witches! Featuring a spectrum of narrative and experimental styles encompassing melodrama\, film-poetry\, animation\, collective filmmaking\, documentary\, and diaristic footage. \nWe hope to be joined by a number of the filmmakers for a Q&A. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598307′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in English\, Scottish Gaelic\, and British sign languages with English language subtitles/captions. The Q&A will be BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nA mixture of film styles with around half relying on visual material to convey ideas and half conveying ideas via dialogue or voiceover. The large majority of films are English language. So\, the screening is relatively accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nMy Loneliness is Killing Me (16m)\nDir: Tim Courtney\, Year: 2018\nA young genderqueer individual searches for community and intimacy\, uncovering an unexpected sexual and emotional connection within the darker edges of the nocturnal metropolis. \nThese Are My Hands (8m)\nDir. Evi Tsiligaridou\, Year: 2018\nThese Are My Hands is a short documentary film-poem written and performed by radical British playwright\, Jo Clifford. It is a deeply moving\, personal account of transgender embodiment in a lifetime\, speaking of wounds\, challenges\, victories\, and the journey towards self-empowerment. The poet’s voice is embraced by a lyrical\, mesmerising soundtrack and together with the graceful and intimate visuals composes a profoundly tender piece. \nEnid & Valerie (2m)\nDir. Matthew Kennedy\, Year: 2018\nEnid & Valerie is a short film about a lone spinster named Valerie. Here we venture in to her dreams\, where she meets Enid (a witch). Could this be the start of an unlikely friendship? \nLong Lost Lover (5m)\nDir. Sandra Alland & Ania Urbanowska\, Year: 2017\nBisexual deaf poet\, Bea Webster\, performs a poem in British Sign Language about her return to Thailand. Poem in English and BSL by Bea Webster; reading of poem by K. Yvonne Strain. Part of Stairs and Whispers: D/deaf and Disabled Poets Write Back (Nine Arches Press\, 2017)\, edited by Sandra Alland\, Khairani Barokka and Daniel Sluman. \nHEARTS (8m)\nDir. Nas Saraei\, Year: 2018\nSarah\, a lost and stuck in a rut 20-something\, ponders and reflects on love in Edinburgh\, after losing the ‘one’ she thought was the ‘one’. \nPouring On House (10m)\nDir. Conor Baird\, Year: 2018\nPouring On House engages with the gradual event of leaving a longtime family home. This strange grief is caught between the familiarity and fascination of interiors and the surrounding suburban sites. Throughout\, a body surveys potential presences of contamination whilst coming to realise a disorientating hopelessness felt from ongoing anti-queer conditioning. \nSubmerged Village (21m)\nDir. Andrew Black\, Year: 2017\nExpanding on elements of Pamela Colman Smith’s drawing for The Moon tarot card – two dogs\, a freshwater crayfish\, a pool of water\, a mountainous landscape – Submerged Village takes discrete moments at rural locations in Yorkshire and the West coast of Scotland and claims them as queer experiences.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-queer-scotland-2/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:BSL,Deaf,Documentary,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Scottish premiere,Shorts,Trans,Woman director
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/MLiKM-Bathroom-No-Title-Web-e1540467376929.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181208T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181208T164000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T091616Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181203T183246Z
UID:8465-1544281200-1544287200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:DESIRES AND RESISTANCE | UNEARTHING TRANS LEGACIES
DESCRIPTION:Anonymous sexual encounters and flirtations with the camera\, dress-up with Flawless Sabrina\, and a night at the Stonewall Inn with Marsha P. Johnson: this programme proposes alternative modes of retrieving and disseminating a trans* past through an erotic gaze. Addressing an erasure of trans* legacies\, these works place trans* sexual expression and resistances in conversation with a non-linear idea of history that is both real and fabricated\, defiantly looking toward a future of pleasure\, play\, and beauty. \nCurated and presented by Finn Paul in partnership with Outfest LGBTQ Film Festival in LA. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’http://www.cca-glasgow.com/programme/sqiff18-desires-and-resistance-or-unearthing-trans-legacies’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ collar=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in the English language with English language subtitles/captions. The introduction will be BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely on visual material to convey ideas\, so are less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nOutlaw – Excerpt – first 16 min (16m)\nDir: Alisa Lebow\, Year: 1994 \nLeslie Feinberg\, a self-identified “gender outlaw” who has spent much of zir life passing as a man\, speaks with passion and intelligence about zir exp… \nSt Pel (16m)\nDir. Jason Barker\, Year: 1998 \nInterviews with 5 friends and the queer retelling of a story of a medieval saint.