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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for SQIFF
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DTSTART:20190101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201005T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201018T233000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20201004T195547Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201005T132943Z
UID:10169-1601856000-1603063800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:All The Feels!: Ultimate Queer Fanvid Playlist
DESCRIPTION:Fanvids are short films using music\, edited by fans in an expression of all the feels around their favourite fandoms. Even with today’s films and television bursting with more queer characters than ever\, we still fight for true recognition\, representation\, and stories that go beyond the sometimes disappointing and limiting storylines we are given. Every fanvid is a DIY work of art\, combining music and clever edits to celebrate favourite shows\, rework plots\, commiserate in collective sadness\, and whatever feels there are to be had! \nCurated by Tara Brown\, queer crip Black fat femme and Fringe! Queer film & arts fest and freelance film curator. \nClick here for Tara’s YouTube playlist. \nACCESS \nThis playlist has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nThe fanvids have English audio. Some have English language captions or a transcript. Transcript of the other vids coming soon. With apologies for the lack of captions on all videos thanks to YouTube removing the option for community captions. Click here to sign a petition for YouTube to reverse this decision. \nThe playlist is 34 minutes long. \nContent notes: Discussion of homophobia\, biphobia\, and racism; depiction of brief nudity\, sex\, violence\, and blood. \n\n\n\n\nThe videos in All the Feels!: Ultimate Queer Fanvid Playlist include some loud music and fast editing. \n\n\n\n\nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/all-the-feels-ultimate-queer-fanvid-playlist/
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Bisexual,English language,Films,Free event,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201005T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201018T235900
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200908T200145Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201005T122700Z
UID:9913-1601856000-1603065540@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF 2020 Vimeo on Demand Film Programme
DESCRIPTION:Click here to access our full film programme on Vimeo on Demand. \nMost of our film programme will be available via Vimeo on Demand for 2 weeks from 5 to 18 October. You can access films in the programme at any time during this period. Films on our Vimeo on Demand will be accessible within the UK only. \n\n\n\n\nTo watch films on our Vimeo on Demand channel\, you will need to create a Vimeo account\, which is free and quick to set up. Click here and then click the option to ‘Join for free.’ You will need access to an email address to be able to join. \n\n\n\n\nYou will be asked to choose what you pay for each film or film programme on our Vimeo on Demand channel. You enter the amount you want to pay starting from £1 every time you rent a film. If you need to access films for free\, get in touch with us and we will send a code for the films you want to access\, no proof of circumstance required. You will have up until 18 October to watch films once you have rented them. \n\n\n\n\nIf you need assistance with accessing films or events online\, including how to use vimeo or Zoom\, you can get in touch with our Access & Support Team between 10am and 5pm every day of the Festival. You can contact them by emailing info[at]sqiff.org or by phone on 07883 737 362. \nIf you want to contact us to ask any questions before the Festival starts\, email info[at]sqiff.org. \n\nClick here to download the SQIFF 2020 brochure for the full list of films on Vimeo on Demand. \nClick here to download a text-only version of the brochure. \nClick here for an audio version of the brochure. \n\nOR here’s a list of all the films and shorts programme with links!: \n  \n\nEvery Utopia is a Dystopia: Science Fiction Worlds \nAshley\n45 minutes\, Dir: Jamie Crewe\, N/C 12+\, UK\, 2020\, English language \n“Dragging a wheelie case behind them\, Ashley arrives at an isolated\, beachside cottage. They hope that this weekend in the countryside might be the change they need: a change f rom depression\, f rom heartbreak\, f rom the pain of a shifting identity. As the weekend unfolds\, however\, their hope wavers: things go wrong in their body\, or perhaps in their mind — or perhaps there really is something\, outside\, developing an appetite for them…” Ashley by Jamie Crewe was created for the 2019/20 Margaret Tait Award\, Scotland’s most prestigious moving image prize for artists. \nFlaming Ears (coming soon!)\n84 minutes\, Dirs: Ursula Pürrer\, Dietmar Schipek\, Ashley Hans Scheirl\, N/C 18+\, Austria\, 1991\, German and English languages \nFlaming Ears is a pop sci-fi lesbian\, fantasy feature set in the year 2700 in the fictive\, burnt-out city of Asche. It follows the tangled lives of three women: Spy\, a comic book artist; Volly\, a performance artist and sexed-up pyromaniac; and Nun\, an amoral alien with a predilection for reptiles. It’s a story of love and revenge\, and an anti-romantic plea for love in its many forms. It’s also a story laced with sex\, violence\, and a pulsating soundtrack\, a cyberdyke movie stimulating both the body and the brain. \nKeyboard Fantasies: the Beverly Glenn-Copeland Story\n63 minutes\, Dir: Posy Dixon\, N/C 12+\, UK\, 2019\, English language \nAs a sci-fi-obsessed queer living in near isolation\, Glenn Copeland wrote and self-released Keyboard Fantasies in Huntsville\, Ontario in 1986. Recorded in an Atari-powered home studio\, the cassette featured seven tracks of a curious folk-electronica hybrid\, a sound realised far before its time. Three decades on the musician began to receive emails f rom people across the world\, thanking him for the music they’d recently discovered. Courtesy of a rare-record collector in Japan and a reissue of Keyboard Fantasies\, the music had finally found its audience two generations down the line. Keyboard Fantasies: The Beverly Glenn-Copeland Story sees the protagonist commit his life and music to screen for the first time – an intimate coming of age story spinning pain and suffering of prejudice into rhythm\, hope\, and joy. \nClick here to access the version of Keyboard Fantasies with audio description. \nMany Black Moons Ago\, To Go…\nSelection of films \nA digital exhibition programme of Afrofuturist films and writings in response to the re/imagining of Black alternative future(s). Curated by Scottish-Zimbabwean artist\, researcher\, and curator Natasha Thembiso Ruwona. \nPEOPLE HAVE COME\n60 minutes\, Dir: Jamie Crewe\, N/C 12+\, UK\, 2020\, English language \nAs part of the Margaret Tait Award\, Jamie Crewe produced a recorded artist’s talk in which they discuss a technique that recurs throughout their practice. They named the technique PEOPLE HAVE COME\, and it describes courting and avoiding publicness. For certain kinds of people the desire to be seen\, recognised\, and understood is as powerful as the urge to hide\, be illegible\, and repel investigation. In reference to Ashley\, their Margaret Tait Award 2019/20 commission\, as well as to other works and experiences\, this talk traces eruptions of this ambivalent seam in Jamie’s life and practice. \nPrototypes I & II (coming soon!)\n104 minutes\, Dir: Doireann O’Malley\, N/C 12+\, UK\, 2018\, English language \nDoireann O’Malley’s most recent body of work is a trilogy titled Prototypes I\, II and III which explore gender and its manifestations in a post-speculative mind/body assemblage of scenes\, set within the modernist Interbau housing development in the Hansaviertel area of Berlin. The films explore new perspectives on trans identity through the lens of a post psychoanalytic\, schizo-analytic methodology\, entangling rhizomatic forms of thought\, systems theory\, consciousness\, machine learning\, and quantum transformation. \n\nSQIFF Shorts: Every Utopia is a Dystopia\n70 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English and Spanish languages\n\nK and L are cultural conservationists working in a not-so-distant future to preserve the artefacts and histories that are being systematically destroyed by a totalitarian government. When they are in a deadly car accident\, time splinters into parallel realities\, separating them. Tonia Stanwell arrives at the government agency where she will apply to turn 36\, a feat few Black trans women like her have reached. A queer utopia named Stonewall Nation has been founded by a generation of activists and artists in a world where AIDS never happened. Tales using classic sci-fi set ups to transmit queer ideas feature in this shorts compilation.\n\nQueering the Script\n93 minutes\, Dir: Gabrielle Zilkha\, N/C 12+\, Canada/USA\, 2019\, English\nlanguage\n\n\nQueerness on television has moved f rom subtext in series such as Xena: Warrior Princess\, to all-out multi season relationships between women\, as seen on Buffy the Vampire Slayer\, Lost Girl\, and Carmilla. But things still aren’t perfect. In 2016\, a record number of queer women died on fictional shows\, which broke the hearts of queer fans and launched a successful fight for better\, more diverse LGTBQ2S+ representation. Stars such as Ilene Chaiken\, Stephanie Beatriz\, Lucy Lawless\, and Angelica Ross join with the voices of numerous kickass fangirls in this fast-paced history of queer women’s representation in contemporary television. \nCruising the Future: Shu Lea Cheang Retrospective \nFluidø\n84 minutes\, Dir: Shu Lea Cheang\, N/C 18+\, Germany\, 2017\, English\, French\, and German languages \nIn a post-AIDS future of 2060\, the Government has declared the era AIDS FREE but mutated AIDS viruses have given birth to the ZERO GEN: genetically evolved\, genderfluid humans whose white fluid is a hypernarcotic. A new war on drugs sees the ZERO GEN declared illegal. The Government dispatches drug-resistant replicants for round-up arrest missions. When one of these government android’s immunity breaks down and its pleasure centres are activated\, the story becomes a tangled multi-thread plot and the ZERO GENs are caught among underground drug lords\, glitched super agents\, a scheming corporation\, and a corrupt government. \nI.K.U.