\n \nFlyHole (6m)\nDir. Malic Amalya\, Year: 2017 \nFlyHole tells the story of a housefly who transitions into a man in order to cruise gay bars. Text and images are appropriated from the March 1985 issue of the adult\, gay digest magazine\, Manscape\, including illustrations by Mike Kuchar. \nShe Whose Blood is Clotting My Underwear (3m)\nDir. Vika Kirchenbauer\, Year: 2016 \nMade for the performance project Cool For You\, this video follows an artist’s research on thermal vision and the enhanced gazes of modern warfare. She uses these technical means to discuss intimacy and the body. \nAt Least You Know You Exist (16m)\nDir: Zackary Drucker\, Year: 2011 \nMade in collaboration with New York performer and drag queen Flawless Sabrina\, the film At Least You Know You Exist explores the interaction between two artists of different ages. \nFirst Love (5m)\nDir. Alec Butler\, Year: 2002 \nOur trans/2spirit/intersex hero Alick takes a walk in the birch grove with Kay\, the high school siren\, the girl of their dreams\, things get hot and wet\, melting hearts and the cold snow of the Canadian landscape. \nbeside the water\, 1999-2003 (12m)\nDir. Finn Paul\, Year: 2018 \nIn this provocative video essay\, queer artist Finn Paul mixes up sexual discovery\, community formation and the isolation of desert landscapes in a collection of erotic snapshots. \nMighty Real (3m)\nDir. Vicente Ugartechea\, Year: 2018 \nA young trans person embodies confidence and power in this cross-generational sexual encounter. \nHappy Birthday\, Marsha! (14m)\nDir. Reina Gossett and Sasha Wortzel\, Year: 2016 \nHappy Birthday\, Marsha! is a fictional short film that imagines transgender rights pioneers Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera in the hours leading to the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City. The film stars Mya Taylor as Marsha P. Johnson.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/desires-and-resistance-unearthing-trans-legacies/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:BSL,Documentary,English language,Films,Hearing loop,People of colour,Scottish premiere,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/BTW2-e1540467181344.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181207T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181207T193000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T093601Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181025T110717Z
UID:8477-1544207400-1544211000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:on the tips of our tongues
DESCRIPTION:on the tips of our tongues intertwines artist film and sound works\, readings and new writing. Concerned with illegible archives and embodied gestures this thing stems from Camara Taylor’s ongoing practice based research project\, wet blue embrace(s)\, which explores strategies and aesthetic practices amidst the Black Queer Atlantic.  \nCurated and presented by artist and researcher Camara Taylor. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598312′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in English with English language subtitles/captions. BSL interpretation for readings. Hearing loop available. \nPlease contact access@sqiff.org to find out more about the films and level of suitability for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/on-the-tips-of-our-tongues/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,BSL,Discussion,English language,Films,Hearing loop,Non-narrative,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Untitled-Facepalm-_-2015-e1540465629297.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181207T153000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181207T163500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T094537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T210408Z
UID:8483-1544196600-1544200500@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Queer Arab Lives
DESCRIPTION:A series of shorts that reveal the social intricacies of queer Arab life. Nazem\, a genderqueer Egyptian-Iraqi drag-queen\, prepares for a performance informed by childhood memories of her mother. A lesbian woman from Lebanon takes a fairground ride with her friends where their conversation turns to sex\, relationships\, and desire. And a Syrian trans woman navigates everyday life in 90s Beirut. \nCurated by Samar Ziadat in partnership with Dardishi\, a zine and Festival of Arab womxn’s art. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598315′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in Arabic\, English\, and French languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely on visual material to convey ideas and are majority non-English language\, so less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nThree Centimetres (9m)\nDir: Lara Zeidan\, Year: 2018\nIn the oldest fun park of Beirut\, four young female friends go on a Ferris Wheel ride. During this claustrophobic open-air journey\, they touch on intimate subjects\, from making best use of three centimetres to Joanna’s recent breakup. However\, Suzie’s breakup advice leads to an unexpected confession. \nRUN(A)WAY ARAB (12m)\nDir. Amrou Al-Khadi\, Year: 2017\nNazeem is a 26 year old Middle Eastern drag queen who names herself QUEEN ZA DREAM – she is preparing for a show with the utmost gravity\, with an outfit evocative of an Egyptian deity.  Interwoven with this is the story of Nazeem as a genderqueer 8 year-old boy\, and the close bond he has with his Iraqi-Egyptian mother\, Halima. Whilst flamboyant and in many ways a drag queen herself on the surface\, Halima is governed by the strict expectations of gender in Arab society. \nCinema Fouad (41m)\nDir. Mohamed Soueid\, Year: 1994\nKhaled\, a Syrian transgender migrant dreams of undergoing gender transition surgery. While trying to make a living from various menial jobs\, she falls in love with a Palestinian freedom fighter and joins his resistance. Gently\, compassionately\, Cinema Fouad draws a portrait of Khaled and introduces the viewer to one of Beirut’s rarely seen netherworlds.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-queer-arab-lives/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Films,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/run-a-way-arab-22-e1540465026590.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181207T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181207T161000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T095043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T210034Z
UID:8487-1544194800-1544199000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Weird and Wild
DESCRIPTION:An encounter with a strange funeral procession in Bethnal Green\, a family losing the plot after meeting their son’s trans girlfriend\, a middle-aged gay man seemingly eerily affected by a forest camping trip\, and queer feminist gangs doing battle in a violent\, dystopian present. Weird and Wild consists of work by filmmakers expert in creating tense atmospheres and queer moods whilst recounting their gripping tall tales. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598316′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in English\, French\, and Norwegian languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely on visual material to convey ideas and two out of four films are non-English language\, so less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nThe Brother (4m)\nDir: Kai Fi’ain\, Year: 2018\nOn a bleary eyed morning in Bethnal Green\, you never know who you might bump into. \nCalamity (22m)\nDir. Séverine De Streyker & Maxime Feyers\, Year: 2017\nFrance meets her son’s girlfriend for the first time. She loses control… \nSkogen (The Forest) (20m)\nDir. Magnus Mork\, Year: 2018\nA middle aged couple is tenting in a forest. Bjørn seems more used to the setting than Lars\, but they are both influenced by the nature. Surrounded by the trees they talk about big and small questions in life. A lovestory. \nSwarm of Selenium (23m)\nDir. Maude Matton & SJ Rahatoka\, Year: 2018\nIn the surreal dystopian present\, two queer feminist crews cohabit the shells of an abandoned malt factory. As a troubling pattern begins to emerge from their mouths in the form of shattered glass\, all are shaken\, but some are hit harder than others. Through dance\, visual work\, and anti-work\, they merge forces to try to care for one another and combat the insidious violent process which seems to increasingly come from within.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-weird-and-wild/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Bisexual,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director,Working class
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/swarm_img_1-e1540464797374.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181207T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181207T132000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T102445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181107T222506Z
UID:8504-1544184000-1544188800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Bodies and Borders
DESCRIPTION:The most urgent issues surrounding identity and oppression revolve around bodies and borders. In Being Okey\, a gay Nigerian man is denied asylum in Switzerland and consequently caught between the constant fear of being sent home and hope of a life in safety. ABEO is an animation by Latinx artist Brenda M. Lopez Zepeda depicting the journey of two immigrants risking their lives to cross the Arizona desert. My Shoreline is an experimental film-poem about a disabled queer body in water\, and My Own Wings documents intersex people from around the world. Working class queer bodies and class borders are forefronted in Krissy Mahan’s All in a Day’s Work and the implication of supposed sexual boundaries is explored in Patricia Silva’s bisexual ode\, A Feeling More Than a Picture. Finally\, legendary lesbian filmmaker Barbara Hammer’s new short\, Evidentiary Bodies\, is a plea for empathy and compassion generated through the viewing of other beings.  \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598338/events/128819651′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in English and Spanish languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms are mixed with some relying on visual material to convey ideas and some using more dialogue. The majority are English language. So\, the event is relatively accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nBeing Okey (34m)\nDir: Nadia Lanfranchi\, Nina Oppliger\, Corinne Pfister\, Year: 2017\nNigerian Okey describes seeking asylum in Switzerland after narrowly escaping death when a mob tried to kill him because he is gay. \nMy Shoreline (4m)\nDir. Aimee Louw\, Year: 2016\nAttempting to reach the Saint Laurence River boardwalk in Montreal proves to be an impossible task for Aimee in this film-poem on the everyday trials of a Disabled queer. \nABEO (7m)\nDir. Brenda M. Lopez Zepeda\, Year: 2018\nA hard-hitting mixed media animated short that depicts the journey of Nadia and Lupe\, two immigrants who risked their lives to cross the Arizona desert in search of a better life. \nMy Own Wings (8m)\nDir. Katia Repina\, Year: 2018\nMy Own Wings is a transmedia project that aims to explore intersex identity. \nAll in a Day’s Work (10m)\nDir. Krissy Mahan & Patricia Silva\, Year: 2018\nAll in a Day’s Work is a series of vignettes about two working class queers who each present as women. \nEvidentiary Bodies (9m)\nDir. Barbara Hammer\, Year: 2018\nA one screen version of an originally three screen immersion exploring illness\, time\, and the isolation of the material body. \nA Feeling More Than a Picture (5m)\nDir. Patricia Silva\, Year: 2017\nA queer reordering of cinematic gestures\, A Feeling More Than a Picture is a formal experiment with the bisexual vocabularies inherently present in the canon of cinema.