\n88 minutes\, Dir: Shu Lea Cheang\, N/C 18+\, Japan\, 2000\, English and Japanese languages \nEnvisioned as a sequel to Blade Runner\, I.K.U. scandalised audiences when it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Following the adventures of seven sexy replicants as they attempt to gather data for the I.K.U. system (which enables touchless orgasms)\, I.K.U. is a cyberpunk fuck film for the internet generation. “I.K.U. is a phenomenon that wants to refuse definition and… crosses all categories – geographic\, physical\, conceptual – with a demented flourish. As much trans-genre as it is trans-gender\, I.K.U. also wants to merge video and film into a fresh digital universe large-scale enough to overwhelm the viewer.” B. Ruby Rich\, Rhizome. \n  \nQueer Ecologies \nFire and Flood\n120 minutes\, Dir: Vanessa Raditz\, N/C 15+\, USA\, 2020\, English and Spanish languages \nFire & Flood: Queer Resilience in the era of climate change tells the story of Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico and the fires in Santa Rosa\, California\, two near simultaneous climate-related disasters in the fall of 2017\, through the voices of LGBTQ people who lived through them and were part of the community response. The film explores the vulnerability of LGBTQ communities to climate disasters and also lifts up queer and trans strategies for resilience\, transition\, and survival. \nClick here to access the version of Fire and Flood with bilingual Spanish and English subtitles. \nSQIFF Shorts: Belonging in Nature / Belonging in Europe\n67 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English\, Swedish\, Portuguese\, and German languages \nA selection of short films made in Europe that investigate intersections and articulations of queerness and the natural world. A pack of Swedish animals sanitise an abandoned space. Two young soldiers are deployed on an island that is plagued by an uncontrollable growth of hydrangeas. Three young women\, living in three separate parallel universes\, depend on one another to survive. The inhabitants of a gender-fluid utopian society explore what queer politics can learn f rom environmental matters. \nSQIFF Shorts: Indigenous Ecofeminisms\n61 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 12+\, English\, Anishinaabe\, and Portuguese languages \nA series of shorts that follow the stories of queer and trans indigenous people as they navigate life on earth during climate crisis. A non-binary Anishinaabe activist attempts to revive ceremonial harvesting rituals with a 10\,000-year-old Sasquatch in suburban Ontario. A queer indigenous writer and performance artist documents the ways in which Canada’s extraction industry destroys indigenous lands and parallels the child apprehension industry. And a group of young people in Brazil enjoy the outdoors over New Years; drawing\, playing instruments\, laying in the sun\, cutting each other’s hair\, and chatting shit about men. \nThe Garden\n92 minutes\, Dir: Derek Jarman\, 12A\, UK\, 1990\, English language \n‘Paradise haunts gardens’\, writes Derek Jarman\, ‘and it haunts mine.’ Jarman was a film director\, stage designer\, diarist\, artist\, gardener\, and author\, whose work\, dwelling on themes of sexuality and violence\, reflected his reality as an HIV-positive man living in Thatcher’s Britain. His own garden-paradise was situated in the flat\, bleak\, often desolate expanse of shingle that faces the Dungeness nuclear power station. This intimate insight into Jarman’s inner world was shot on Super8 with the help of friends and collaborators\, movingly utilising a cast of iconic\, religious figures that include Jesus\, Judas\, and the Madonna\, and a cast of queer icons. Screening with 1993 short film featuring Jarman\, The Clearing (7 minutes). \nWater Makes Us Wet: An Ecosexual Adventure\n79 minutes\, Dirs: Beth Stephens\, Annie Sprinkle\, N/C 18+\, USA\, 2018\, English language \nWith a poetic blend of curiosity\, humour\, sensuality\, and concern\, this film chronicles the pleasures and politics of H2O f rom an ecosexual perspective. Travel with Annie\, a former sex worker\, Beth\, a professor\, and their dog Butch\, in their E.A.R.T.H. Lab mobile unit\, as they explore the role of water. Ecosexuality shifts the metaphor “Earth as Mother” to “Earth as Lover” to create a more reciprocal and empathetic relationship with the natural world. Along the way\, Annie and Beth interact with a diverse range of folks including performance artists\, biologists\, water treatment plant workers\, scholars\, and others\, climaxing in a shocking event that reaffirms the power of water\, life\, and the earth. \n  \nIslands and Oceans \nLeitis in Waiting\n72 minutes\, N/C 12+\, Dirs: Dean Hamer\, Joe Wilson\, Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu\, 2018\, English and Tongan languages \nTonga\, an island group in the South Pacific\, has long considered trans women\, known as leitis\, an integral part of its culture\, often carrying significant social status. But recent Western religious influences have seen their identities being increasingly challenged. This documentary traces their proud cultural history and highlights developments in their struggles against discrimination. \nTchindas\n94 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dirs: Pablo García Pérez de Lara\, Marc Serena\, Cape Verde\, 2015\, Cape Verdean Creole language \nTchindas explores queer identity and acceptance in the Cape Verde archipelago\, and follows Tchinda\, a transgender woman who is a national heroine\, as she prepares for Carnival month. The camera closely follows Tchinda and her cohorts – an engaging\, closely knit group of trans women and gay men – as they take the lead in preparing their neighbourhood for the festivities. \n  \nDaydreams and Testamonials: Queer South America \nCracks in the Patriarchy (coming soon!)\n78 minutes\, N/C 12+\, Dir: Cagdas Celtikli\, Kai Münch\, Argentina\, 2020\, Spanish language \nThrough comprehensive interviews focused on seven individuals f rom different backgrounds\, this documentary examines the LGBTQI+ community in Buenos Aires\, Argentina. History and biography meld with the fiercely political as we learn of several overlapping struggles in the vast city. From the fight for gender recognition by the trans community to ongoing struggles to fight racism both within the LGBTQI+ scene and beyond; from the experiences of travestis in art and theatre to the massive movement to decriminalise abortion; the history\, culture\, and politics of the LGBTQI+ community are drawn into sharp focus. Yet in this great variety of perspectives and histories lies a shared goal: a safer\, freer society for all. \nFabiana\n89 minutes\, N/C 12+\, Dir: Brunna Laboissière\, Brazil\, 2018\, Portuguese language \nFor over three decades\, Fabiana has lived a nomadic life as a trans woman trucker in Brazil. She has crossed the vast country hundreds of times over\, never staying anywhere for too long. Confident and adventurous\, she’s at home amongst the mostly-male truckers she encounters\, and often hooks up with other women in her travels. But is she ready to finally settle down\, when the open road has been her life? This documentary joins her on her last few journeys on the eve of retirement\, sharing the connections and intimacies of her life. \n  \nFeature films \nBlindsided\n60 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dir: Lisa Olivieri\, USA\, 2015\, English language \nA documentary narrative about Patricia Livingstone\, a deafblind\, lesbian artist facing a series of losses and gains. The film weaves intimate\, real time scenes shot over the course of eight years with home videos and photographs\, relaying the story of a woman whose spark did not fade even in the face of hardship and loss. Screening with local short film\, Blind Spot (20 minutes)\, exploring and attempting to simulate the experience of visual impairment. \n\nClick here to access the version of Blindsided and Blind Spot with audio description. \n\nBreaking Fast\n92 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dir: Mike Mosallam\, USA\, 2020\, English and Arabic languages \nMo\, a practicing Muslim living in West Hollywood\, is learning to navigate life post-heartbreak. Enter Kal\, an All-American guy who surprises Mo by offering to break fast with him during the holy month of Ramadan. As they learn more about each other\, they fall in love over what they have in common and what they don’t. The genesis of the feature film came about from overwhelming positive responses to the short film by the director\, which SQIFF screened at our 2019 Festival. The film aims to be the first of its kind to feature a practicing Muslim character who is gay and not dealing with those two things in conflict but rather in harmony. \nClick here to access the version of Breaking Fast with audio description. \nGame on: queer disruptions in sport\n67 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dir: Maria Takacs\, Hungary\, 2020\, English\, Hungarian\, and German languages \nGame on: queer disruptions in sport is a documentary which shines a light on the experiences of those with diverse identities within grassroots sport. The film features the stories of gay runners Csaba and Benjamin f rom Hungary; Natalie\, a Scottish lesbian boxer; Pol\, an intersex rower f rom Bulgaria; and a German trans woman footballer called Jessi. Their stories are unique but bring up themes that are typical for lesbian\, gay\, bisexual\, transgender\, intersex\, and queer (LGBTIQ+) people in sport. \nLingua Franca\n95 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dir: Isabel Sandoval\, USA\, Philippines\, 2019\, English\, Tagalog\, and Russian languages \nIn this beguiling drama\, an undocumented Filipina immigrant paranoid about deportation works as a caregiver to a Russian-Jewish grandmother in Brooklyn. When the American man she’s secretly paying for a green card marriage backs out\, she becomes involved with a cis male slaughterhouse worker who is unaware she’s transgender. \nPride & Protest\n90 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dir: Blaise Singh\, UK\, 2020\, English language \nPride & Protest is a documentary about QTIPOC communities and activists in Britain today and struggles surrounding the politics of desire\, self-care\, and found family. In the wake of the Birmingham protests against LGBTIQ+ relationship education in primary schools\, director Blaise Singh follows various queer people of colour as they challenge homophobia and racism in their communities. They speak out against internalised shame and lack of representation\, and we follow them trying to figure out their place in the world in the build up to UK Black Pride. \nScream\, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street\n100 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dirs: Roman Chimienti\, USA\, 2019\, English language \nAt the time of release\, The Advocate dubbed 1985’s A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge the gayest horror film ever made. For the film’s closeted young star\, Mark Patton\, such a tag was a stark reminder about the homophobia rampant in Hollywood at the time—and the painful experience he had making the high-profile film and living through the polarising critical aftermath. This new documentary highlights Patton’s time in the horror spotlight\, and Patton—who co- produced the film with Roman Chimienti\, a NYC-based sound engineer—sets the record straight about this controversial sequel\, which ended his acting career just as it was about to begin. \nThe Cancer Journals Revisited\n98 minutes\, N/C 15+\, Dir: Lana Lin\, USA\, 2018\, English\, Spanish\, and German languages \nThe Cancer Journals Revisited is prompted by the question of what it means to re-visit and re-vision Black lesbian feminist poet Audre Lorde’s classic 1980 memoir of her breast cancer experience today. At the invitation of filmmaker Lana Lin\, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010\, twenty-seven writers\, artists\, activists\, health care advocates\, and current and former patients recite Lorde’s manifesto aloud on camera\, collectively dramatising it and producing an oration for the screen. The film is both a critical commentary and a poetic reflection upon the precarious conditions of survival within the intimate and politicised public sphere of illness. \nThe Wound + South African Shorts\n88 minutes\, 15\, Dir: John Trengrove\, South Af rica\, 2017\, Xhosa language \nDespite a rich queer history and long fight to guarantee the rights of queer people under the first democratic government of Nelson Mandela\, queer and trans South Africans face many challenges\, which intersect with class and cultural identities. This screening attests to those challenges but demonstrates that love and support comes f rom surprising and subversive places. The Wound explores the relationship between traditional Xhosa initiation rituals and queer identity\, also alluded to in My Transgender Life (12m) by Yonela Simetu. The Men Who Speak Gayle (11m) celebrates a secret language used during the apartheid era to hide queer identities f rom the authorities. \n  \nShort films \nA Funny Thing Happened\n37 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English language \nThe mother of a queer daughter moves into a nursing home leading to a shocking – and buzzing – revelation. A date leads to a stand off as two lesbian women try their damnest to out-queer each other. In a campy western town\, a lady blacksmith and her naughty paramour get up to no good in a who-rides-who tale with a twist. A drag wardrobe malfunction leads to unexpected consequences. And a satire of lesbian vampire and lesbian nun films comically exposes poor representation in cinema. A wee short shorts screening at 37 minutes for those who need a shot of humour in their lives! \nClick here to access a version of A Funny Thing Happened with audio description. \nBridges to the Past\n63 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English and French languages \nProviding access to queer history\, which is often obscured and hidden f rom us\, is one of the main rationales for putting on a queer film festival. In this selection of shorts there’s a chance to learn about histories including those of LGBTQ+ individuals living in West Yorkshire f rom the 60s to the present day\, and of trans people in the 1950s US\, whose case files have only recently been unearthed. A quite different documentary tale about a group of queers and migrants squatting a house in Toulouse haunted by a misogynist murder cements the programme’s overall reflection on historical inheritance as a concept. \nFamily Ties (coming soon!)\n68 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English\, Portuguese\, and Tagalog languages \nNavigating the risk of rejection and trying to forge understanding form a large part of queer people’s relationships with their biological families. A British-Nigerian man conf ronts such a possibility of rejection when his mother finds out about his sexuality. Brandon\, a queer Filipino-American grandson\, meditates through his anxiety of having to call and wish his grandmother Happy Birthday. And more tales of family bonds versus woe. \nGods and/or Monsters: Queer East Film Festival (coming soon!)\n76 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 18+\, Mandarin\, Cantonese\, Japanese\, and English languages \nAfter having to postpone its first full edition (originally scheduled for April/May 2020)\, the London-based Queer East Film Festival has been undertaking an ambitious series of online screenings over the past few months. Now\, QEFF takes its first virtual visit to Scotland\, presenting a wild and wonderful programme of short films that give a breathtaking glimpse into just some of what East Asian queer cinema has to offer. Showcasing new and rediscovered works – and some things in between – it features daring touches of the supernatural\, the horrific\, the surreal\, and the downright weird. Curated by Queer East’s director and programmer Yi Wang\, this selection is equal parts shocking\, touching\, and bittersweet – and not for the faint of heart! \nHealing\n49 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English and Malagasy languages \nChado hones in on the moments when a child navigates the uncomfortable space between themself and their care-givers. In Razana\, Solo returns to Madagascar after the death of their lover. Confronting their late partner’s family in line with their final wishes\, Solo must reconcile with grief\, homophobia\, and compassion. Yellow Peril: Queer Destinyexplores themes of racism\, gender\, self-actualisation\, and the ways in which Asian diaspora navigate multicultural living. The impact of community arts and organising and themes of access and fulfilment are explored in Trans Happiness is Real. These films all deal with healing and searching for inner contentment. \nLove or Something Like It\n71 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, Korean\, English\, Portuguese\, and Hindi languages \nThe vagaries of romantic love crossed with sexual desire are probed in this collection. A mother assists her Disabled son to masturbate and discovers his sexual preference. Experimental images of toys and animations played on monitors are used to explore the subconscious influences of childhood memories on intimate relationships. A poetry film made entirely with a cell phone conveys the regret and longing of a Brazilian immigrant in London. A middle-aged man makes his weekly visit to the neighbourhood barber shop so he can be touched by his crush. And three queers on a countryside holiday carry out a utopian experiment in the form of a three-way romantic relationship. \nQueer Scotland\n57 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, Arabic\, English\, and British Sign languages \nWe are always proud to present some of the astonishing queer filmmaking made by local talent. This year features meditation on the queer body and its owner’s cultural history\, the potential for zine culture to assist in the recovery f rom mental health difficulties\, being censored when writing LGBTQ characters\, living as a gay man in the era of 1950s McCarthyism\, feminist sci-fi baby- making adventures\, love on the mind of an admirer\, and Deaf identities. \nRhythms (coming soon!)\n59 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English language \nPoetry\, dancing\, music\, the rhythms of queer clubbing… A series of trans poetry performed by its authors delves deep into gritty issues. A documentary chronicles the life of a man who came out in his late 60s and loves to dance more than anything else. A queer singer-songwriter considers what it means to rethink your gender labels through gender affirming top surgery. On the first tube home\, Tam relives his night out clubbing via his phone. A dance teacher and choreographer by day discusses how his drag performances by night have influenced him. And a belly dancer f rom a small Kurdish community in Turkey talks about the meaning of dance in his life. \nTransdimensional Voices\n32 minutes\, Various directors\, N/C 15+\, English language \nThis collection of shorts uplifts trans* voices and showcases a wide range of trans* identifying talent based within Glasgow. Jamie Crewe’s “The Ideal Bar” — “Le Narcisse” — “Alec’s” touches on experiences of transphobia and LGBTQIA+ solidarity and conflict. Sorcha Clelland presents Where the Red Fern Grows\, interrogating performance\, queer club space aesthetics\, and the consistent demolition of community spaces which seek to aid queer voices. Powder Snowdrop Catatonic is a performance featuring various camp characters by Sgàire Wood. The films cover a multitude of themes\, depending on the viewer’s perception of the work.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-2020-vimeo-on-demand-film-programme/
CATEGORIES:Films
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Baier-0502-217-Eva_and_Datqueen-e1599593454753.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201005T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201018T235900
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200923T212546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201003T160216Z
UID:10097-1601856000-1603065540@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Many Black Moons Ago\, To Go...