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-bodies-and-borders/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Bisexual,Disability,Documentary,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Woman director,Working class
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/BeingOkey_2-e1540464087157.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181206T204500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181206T220000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T102902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T205538Z
UID:8511-1544129100-1544133600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Floofy Friends
DESCRIPTION:Indulging our obsession with cutesy animals\, we present a gay goldfish\, genderqueer spotted hyena\, an affair between a dorky fox and a hunky wolf\, and a somewhat unfortunate cat. This selection of shorts reflects on the non-human as allegories for our own queer lives\, mediators of family discord\, and source of philosophical contemplation of race\, gender\, and the human condition. Please note that although we have used the word ‘floofy’ in the title\, the programme contains violence enacted both by and on the animal protagonists. Vegetarians and vegans in particular should view with caution.    \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598339/events/128819652′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in Greek\, English\, and Swedish languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely on visual material to convey ideas and the majority are non-English language\, so less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nGoldfish (14m)\nDir: Yorgos Angelopoulos\, Year: 2017\nA young boy thinks his new goldfish is gay\, much to the horror of his conservative father. \ndid you know? (7m)\nDir. Lynn Kim\, Year: 2018\nAn exploration in shared sites of queerness and sexuality between the spotted hyena and myself. \nManivald  (13m)\nDir. Chintis Lundgren\, Year: 2017\nManivald\, a fox\, is turning 33. Overeducated\, unemployed\, and generally uninspired\, he lives with his overbearing\, retired mother. It is an easy life\, but not a good one. This unhealthy co-dependence changes when the washing machine breaks down and Toomas\, a sexy wolf repairman\, arrives to fix it\, and them. \nSwedish Candy\, Some Violence and a Bit of Cat (45m)\nDir. Ester Martin Bergsmark\, Year: 2018\nAn existential sugar shock which takes us on a fun\, candy-filled roller-coaster ride between cruel violence and extreme cuteness – which prove to be disturbingly close together.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-floofy-friends/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/still1_1920-e1540463739907.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181206T203000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181206T214500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T103518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181122T172350Z
UID:8515-1544128200-1544132700@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Scotch Porn
DESCRIPTION:After several years of pushing the queer porn filmmaking agenda in Scotland\, SQIFF is delighted to be able to showcase some (sort of) homemade pornographic content. Bruce LaBruce creates a parody Scots porn character in Scotch Egg. Performer Candy Flip plays a straight girl impersonating a gay man and in a festish bar meets the homo she’s dreamed about\, played by Scottish performer AJ Alexander. Candy gets the full experience: sucked off\, taking her man from behind\, and getting to come on his face. How does that work? Use your imagination! Screening with Smoke gets in your eyes by Glasgow-based Dylan Meade\, a character’s journey of sexual compulsion that winds through destruction of property and bodies\, a coven of queer witches\, and a vase in ass sex magic ritual.  \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598340/events/128819653′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in the English language with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely a lot on visual material to convey ideas\, so less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nSmoke gets in your eyes (26m)\nDir: Dylan Meade\, Year: 2018\nA character’s journey of sexual compulsion that winds through destruction of property and bodies\, a coven of queer witches\, and a vase in ass sex magic ritual.  \nAJ Alexander & Rick Lous (19m)\nDir. Cazzo Films\, Year: 2016\nTwo sporty guys AJ Alexander and Rick Lous relax in the beauty of Berlin’s nature and smoke. Featuring rough rubber\, deep throating\, and steamy tongue fucking. \nScotch Egg (20m)\nDir. Bruce LaBruce\, Year: 2018\n…a straight girl is really curious about what it would be like to have sex with a gay man..