DESCRIPTION:Time as it is Queer.  \nBlackness as it is Queer. \nWhat comes next after the end of the world?  \nA digital exhibition programme of Afrofuturist films and writings in response to the re/imagining of Black alternative future(s). Curated by Scottish-Zimbabwean artist\, researcher\, and curator Natasha Thembiso Ruwona. Sign up to receive a link to access the exhibition website during the festival dates\, 5th to 18th October.  \nShort films available as part of the exhibition across the 2 weeks include NEGRUM3 (2018) by Diego Paulino\, Reifying Desire 5 (2012) by Jacolby Satterwhite\, and Time Travel Experiments Pt. 2 (2017) by Black Quantum Futurism. Born in Flames (1983)\, depicting a future where a socialist government gains power and a group of women decides to organize and rebel\, will be available to view as part of the exhibition on our Vimeo on Demand channel 12th to 13th October. Please note all films will screen with English language captions. Further access information will be available on the film’s Vimeo on Demand pages. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/many-black-moons-ago-to-go-tickets-122063351771′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \nThere will be artists’ responses to the programme by Sequoia Barnes and Naomi Gessesse. \nSequoia Barnes’ work is predominately centered around making processes\, rituals\, and modes of fashioning. Trained in semiotics\, she deploys research through praxis often in her artistic explorations of black diasporic symbolisms\, storytelling as performance\, and positioning the creative process as a performance/ritual. Her scholarly work currently explores the design techniques and aesthetic semiotics of late fashion designer\, Patrick Kelly. Her most recent artistic works include her artist responses to Senga Nengudi (Fruitmarket Gallery) and Nick Cave (Tramway) with performative works entitled Sew Me A Quilt. Tell You A Story. (2019) and The Burden I Bear Is Heavy (2019)\, respectively. \nNaomi Gessesse is a movie watcher and Aries sun from Glasgow. They have written for several publications and wrote an undergraduate thesis on the politics of space at the lgbtqia+ film festival. Naomi now works for Berwick Film And Media Arts Festival while continuing to write. \nA reading group led by Martha Williams on Sunday 18 October will conclude the series. Click here to book a free ticket to the reading group event\, Call & Reponse. The event will have BSL interpretation\, live captioning\, and live audio description. The films in the exhibition all have English language captions.  \nBorn in Flames is preserved by Anthology Film Archives with restoration funding from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association and The Film Foundation. Distributed by Cinenova.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/many-black-moons-ago-to-go/
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Films,Free event,People of colour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/negrum32-e1600896313163.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201012T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201012T184500
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200908T232707Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200911T161017Z
UID:9980-1602525600-1602528300@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Q&A: Game on: queer disruptions in sport
DESCRIPTION:Game on: Queer Disruptions in Sport is a documentary which shines a light on the experiences of those with diverse identities within grassroots sport. The film features the stories of gay runners Csaba and Benjamin from Hungary; Natalie\, a Scottish lesbian boxer; Pol\, an intersex rower from Bulgaria\, and a German trans woman footballer called Jessi. Join us for a live Q&A with the film’s director Maria Takacs\, protagonists from the film\, and LEAP Sports. \nPresented in partnership with LEAP Sports Scotland\, promoting LGBTI participation and ending LGBTI-phobia in sport. The Q&A will also be live-streamed to Facebook. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFree event. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/qa-game-on-queer-disruptions-in-sport-tickets-120125549753′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThe event has BSL interpretation and live captioning. \nThe event is 45 minutes long. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/qa-game-on-queer-disruptions-in-sport/
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,BSL,Discussion,Free event,Gay men,Intersex,Lesbian,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/game_on_A3-e1599607352349.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201013T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201013T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T095615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201012T124536Z
UID:10000-1602615600-1602624600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Watch Party: The Wound + South African Shorts
DESCRIPTION:Despite a rich queer history and long fight to guarantee the rights of queer people under the first democratic government of Nelson Mandela\, queer and trans South Africans face many challenges\, which intersect with class and cultural identities. This screening attests to those challenges but demonstrates that love and support comes from surprising and subversive places. The Wound explores the relationship between traditional Xhosa initiation rituals and queer identity\, also alluded to in My Transgender Life (12m) by Yonela Simetu. The Men Who Speak Gayle (11m) celebrates a secret language used during the apartheid era to hide queer identities from the authorities. \nCurated by Harvey Dimond and followed by a Q&A with Yonela Simetu\, a Cape Town-based filmmaker and the director of My Transgender Life. Supported by Film Hub Scotland\, part of the BFI’s Film Audience Network\, and funded by Screen Scotland and Lottery funding from the BFI. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/watch-party-the-wound-south-african-shorts-tickets-120168612555′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 15+. \nThe films have Xhosa and English audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation and live captioning provided for introduction and Q&A. \nThe films are 2 hours long with a brief introduction at the start and a 30 minute Q&A after the films. \nContent notes: discussion of racism\, homophobia\, transphobia\, misogyny\, swearing\, and violence; depiction of nudity\, sex\, violence\, blood\, death\, and graphic depictions of animal slaughter. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nTickets for most live events are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. Our sliding scale allows you to choose what to pay based on what you feel you can afford. No evidence or proof of circumstances is required. If you can afford to pay more\, we really appreciate it as we rely on this income to pay queer people fairly for their work and keep the festival going.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/watch-party-the-wound-south-african-shorts/
CATEGORIES:BSL,Feature,Films,Gay men,People of colour,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/16WOUND-superJumbo-e1599644986831.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201014T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201014T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T101224Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200909T101224Z
UID:10003-1602698400-1602702000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Workshop: Queer Speculative Fiction with Katalina Watt
DESCRIPTION:Katalina Watt is an Edinburgh-based author and publisher with a background in digital publishing\, copywriting\, and bookselling. A champion of representative voices and stories\, she has been published in various anthologies and magazines\, and was longlisted for Penguin Random House UK’s 2020 Write Now programme. She is currently working on her debut Horror-Fantasy short story collection inspired by folklore of the Philippine islands. As part of the festival’s focus on all things speculative and fantastic\, this informal event will feature an introduction to Katalina’s work\, discussions around representation in new writing\, and a chance for writers in the audience to talk through some next steps on what to do with their own work. \nWith thanks to the Scottish BAME Writers Network. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/workshop-queer-speculative-fiction-with-katalina-watt-tickets-120170261487′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis workshop has an age recommendation of 15+. \nBSL interpretation and live captioning are provided for the workshop. \nThe workshop is 1 hour long. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/workshop-queer-speculative-fiction-with-katalina-watt/
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,BSL,People of colour,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Katalina-Watt-Photo-Credit-Alan-Trotter-2020-e1599645782785.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201014T210000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201014T220000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T102614Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201014T120738Z
UID:10006-1602709200-1602712800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Watch Party: Lesbian Shorts by Shu Lea Cheang
DESCRIPTION:Shu Lea Cheang’s work from the early-to-mid 1990s demonstrated an exciting fusion of identity politics and erotic exploration\, making her one of the period’s most prominent queer media artists. \nThis collection presents two of her solo works and two collaborations\, alongside a Q&A with Cheang hosted by scholar and critic B. Ruby Rich. \nPart of our Shu Lea Cheang Retrospective\, Cruising the Future. Cheang is a multi-media artist working in experimental video and net art since the early 1980s. Her work deals with the techno body\, queer erotics and politics\, race relations\, and governmental and institutional power. Click here to access Cheang’s 2000 feature film I.K.U. on our Vimeo on Demand. Click here to access Fluidø  (2017). \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders on the day. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/watch-party-lesbian-shorts-by-shu-lea-cheang-tickets-120172225361′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 18+. \nThe films have Japanese and English audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation and live captioning provided for introduction and Q&A. \nContent notes: discussion of cancer\, death\, and sex; depiction of nudity and sex. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n  \nPROGRAMME \nSex Fish (6m)\nDir: Shu Lea Cheang\, Country: USA\, Year: 1993\, Language/s: English\nAn erotic lesbian video involving swimming upstream\, female power\, and fish love. Made as a collaboration under the name E.T. (Ela Troyano) Baby (Jane Castle) Maniac (Cheang). \n“In Sex Fish water provides the common denominator for nature imagery and explicit sex. Unlike 1970s feminist imagery\, however\, nature is sexualized rather than sex naturalized. Dripping from the faucet\, spraying against a shower curtain\, swirling down a toilet\, water leads viewers from one sex scene to another\, private to public and back again. Swimming through the video are various fish\, seemingly unaware of the derogatory pun they enact\, and all gulping enviously as cunnilingus surrounds them.” \n—Chris Straayer\, Deviant Eyes\, Deviant Bodies: Sexual Re-orientations in Film and Video (New York: Columbia University Press\, 1996) \nSex Bowl (8m)\nDir: Shu Lea Cheang\, Country: USA\, Year: 1994\, Language/s: English\nAll forms of human sport become sites for sexual play and celebratory eroticism. \n“The tape’s images are quick\, suggestive\, and sexy: fingers moving into bowling balls\, shoe-smelling and toe-sucking\, a dog wearing chain jewelry\, fish being wrapped at the market\, young naked couples having sex…. Edited like a music video\, the image track is a constant flow of fetishes that lure us into the promiscuous pace of girls who keep lists of their sexual encounters.” \n—Chris Straayer\, Deviant Eyes\, Deviant Bodies: Sexual Re-orientations in Film and Video (New York: Columbia University Press\, 1996) \nFingers and Kisses (5m)\nDir: Shu Lea Cheang\, Country: Japan\, Year: 1995\, Language/s: Japanese\, English\nCheang has taken her camera to the streets for a candid glimpse of lesbian public sexuality. If Asian women and lesbians share a certain amount of invisibility in the culture\, Fingers and Kisses offers not only a bold representation of both\, but a challenge to the question “What do lesbians do?” Tokyo’s own out-and-loud music by Chu punctuates the narrative as what begins in the streets continues under the sheets. \nComing Home (5m)\nDir: Shu Lea Cheang\, Country: USA\, Year: 1995\, Language/s: Japanese\, English\nThis humorous video begins with two women—one white\, the other Asian—attempting to fit into a Japanese bathtub. The awkward fitting of bodies into a small space is just one of the allegorical scenarios dramatized in a pressing appeal for lesbian rights. In a game of hanafuda (flower cards)\, the terms of lesbian domesticity are cleverly played out according to such legalities as joint property\, social security\, and pensions.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/watch-party-lesbian-shorts-by-shu-lea-cheang/
CATEGORIES:BSL,Films,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/shuleacheang_baier-e1599646736308.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201015T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201015T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T103502Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200919T202940Z
UID:10009-1602786600-1602792000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Discussion: Film Programming for QTIPOC
DESCRIPTION:A conversation with QTIPOC film programmers from across the UK. We’ll be tackling questions such as: What does it mean to programme for us\, by us? What unique and specific challenges are we facing? How do we curate safe and nourishing spaces for our communities? How do we take care of our selves while doing this grassroots work? Guest speakers include queer crip Black fat femme and Fringe! Queer film & arts fest and freelance film curator\, Tara Brown\, Director of CineQ and Festival Manager of SHOUT Festival\, Rico Johnson-Sinclair\, and Scottish-Zimbabwean artist\, researcher\, and curator\, Natasha Thembiso Ruwona. \nThis event is only open to QTIPOC (queer\, trans\, and intersex people of colour). \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are free. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/discussion-film-programming-for-qtipoc-tickets-120173693753′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nBSL interpretation\, live captioning\, and live audio description provided for the event. We will send instructions on how to access the live AD to all ticket holders before the event. Contact us by emailing info@sqiff.org if you would like any more information about live AD during the Festival. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/discussion-film-programming-for-qtipoc/
CATEGORIES:Audio description,BSL,Discussion,Free event,People of colour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/SQIFF2019_Day5_highres-12-e1599647491101.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201016T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201016T201000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T104837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201015T113328Z
UID:10012-1602871200-1602879000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Watch Party: The Cancer Journals Revisited
DESCRIPTION:The Cancer Journals Revisited is prompted by the question of what it means to re-visit and re-vision Black lesbian feminist poet Audre Lorde’s classic 1980 memoir of her breast cancer experience today. At the invitation of filmmaker Lana Lin\, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010\, twenty-seven writers\, artists\, activists\, health care advocates\, and current and former patients recite Lorde’s manifesto aloud on camera\, collectively dramatising it and producing an oration for the screen. The film is both a critical commentary and a poetic reflection upon the precarious conditions of survival within the intimate and politicised public sphere of illness. \nFollowed by a Q&A with director Lana Lin hosted by Anahit Behrooz. Anahit is an arts journalist based in Edinburgh\, currently working as events editor at The Skinny and commissioning editor at Bella Caledonia\, with bylines in The List\, Girls on Tops\, and Club des Femmes among others. Presented in partnership with Scottish Documentary Institute. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/watch-party-the-cancer-journals-revisited-tickets-120174640585′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 15+. \nThe films have English\, Spanish\, and German audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation and live captioning provided for introduction and Q&A. \nThe film is 98 minutes long with a brief introduction at the start\, a 5 minute comfort break after the film\, and a 30 minute Q&A. \nContent notes: discussion of racism including anti-Blackness\, violence\, cancer\, and death. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nTickets for most live events are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. Our sliding scale allows you to choose what to pay based on what you feel you can afford. No evidence or proof of circumstances is required. If you can afford to pay more\, we really appreciate it as we rely on this income to pay queer people fairly for their work and keep the festival going.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/watch-party-the-cancer-journals-revisited/
CATEGORIES:BSL,Documentary,Feature,Films,Lesbian,People of colour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/CJR_Veronica-e1599648125891.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201016T203000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201016T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T105911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201016T172122Z
UID:10015-1602880200-1602880200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Party feat FRAN.K & guests
DESCRIPTION:This year SQIFF X Vogue Scotland’s party features a performance by Vogue Scotland member FRAN.K alongside; \nPURINA ALPHA \nDAVID RONAN \nSEQUOIA BARNES \nMELE BROOMES \nThis live 3 hour virtual club is a collision of bodies on the dance floor in a rotating duet\, mimicking our fleeting interactions in the club. Featuring four guest dancers\, FRAN.K takes us on a journey through a three and a half hour soundtrack from DJ RyanAir broadcast on Zoom. \nParticipant videos will be set to off and mics muted on entry\, so you can watch from the zoom or opt to turn on your camera to join the dance-floor. You can also join us in the chatroom\, and once you’ve entered feel free to come and go through the night! Chatroom will be facilitated by our virtual host NUSSATARI. \nLive Stream filmed by Daniel Hughes. \nLighting Design – Jazz Hutsby \nSound Mixing – Simon Howard / DJ RyanAir \nOutfit Design Cover Image/ Pop /Techno – Asia Apolonia Przytarska \nContent warning: The performance includes flashing lights and explicit language \nHouse Rules: We are a club space that does not condone any discrimination of any kind. Anyone displaying such behaviour will be ejected. If you feel uncomfortable at any time please message in the chat to reach our security staff. \nTickets are free. To book\, click the button below and you will receive a Zoom link for the event. When you enter the Zoom waiting room\, please open the chat so we can say hello before you join the event. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/party-vogue-scotland-tickets-120176299547′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThe event will be captioned. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/party-vogue-scotland/
CATEGORIES:Free event,Parties
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screen-Shot-2020-10-16-at-18.15.31-e1602868831937.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201017T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201017T181500
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T110632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201014T122740Z
UID:10019-1602950400-1602958500@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Workshop: Documentary Filmmaking with Lana Lin SOLD OUT