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/scotch-porn/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Bisexual,English language,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/SCOTCHEGG-20-e1541092187337.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181206T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181206T194500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T103949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T213051Z
UID:8519-1544121000-1544125500@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:East Asian Focus: Extravaganza + shorts
DESCRIPTION:A behind-the-scenes look at the vibrant\, fierce and ever-so-slightly chaotic world of one of the most dynamic drag scenes in China. Filmed in July 2017\, Extravaganza covers the build-up behind a night of twelve drag performances\, with running shade provided by organiser Miss Jade.  Screening with a selection of new Chinese short films chosen by Extravaganza’s co-director\, Matthew Baren\, who is also one of the founders of CINEMQ. \nWith an introduction by SQIFF’s Marc David Jacobs\, curator of our East Asian Focus. \nCINEMQ is an unrefined queer underground collective based in Shanghai. We organise events and curate content from around the world\, with a focus on China and East Asia. Walls are our screens. Rooftops and basements are our cinemas. Queer is our purpose. Click here to visit CINEMQ’s website or contact them by emailing cinemq.sh@gmail.com for more information. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598342/events/128819654′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in the English and Mandarin Chinese languages with English language subtitles/captions. Introduction BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely on visual material to convey ideas and some films are non-English language\, so less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nLotus Lantern (7m)\nDir: Xingpei Shen\, Year: 2017\nAn animated tribute to the late singer Zhou Xuan\, a missing link between the filmmaker’s queer identity and Chinese heritage. \nUnfinished (7m)\nDir. Siufung Law\, Year: 2016\nSiufung attempts to formulate transgender subjectivity by retelling his own gender struggle through poetry and experimental video. \nThe Decision of Riley (4m)\nDir. Yue Xia Year: 2017\nRiley was born with a female body\, but has always been confused about her gender identity. One day\, she discovers a simple way to witch up her biology. \nGoodbye Mr B\, Hello Ms B! (15m)\nDir. Beatrice Wong\, Year: 2015\nBeatrice records her experiences of gender confirmation surgery\, and meditates on what it means to be a woman in this honest and very entertaining autobiographical documentary. \nExtravaganza (45m)\nDir. Matthew Baren & Will Dai\, Year: 2018\nFeel the shade\, live the fantasy. A new documentary about the Shanghai drag scene.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/east-asian-focus-extravaganza-shorts/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:BSL,Documentary,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Extravaganza-1-e1541092085833.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181206T181500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181206T195500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T104713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T151202Z
UID:8527-1544120100-1544126100@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Picture This
DESCRIPTION:Filmmaker and vlogger Ross Wilcock presents short films building on his own video for BBC The Social\, Online Dating with a Disability. Themes of ableism and anxiety around sex and dating are explored alongside joy in self-expression and claiming Queer and Disabled as an identity. Screening along with Ross’ own work are Sherren Lee’s The Things You Think I’m Thinking\, about a burn-survivor and amputee going on a date for the first time since his accident\, and Picture This\, in which Canadian activist Andrew Gurza describes his mission to make sex and disability part of the public discourse.   \nFollowed by a discussion hosted by Ross Wilcock on being queer and Disabled and what that means for your dating life. In partnership with Glasgow Disability Alliance. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598351/events/128819672′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in the English language with English language subtitles/captions. Discussion BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nAudio description available. Please ask at box office for a headset. Films have a lot of explanatory dialogue and voiceover\, so are otherwise relatively accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nOnline Dating With A Disability (3m)\nDir: Ross Wilcock\, Year: 2018\nRoss Wilcock shares his experience of online dating with a disability in a short video made for BBC The Social. \nThe Things You Think I’m Thinking (15m)\nDir. Sherren Lee\, Year: 2017\nA burn-survivor and amputee goes on a date for the first time since his accident. \nPicture This (33m)\nDir. Jari Osborne\, Year: 2017\nWhat does it mean to be disabled and desirable? In Picture This\, a new documentary by Jari Osborne\, we meet Andrew Gurza\, a self-described “queer cripple” who has made it his mission to make sex and disability part of the public discourse.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-picture-this/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Audio description,BSL,Disability,Discussion,Documentary,English language,Films,Gay men,Hearing loop,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/PICTURE_THIS_10040122-e1540464580597.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181206T153000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181206T165000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181025T105509Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181113T150810Z
UID:8541-1544110200-1544115000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Shorts: Overcome