DESCRIPTION:**Please note this event is now sold out.** \nJoin us for a workshop in collaboration with Scottish Documentary Institute with Lana Lin\, a filmmaker\, artist\, and writer whose creative practice concerns embodied vulnerabilities. Lana’s most recent film The Cancer Journals Revisited is a brave feature prompting the question of what it means to re-visit and re-vision Black lesbian feminist poet Audre Lorde’s classic 1980 memoir of her breast cancer experience today. \nThe workshop will be broken down into two one-hour sessions. In the first hour Lana will give an overview of her practice\, particularly focussing on ethics of documentary filmmaking. For the second half of the session\, Lana will workshop a couple of selected projects from submissions. Attendees are welcome to join with or without a film project in the making. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are free. To book\, click the button below. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.123formbuilder.com/form-5633580/form’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis workshop has an age recommendation of 18+. \nBSL interpretation and live captioning are provided for the workshop. \nThe workshop is 2 hours long with a 15 minute break in the middle. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/workshop-documentary-filmmaking-with-lana-lin/
CATEGORIES:BSL,Free event,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/LIN-e1599649540226.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201017T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201017T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T112034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201012T160701Z
UID:10022-1602961200-1602966600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Watch Party: Transdimensional Voices
DESCRIPTION:This collection of shorts uplifts trans* voices and showcases a wide range of trans* identifying talent based within Glasgow. Jamie Crewe’s “The Ideal Bar” — “Le Narcisse” — “Alec’s” touches on experiences of transphobia and LGBTQIA+ solidarity and conflict. Sorcha Clelland presents Where the Red Fern Grows\, interrogating performance\, queer club space aesthetics\, and the consistent demolition of community spaces which seek to aid queer voices. Powder Snowdrop Catatonic is a performance featuring various camp characters by Sgàire Wood. The films cover a multitude of themes\, depending on the viewer’s perception of the work. \nCurated and hosted by Glasgow-based artist TAAHLIAH. There will be a Q&A with the filmmakers after the screening. \n\nImage credit: Sorcha Clelland’s Where the Red Fern Grows. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/watch-party-transdimensional-voices-tickets-120178157103′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 15+. \nThe films have English audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation and live captioning provided for introduction and Q&A. \nThe films are 32 minutes long with a brief introduction at the start and a 45 minute Q&A. \nContent notes: depiction of violence\, gruesome imagery\, and an animal in distress. \n\n\n\n\nThe films in Transdimensional Voices include some loud music and abrasive sound effects\, disorientating editing\, and flashing lights. \n\n\n\n\nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nTickets for most live events are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. Our sliding scale allows you to choose what to pay based on what you feel you can afford. No evidence or proof of circumstances is required. If you can afford to pay more\, we really appreciate it as we rely on this income to pay queer people fairly for their work and keep the festival going. \nPROGRAMME \n“The Ideal Bar” – “Le Narcisse” – “Alec’s” (2m)\nDir: Jamie Crewe\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: No spoken language \n“The Ideal Bar” – “Le Narcisse” – “Alec’s” is a dramatised exchange between two characters in a Glasgow nightclub\, inspired by a sequence in Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness in which Stephen Gordon encounters a repellent reflection of herself in a Parisian gay bar. Their exchange is punctuated\, as in Radclyffe Hall’s text\, by the image of a panting\, dying fox. Though it demands compassion\, this fox is not real\, and its blood looks perhaps more like lipstick. The video is scored by a hyperventilating concertina. \nThese characters are portrayed by performance maker and ogre Sorcha Clelland\, and performance artist and music producer TAAHLIAH. In this version\, TAAHLIAH is standing\, and Sorcha is seated. \nPowder Snowdrop Catatonic (17m)\nDir: Sgàire Wood\, Country: Scotland\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: English and French languages \nProduced in one room over the course of a week in the heart of lockdown\, Sgàire Wood’s Powder Snowdrop Catatonic is an irreverent pantomime performance of mental deterioration under mandatory quarantine. Summoning a cast of capricious characters\, Wood runs a Kübler-Ross style gamut of emotions precipitated by self-isolation\, from misanthropic smugness to mind-bending ennui and cabin fever. Seen solely through the narrow lens of a smartphone camera\, she dances before the flimsy trompe l’oeil facade of a Victorian parlour\, existing in the space between coziness and claustrophobia\, flippancy and sincerity. The film’s celebratory intimacy pays tribute to queer\, radicalised or feminised practices which\, being underrepresented in traditional art spaces\, are relegated to the realm of domesticity and how under the circumstances in which the film was produced\, have found a new appreciation and importance. \nWhere the Red Fern Grows (11m)\nDir: Sorcha Clelland\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: No spoken language \nSorcha Clelland’s Where the Red Fern Grows\, titled after Wilson Rawls’ 1961 children’s book about hunting dogs\, exists as a love letter to a rave and venue in Ibrox\, Glasgow. Filmed at The African Arts Centre in May 2020 during the venue’s demolition and Scotland’s lockdown from COVID-19. The novel begins with an aspiration to heal and a birth of kinship. Character growth is continued through belief in a magic. Performing as SHREK 666\, the embodiment of a demonic ogre shifting through monstrous transformation chained to catholicism\, he revisits a site and performance which was formerly a scene of Queer Intimacy. \n“The Ideal Bar” – “Le Narcisse” – “Alec’s” (2m)\nDir: Jamie Crewe\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: No spoken language \n“The Ideal Bar” – “Le Narcisse” – “Alec’s” is a dramatised exchange between two characters in a Glasgow nightclub\, inspired by a sequence in Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness in which Stephen Gordon encounters a repellent reflection of herself in a Parisian gay bar. Their exchange is punctuated\, as in Radclyffe Hall’s text\, by the image of a panting\, dying fox. Though it demands compassion\, this fox is not real\, and its blood looks perhaps more like lipstick. The video is scored by a hyperventilating concertina. \nThese characters are portrayed by performance maker and ogre Sorcha Clelland\, and performance artist and music producer TAAHLIAH. In this version\, Sorcha is standing\, and TAAHLIAH is seated.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/watch-party-transdimensional-voices/
CATEGORIES:BSL,English language,Films,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screenshot-2020-07-22-at-16.13.50-1-e1599650120978.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201018T140000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201018T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T113343Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200919T210228Z
UID:10026-1603029600-1603036800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Call & Response: Reading and Writing for the Future
DESCRIPTION:A workshop and reading group led by Martha Williams. The discussion and activities will be based around one or more of the texts selected for the Many Black Moons Ago\, To Go programme. Texts will be sent to participants prior to the workshop. \nThe workshop is for Black people only. \nMartha Adonai Williams is a writer\, facilitator\, and community organiser. She is a coordinator for the Black Feminist Bookshop and runs the Black womxn/non-binary writing space\, Call+Response. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFree event. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/call-response-reading-and-writing-for-the-future-tickets-120178863215′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThe event has an age recommendation of 18+. \nBSL interpretation\, live captioning\, and live audio description provided for the event. We will send instructions on how to access the live AD to all ticket holders before the event. Contact us by emailing info@sqiff.org if you would like any more information about live AD during the Festival. \nThe workshop is 2 hours long with a comfort break in the middle. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/call-response-reading-and-writing-for-the-future/
CATEGORIES:Audio description,BSL,Free event,People of colour,Speech to Text,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/negrum3-x_Rodrigo-Espíndola-e1599650981597.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201018T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201018T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T114554Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201018T114536Z
UID:10029-1603040400-1603047600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Watch Party: Queer Scotland Shorts
DESCRIPTION:We are always proud to present some of the astonishing queer filmmaking made by local talent. This year features meditation on the queer body and its owner’s cultural history\, the potential for zine culture to assist in the recovery from mental health difficulties\, being censored when writing LGBTQ characters\, living as a gay man in the era of 1950s McCarthyism\, feminist sci-fi baby-making adventures\, love on the mind of an admirer\, and Deaf identities. \nThe screening will be followed by a filmmaker Q&A. There will be an award for Best Scottish Short voted for online by audiences. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/watch-party-queer-scotland-shorts-tickets-120180504123′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 15+. \nThe films have Arabic and English audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation\, live captioning\, and live audio description are provided for the event. We will send instructions on how to access the live AD to all ticket holders before the event. Contact us by emailing info@sqiff.org if you would like any more information about live AD during the Festival. \nThe films will be around 1 hour long with a brief introduction at the start and a 30 minute Q&A. \nContent notes: discussion of homophobia\, misogyny\, ableism\, mental health issues\, and suicide; depiction of homophobia\, nudity\, grief\, and death. \n\n\n\n\nThe films in SQIFF Shorts: Queer Scotland include some abrasive sound effects. \n\n\n\n\nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nTickets for most live events are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. Our sliding scale allows you to choose what to pay based on what you feel you can afford. No evidence or proof of circumstances is required. If you can afford to pay more\, we really appreciate it as we rely on this income to pay queer people fairly for their work and keep the festival going. \nPROGRAMME \nSaturnrania (5m)\nDir: Holly McLean\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nA feminist sci-fi adventure documentary following an experimental physicist on her quest to have a baby. \nThe Fabric of You (11m)\nDir: Josephine Lohoar Self\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nSet in the Bronx\, in the era of 1950s McCarthyism\, everybody wants to look the same. Michael a gay\, twenty-something-year old mouse\, hides his true identity while he works as a tailor. \nWhen Isaac enters the shop one day he offers the escapism and love Michael craves. In Michael’s confined apartment\, he becomes tormented by the memories of Isaac’s tragic death. Michael’s memories and flashbacks are triggered when he notices Isaac’s jacket draped on the back of a chair. Haunted by the solace Isaac once offered\, he struggles to come to terms with his loss. \nLet My Body Speak (10m)\nDir: Madonna Adib\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: Arabic\nThis documentary is a personal and intimate journey exploring the repression experienced by the filmmaker during her childhood when she faced sexual control in a Damascus also experiencing a growing socio-political repression in the late 80s and early 90s. Through the creative use of family archive in Damascus mixed with current footage of her body she reconstructs the pain of the past absorbed by her body. \nWhat is Wrong with Her? (7m)\nDir: Leah Francisco\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: BSL and English\nLeah finds life and identity by moving past other people’s labels in this British Sign Language poem travelling through time and space. Produced by Solar Bear Theatre company through their digital arts programme\, Solar Flares. \nZine There Done That (8m)\nDir: Fergus Cruickshank\, Ana Hine\, Country: UK\, Year: 2019\, Language/s: English\nAs Ana recovers from a serious mental health breakdown\, she discovers the potential for zines to rebuild her life and rediscover her voice. This intimate documentary is captured on an eclectic mix of formats to mirror the delicate piecing together of Ana and her connection to the underground mental health zine community in the UK. A tender\, creative\, and ultimately empowering look at how art can bring people together to take ownership of their lives. \nBe Seen (2m)\nDir: Sophie Stone\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: BSL\nLove fully explored in the mind of the admirer. Produced by Solar Bear Theatre company through their digital short programme\, Solar Snaps. \nAll the reasons behind a kiss (3m)\nDir: Aimie Willemse\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: English\nA theatre student gets rebuked for writing LGBTQ+ characters in her zombie apocalypse play as “following the latest trend”\, however it turns out\, she has a personal reason to do so. \nReal Boy (11m)\nDir: Jamie Rea\, Country: UK\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: BSL\nAll the parts of life from the smallest atom to the meaning of life converge and form into a feeling of completeness within Joe. We share in this journey. Produced by Solar Bear Theatre company through their digital arts programme\, Solar Flares.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/watch-party-queer-scotland-shorts/
CATEGORIES:Audio description,BSL,Deaf,Disability,Films,Shorts,Speech to Text,Trans
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201018T200000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201018T230000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20200909T115757Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201014T140220Z
UID:10032-1603051200-1603062000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF Closing Night Pub Quiz
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the closing night event of SQIFF 2020. Test your queer culture knowledge with our fun and accessible quiz covering everything from camp classics to contemporary movie controversies – plus some sport\, music & history\, all with an LGBTQIA+ flavour!  You can join in with or without a team. There will be some exciting prizes on offer! We’ll also announce the winner of this year’s Best Scottish Short and say our heartfelt thank yous and tearful goodbyes to this year’s fest. \nQuiz teams of up to 4 people. If you are in separate households\, you will need an alternative way to communicate as we are running the Quiz via Zoom Webinar for access reasons. This means audiences will have their videos and sound off and can’t communicate with each other. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below. You can book a ticket up to one hour before the start time. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders a day or two beforehand. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sqiff-closing-night-pub-quiz-tickets-120181346643′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nBSL interpretation\, live captioning\, and live audio description are provided for the event. We will send instructions on how to access the live AD to all ticket holders before the event. Contact us by emailing info@sqiff.org if you would like any more information about live AD during the Festival. \nThe quiz will be 3 hours long with comfort breaks throughout. \nWe have a limited access fund to assist people with no or limited internet access to attend the Festival. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2020\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nTickets \nTickets for most live events are on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. Our sliding scale allows you to choose what to pay based on what you feel you can afford. No evidence or proof of circumstances is required. If you can afford to pay more\, we really appreciate it as we rely on this income to pay queer people fairly for their work and keep the festival going.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-closing-night-pub-quiz/
CATEGORIES:Audio description,BSL,Speech to Text
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210219
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20210129T124824Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210205T133224Z
UID:10248-1612324800-1613620799@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Unsettled: Seeking Refuge in America
DESCRIPTION:Unsettled: Seeking Refuge in America is a feature-length documentary revealing the untold stories of LGBT refugees and asylum seekers who have fled intense persecution from their home countries and who are resettling in the United States. As leadership in America continues to demonize immigrants and drastically restrict the flow of refugees and asylum seekers into the U.S.\, Unsettled follows Subhi\, a gay Syrian refugee\, Cheyenne and Mari\, a lesbian couple from Angola\, and Junior\, a gender non-conforming gay man from the Congo\, struggling to create new lives for themselves. \nClick here to rent Unsettled on our Vimeo on Demand channel up until 17 February. You can rent the film on our pay what you can sliding scale of free to £8. Please note the film is only available to rent within the UK. \nWe are holding two free online events to discuss the themes of the film and the situation for LGBTQ+ asylum seekers in the UK on 4 and 11 February. To book for our discussion 7-8pm on Thursday 11 February with Leni Candan from UK Lesbian & Gay Immigration Group and Solomon Adebayo LGBT Unity Scotland responding to the film\, click the button below. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders on the day. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/unsettled-discussion-with-uk-lesbian-gay-immigration-group-and-lgbt-unity-tickets-140278198869′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nPresented in partnership with LGBT Unity Scotland\, a community-led group providing essential support to LGBTQIA+ refugees\, asylum seekers\, and other migrants\, and Scottish Borders LGBT Equality for LGBT History Month. Supported by Film Hub Scotland\, part of the BFI’s Film Audience Network\, and funded by Screen Scotland and National Lottery funding from the BFI. \n  \nACCESS \nThe film and events have an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nThe film has English audio with English language captions. Live captioning provided for online discussions. \nThe film has quite a lot of dialogue and voiceover\, all English language\, and mostly bright images. \nThe film is 84 minutes long. Each discussion event is 1 hour long. \nContent notes: Discussion and depiction of homophobic violence\, honour-based violence\, trauma\, emotional distress\, and substance abuse.\n \nIf you have any questions about accessibility for the film and events\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nFilm rental price\n \nRental of the film on our Vimeo on Demand is on a sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. Our sliding scale allows you to choose what to pay based on what you feel you can afford. No evidence or proof of circumstances is required. If you can afford to pay more\, we really appreciate it as we rely on this income to pay queer people fairly for their work and keep the festival going.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/unsettled-seeking-refuge-in-america/
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Discussion,English language,Free event,LGBT History Month,People of colour,Speech to Text
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210220T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210220T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20210122T131009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210122T131152Z
UID:10244-1613844000-1613851200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Pride & Protest: Live Watch Party + Q&A with director Blaise Singh