DESCRIPTION:Strong narratives of queer characters who are occasionally overcome but mostly do the overcoming are contained in this programme of gutsy shorts. A trans man is bullied when his gender is outed at a new workplace\, a queer woman faces homophobic banter at her hair salon\, a trans woman visits the family home after her mother’s death and struggles with revealing her true self\, as another trans woman searches for love and community after moving to Berlin from San Francisco. Each protagonist uses courage and determination to express themselves and survive.   \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873598353/events/128819675′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms in English\, German\, and Chinese languages with English language subtitles/captions. Hearing loop available. \nFilms rely on visual material to convey ideas and two out of four films are non-English language\, so less accessible for blind and partially sighted audiences. Large print versions of handouts available. \nCCA has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nComfy seating (bean bags) available. If you would like to reserve this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nMATHIAS (30m)\nDir: Clara Stern\, Year: 2017\nMathias is transgender. Although he is more than sure about his decision to live as a man\, he still has to find his way in his new identity and especially in his new job. And also his relationship with his girlfriend seems to have changed due to the transition. \nLadies Day  (9m)\nDir. Abena Taylor-Smith\, Year: 2018\nAmma arrives at her hair salon\, having fallen out with her girlfriend\, Jade. Inside\, she is greeted like an old friend. But when the conversation suddenly turns homophobic\, Amma has a difficult decision to make: stay silent\, or stick up for herself… \nSunken Plum (20m)\nDir. Roberto F. Canuto & Xu Xiaoxi\, Year: 2017\nWorking at a nightclub in Chengdu\, a transgender Chinese woman receives an unexpected visit from her cousin\, informing her that the mother has died. As the only “son”\, she feels obligated to return to her birthplace for the sake of her family\, even though she’ll have to hide her true self from those that once shared her past. \nAlyha Love (19m)\nDir. Savio Debernardis\, Year: 2017\nAlyha Love is a walking contradiction\, a typical child of the generation Y. Her life oscillates between her passions and others’ expectations\, between the search for love and the struggle to feel completely herself. In her journey\, she overcomes geographical and gender barriers to land in Berlin\, where\, surrounded by like-minded people\, she tries to find herself without getting lost.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-shorts-overcome/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Documentary,Films,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans,Woman director,Working class
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Ladies-Day_-Still-1-e1540465380207.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181205T203000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181205T220000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20180926T102434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181115T135555Z
UID:8219-1544041800-1544047200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF 2018 Opening Night Shorts
DESCRIPTION:We kick off our 2018 edition with an exciting and boundary-pushing programme of contemporary LGBTQ+ shorts from around the world. Headlining is VISIBLE\, created by Campbell X and Kayza Rose\, who explore QTIPOC (queer trans intersex people of colour) histories\, challenging mainstream perceptions and sanitisation of legacies\, and celebrating complexity\, multiplicity\, myths\, gossip\, and legends.   \nWe hope to welcome several of the filmmakers for a Q&A. Followed by an informal drinks reception for all ticket holders. \nTickets are priced on a sliding scale £0-£8 depending on what you can afford. To book\, please use the button below or call GFT box office on +44 (0)141 332 6535. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://glasgowfilm.org/shows/sqiff-2018-opening-night-shorts-qanda-nc-15′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nFilms are in a variety of languages with English language subtitles/captions. BSL interpretation for introduction and filmmaker Q&A. Hearing loop available at GFT box office only. \nLarge print versions of handouts available. \nGlasgow Film Theatre has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for more details on venue access. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nIn order to make SQIFF more accessible to those on a low income\, we use a sliding scale ticket price of £0-£8 for our events. You can choose what you pay based on your circumstances – you won’t be asked for any proof / ID\, we just ask that you are honest! Our ticket sales go towards supporting the vital work of LGBTQ+ filmmakers\, artists and organisers. If you have a free ticket and can no longer use it\, please contact the relevant venue box office to let them know so it can be used by someone else. For more info on what you should pay\, click here. \n  \nRound One (4m)\nDir: Ella Sowinska\, Year: 2017\nRound One creates a portrait of Nicola Stevens\, who played in the first professional Australian Football League women’s game in 2017. \nThere You Are (15m)\nDir. Lisa Donato\, Year: 2018\nA trans woman must dress like a boy to say goodbye to her dying grandmother. \nBlooming Night (9m)\nDir. Bell Zhong\, Year: 2017\nMesmerised by a pair of red heels\, a lonely street guy in Shanghai follows their owner into a club\, where he discovers a forbidden community that he has never experienced before. \nMedulla Oblongata (8m)\nDir. Roberto Nascimento\, Year: 2017\n“Life can be horrible. But it also can be beautiful. Really f***ing beautiful.” Abraham Naim aka drag queen Medulla Oblongata relates their story of escaping persecution for being gay in the Maldives and finding acceptance and community. \nCrashing Waves (4m)\nDir. Emma Gilbertson\, Year: 2018\nTwo young working-class men explore the intimacy and vulnerability of relationships in a combative dance against the backdrop of an inner city estate\, risking all under the scrutiny of a tight-knit community. \nTop 10 Places to Visit in São Paulo (14m)\nDir. Akira Kamiki\, Year: 2018\nOn a dreamy Sunday\, two photographers walk around São Paulo trying to connect with the city\, and slowly fall in love with each other. \nVISIBLE (20m)\nDir. Campbell X\, Year: 2018\nVISIBLE digs in and shreds misconceptions that LGBTQ+ people of colour have no history – and no story to tell. Weaving together the tales of inspirational ancestors\, contemporary artists\, political activists\, and community leaders – VISIBLE challenges mainstream perception and the sanitisation of LGBTQ+ legacies by celebrating complexity\, multiplicity\, and the myths\, gossips\, legends\, and truths of QTIPOC histories.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-2018-opening-night-shorts/
LOCATION:Glasgow Film Theatre\, 12 Rose Street\, Glasgow\, G3 6RB\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:BSL,Discussion,Films,People of colour,Scottish premiere,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/VISIBLE_still_2-1-e1537954269978.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181121T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181121T210000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20181118T190252Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181118T190252Z
UID:8823-1542826800-1542834000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Stirling Uni LGBTQ+ Society presents: SQIFF 2018 Shorts
DESCRIPTION:LGBTQ+ and AirTV are bringing SQIFF to Stirling. We will be screening a selection of shorts from the upcoming SQIFF 2018 programme followed by a Q&A with Michael Richardson\, writer of My Loneliness is Killing Me\, and SQIFF’s Coordinator\, Helen Wright. \nAll are invited to come along\, take in the incredible films and have an opportunity to ask a few of your own questions (so start writing them down now) \nThis is a free\, unticketed event taking place in Cottrell 2V1 at Stirling University. \n  \nACCESS \nFilms are in a variety of languages with English language subtitles and captions. \nLarge print versions of handouts available. \nCottrell 2V1 has good access for wheelchair users. Click here for a disabled access map of Stirling University Campus. \nWe have a limited travel fund to assist people to come to the Festival for those who could not otherwise afford to attend. If you would like to apply for this\, please contact access@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/stirling-uni-lgbtq-society-presents-sqiff-2018-shorts/
LOCATION:Cottrell 2V1\, University of Stirling\, Stirling\, FK9 4LA\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Films,Free event,Gay men,Intersex,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180912T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180912T210000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20180910T123732Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180910T123907Z
UID:8197-1536778800-1536786000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Presents: GSA Freshers’ Week Best of SQIFF Shorts
DESCRIPTION:Scottish Queer International Film Festival (SQIFF) presents some of our fav short films from the last 3 years of our fest. Featuring a meditation on butch-femme lesbian relationships\, a colourful ode to cruising\, a trans man building his own cyborg twin\, and more. This programme explores identities alongside abstracts\, queer issues side by side with experiments in form. \n**ACCESS** \nThis event is taking place on the ground floor of The Glue Factory with level access via the entrance to the right hand side of the building as you approach from Garscube Road. An accessible toilet is available. The films are in English\, Swahili\, Telugu\, and Portuguese with English subtitles. English language films and segments are subtitled in English for D/deaf and Hard of Hearing access. \nFREE event open to all\, part of Glasgow School of Art’s Freshers’ Week. \nContent note: queerphobic violence and sex. \nThis event is funded through GSA Sustainability. \n  \nEverything That I’m Not (15m) \nDir: Roman Manfredi\, Country: UK\, Year: 2017 \nEverything That I’m Not centres the relationships of 3 Butch/Femme and Stud/Fem lesbian couples from working class backgrounds. \n  \nCourtship Disorder (5m) \nDir. John Walter\, Country: UK\, Year: 2015 \nCourtship Disorder addresses cruising and sexual risk\, in particular around the ‘cottage\,’ a public toilet that is repurposed as a space of sex. Cruising for sex in real space has not disappeared despite the development of online cruising apps. ‘Courtship Disorder’ refers to a controversial term used by sexologists such as John Money to describe a spectrum of human behaviours\, especially in men\, including exhibitionism\, voyeurism\, toucherism\, rubbing\, and sexual assault. \n  \nKuhani (7m)\nDir. Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine\, Countries: Nigeria/Uganda/USA\, Year: 2013 \nAn experimental film inspired by Ugandan Catholic priest Father Anthony Musaala’s open letter to the church titled “The Failure of Celibate Chastity among Diocesan Priests.” Father Musaala is one of many Ugandans who have been persecuted as a result of the country’s recently introduced Anti-Homosexuality Act. \n  \nLove Letter / Prēma Lēkha (5m) \nDir: Neelu Bhuman\, Country: UK\, Year: 2015 \nAn abstract film exploring gender and race through the power of erotics and love. \n  \nTailor (10m) \nDir: Cala dos Anjas\, Country: Brazil\, Year: 2017\nTailor is a young cartoonist from Rio de Janeiro who started drawing cartoons to express issues around being trans he was facing and tell the stories of other transgender people. \n  \nMymy (14m) \nDir. Anna Helme\, Country: Australia\, Year: 2014 \nIn a mythic cyberfeminist universe\, a frustrated young man yearns for affinity and connection. In an age of digital avatars\, he crafts a version of himself that is far more corporeal – by stitching together parts of himself to become his own cyborg twin. However\, his new clone has been corrupted by a techno-magick virus… \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-presents-gsa-freshers-week-best-of-sqiff-shorts/
LOCATION:The Glue Factory\, 15 Burns Street\, Glasgow\, G4 9SE\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Shorts
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180426T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180426T211500
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20180404T200512Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180418T222516Z
UID:8142-1524769200-1524777300@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:An Unashamed Claim to Visibility
DESCRIPTION:As queer communities strive to embrace intersectional politics\, those with a disability or functional diversity are often left behind. This programme presents an exciting selection of work by and about functionally diverse filmmakers exploring the intersections of queerness and disability. Followed by a discussion with guest speakers to be announced. \nAges 18+ only. \nContent note: discussion of violence\, including sexual violence. \nTicket prices are on a sliding scale. Choose between free\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8 depending on what you can afford. No proof of your situation will be asked for. To book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873590172′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nEVENT SCHEDULE \n6.45pm – doors to Theatre open\n7pm – event starts\, short introduction from host followed by short films (81 minutes running time)\n8.30pm – access break\n8.45pm – discussion\n9.15pm – event ends \nACCESS \n– venue has level access at Sauchiehall Street entrance with Theatre on 1st floor accessible via a lift\n– accessible and gender neutral bathrooms on ground\, 1st\, and 2nd floors\n(Please note there is currently redevelopment on Sauchiehall Street meaning some disruption to accessing the main doors – contact the venue on 0141 352 4900 or dutymanagers@cca-glasgow.com if you have any questions about this)\n– closest blue badge spaces to CCA are currently on Blythswood Square when approaching from Douglas Street or West George Street\n– detailed venue access information can be found here: http://cca-glasgow.com/about-cca/access-statement\n– we have a limited fund to assist with travel for those who require this for any reason to be able to attend\n– large print versions of handouts available\n– films mostly in English language with one film in German language\n– audio description for films available – please ask for a headset at CCA box office when you arrive\n– films have English language captions or subtitles\n– hearing loop at box office and in the Theatre\n– BSL interpreter for introduction and discussion\n– limited comfy seating (beanbags at front of Theatre) available\n– Theatre will be no more than two thirds full of people\n– relaxed event with people welcome to make noise and move around \nTo request travel costs\, book a beanbag or a seat in the front row or if you have any questions about access\, please contact Helen on helen@sqiff.org or by calling or texting 07735 273 245 (if calling\, please do so Monday to Friday between 9am and 5pm). SQIFF volunteers will be available during the event if you have any questions or anything we can help you with. \nPart of a Queer Film Network (QFN) tour. QFN is a strategic Film Hub Wales project and receives support from the BFI Film Audience Network.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/an-unashamed-claim-to-visibility/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Audio description,BSL,Deaf,Disability,Discussion,Documentary,Gay men,Hearing loop,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Trans
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180415T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180415T213000
DTSTAMP:20260505T024318
CREATED:20180313T215027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180313T220132Z
UID:8124-1523818800-1523827800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Presents: By Hook or By Crook + Unhung Heroes
DESCRIPTION:By Hook or By Crook (2001) chronicles 3 weeks in the life of a handsome\, small-town trans man with a nagging messiah-complex. Shy heads to the big city to sink himself into a life of crime and meets Valentine\, a deliriously expressive\, wise-acre adoptee on a misguided search for his birthmother. The 2 freaky grifters join forces and get up to misadventures in this anti-authoritarian tale of friendship\, trust and redemption. \nScreening alongside Unhung Heroes (2002)\, a short comedy about five trans guys who scheme to raise over a million dollars for a penis transplant. Lazlo Pearlman\, film and performance maker\, academic\, and director of Unhung Heroes\, will join us to chat DIY queer and trans filmmaking. \nACCESS: Level access at entrance of CCA with Cinema space on ground floor. Accessible toilets available. Both films are in the English language with English language subtitles or captions. The post-film chat will be BSL interpreted. Hearing loop available. \nTicket prices on a sliding scale according to your circumstances. Choose between FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8 (prices include CCA booking fee) according to what you can afford. See Glasgow Zine Fest’s ticketing information for more details. \nTo book\, please use the button below or call CCA box office on +44 (0)141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873588424′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’]
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-presents-by-hook-or-by-crook-unhung-heroes/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:BSL,Discussion,English language,Feature,Films,Hearing loop,Shorts,Trans
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