DESCRIPTION:Pride & Protest is a documentary about QTIPOC communities and activists in Britain today and struggles surrounding the politics of desire\, self-care\, and found family. In the wake of the Birmingham protests against LGBTIQ+ relationship education in primary schools\, director Blaise Singh follows various queer people of colour as they challenge homophobia and racism in their communities. They speak out against internalised shame and lack of representation\, and we follow them trying to figure out their place in the world in the build up to UK Black Pride. \nThe film will screen on Zoom as a live watch party followed by a Q&A with director Blaise Singh and other members of the cast and crew. We will send out a Zoom link for the event to ticket holders on the day. We are partnering with An Lanntair to host this event to mark LGBT History Month 2021 this February. \nThis event is a ‘Pay What You Can’ event – come for free or pay what you can afford. To book\, click the button below or call An Lanntair on 01851 708 480. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://tickets.lanntair.com/sales/categories/sqiff/pride–protest/live-watch-party–qa/pay-what-you-can-afford’ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThe film is English language with captions and the Q&A will have live captions available. The event is suitable for ages 12+. If you have any questions or access requests for this event\, please get in touch by emailing info@sqiff.org. \nContent notes: Discussion of racism\, homophobia\, biphobia\, and transphobia; depiction of homophobia\, transphobia\, biphobia\, and brief racist violence.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/pride-protest-live-watch-party-qa-with-director-blaise-singh/
CATEGORIES:Bisexual,Documentary,English language,Feature,Films,Gay men,Lesbian,LGBT History Month,People of colour,Trans
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211002T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211010T233000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20211008T122510Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211008T122510Z
UID:10648-1633161600-1633908600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF 2021 Online
DESCRIPTION:Several films from the SQIFF 2021 programme are available to rent online from SQIFF’s Vimeo on Demand channel until 10 October. You can access these films at any time during this period. Films on our Vimeo on Demand will be accessible within the UK only. Click here to access the online programme.\n \nTo watch films on our Vimeo on Demand channel\, you will need to create a Vimeo account\, which is free and quick to set up. Go to vimeo.com and click the option to ‘Join for free.’ You will need access to an email address to be able to join.  \nYou will be asked to choose what you pay for each film or film programme on our Vimeo on \nDemand channel. The default price for films on Vimeo will be set to £8\, and you can click \n‘Apply promo code’ and then enter a discount code of\, for example\, ‘6’ to pay £6\, or ‘4\,’ ‘2\,’ or \n‘free’ to get the pricing you choose. You will have up until 10 October to watch films once \nyou have rented them. \nFilms and programmes available to rent include: \nA New Chapter Begins \nGA(Y)MERS with an audio described version available \nChanging the Game with an audio described version available
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-2021-online/
CATEGORIES:Audio description,English language,Films,Shorts
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211003T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211003T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195030
CREATED:20210901T112128Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210929T140018Z
UID:10313-1633284000-1633291200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Sanctuary shorts in association with SQIFF + Q+A
DESCRIPTION:This community-curated programme* explores the acceptance of identity\, self\, and of the world around us\, while highlighting the universal experience of being queer–with a special focus on being lesbian. The films’ instinctive narratives show the lows of being ‘othered’\, and the highs of finding a safe space within that\, no matter what age\, country\, or time period. Join us for powerfully diverse stories\, told with heart\, honesty\, and a perfect amount of humour. You’ll leave the event with a new community of queer film-lovers: your very own sanctuary. \n*Back in July\, Sanctuary collaborated with SQIFF producer and co-founder Helen Wright to offer 2 online workshops for LGBTQIA+ people\, aged 18+\, to learn about film programming. Participants worked together to watch a selection of queer short films and make decisions about a final shorts programme. Thanks to Ewan McPherson\, Kate Hammer\, Liam Rees\, JD Stewart\, Merik Tiz\, Ben Cave\, Beth Cooper\, Jonathan McLean\, Vee Smith and Sand Owsnett. \nThis is a free event. Book tickets using the button below. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/sanctuary-shorts-in-association-with-sqiff-qa-tickets-167955993899′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nWe’ll be using Zoom Webinar for this screening event and Q&A. Audience members will be able to interact with the discussion through the chat function. Once you book a ticket you’ll be sent a link to access the event\, 24 hours before the event starts. \nThe films are in a mixture of spoken languages with English language captions and the Q&A will have live captions and BSL-English interpretation available. The event is suitable for ages 16+. If you have any questions or access requests for this event\, please get in touch by emailing info@sqiff.org. \nThe total films running time is 1 hour 25 minutes. \nThis film and discussion may include reference to: mental health breakdown\, homophobia\, transphobia\, alcohol or substance addiction. We appreciate this list is not comprehensive and encourage you to confidentially get in touch if there is a particular subject matter not listed you wish to avoid: hello@sanctuaryqueerarts.com. \nPROGRAMME \nThe Way We Are (16m) \nDir: Amanda Ann-Min Wong\, Country: Canada\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: \nEnglish  \n“The Way We Are” shares excerpts of stories from audio interviews with 4 queer Asian women: Katherine Chun\, Wenda Li\, Tamai Kobayashi\, and Nancy Seto. Told in the present-tense\, these stories are arranged in a way that explores the past as the present\, and in doing so\, immersing viewers into the real-lived experiences from a different generation. \n \nA Story of Wedding (27m) \nDir: Wei Zhao\, Country: France\, Year: 2021\, Language/s: Mandarin  \nTo satisfy their families\, Huanlin\, a gay man\, and Ziqiao\, a lesbian\, have agreed to have a marriage of convenience\, which will be held online due to the pandemic. In addition\, they have also agreed to have and raise a baby together. However\, this decision is changing their lives before they know it. \n \nFora de Época | Out of Place (13m) \nDir: Drica Czech\, Laís Catalano Aranha\, Country: Brazil\, Year: 2020\, \nLanguage/s: Portuguese  \n2018: Brazil’s general election. Emotionally shaken by the possibility of Bolsonaro being elected\, a young lesbian takes refuge in her family’s farm. As she tries to understand why her mother spent the last days of her life alone in the old house\, she is faced with revelations about her own story. \n \nSubjekträume (Subject Spaces) (29m) Dir: Kat Voss\, Country: Germany\, Year: 2020\, Language/s: German  \nLeather\, metal\, fur: Pelze Multimedia\, West Berlin 1981-1996\, provided a space for art\, musix\, sex parties\, experiments. A glimpse into an almost forgotten site of lesbian/queer history.  \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sanctuary-shorts-in-association-with-sqiff-qa/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:BSL,Documentary,Films,Free event,Lesbian,People of colour,Shorts,Speech to Text
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Geländer-mit-Arsch-JPG-e1630495182574.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211004T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211004T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210928T184911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210928T184911Z
UID:10553-1633366800-1633370400@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF 2021 Access Information Session
DESCRIPTION:Before this year’s in person festival starts on Wednesday 6 October\, we’re holding a session for people to find out more about how to come along and access support. \nJoin our Access & Engagement Coordinators Charlotte and Kiana at an online session on Zoom to find out more about the festival and ask any questions you have. \nBSL-English interpretation and live captioning will be available at the session. If you have any other access requirements to attend\, please email info@sqiff.org. \nThe session is free and open to all. Book a ticket below to receive the Zoom link\, which will be sent out one day before. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627585‘ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \nSQIFF 2021 takes place 6-10 October in person at CCA in Glasgow. Click here for Accessibility information including accessible versions of the brochure. You can also email info@sqiff.org to ask a question or get individual support to come along to the festival.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-2021-access-information-session/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Free event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/SQIFF2019_Day1_webres-96-e1632854894483.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211006T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211006T201500
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T093907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211006T084221Z
UID:10332-1633545000-1633551300@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:SQIFF 2021 Opening Night Shorts SOLD OUT
DESCRIPTION:**Please note this event is now sold out – we may be able to release more tickets nearer the screening** \nOur festival opens this year with the first of our 2021 Scottish Shorts programmes\, including multiple works giving a taster of the many themes to expect from the festival. \nFeaturing a poetic film in British Sign Language (Affirmation #6)\, selections from queer Black artists from Fringe of Colour (Ixwa Blue\, Space 2: We’ve Come A Long Way\, black queer nature poem for khadijah (and all of us))\, sweet musings on trans life in Glasgow (You can run)\, and lots more. We hope that there will be something for everyone in our multifaceted queer community on our opening night. \nCurated by Nat Lall. We hope to welcome several of the filmmakers for a Q&A. All ticket holders are invited to join us for a drink at CCA after the screening. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627516′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nEnglish and Portuguese audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Lisa Li and live captioning by Louisa McDaid provided for the intro and Q&A. \nAudio description available. Headsets available at the cinema entrance. \n\n\nThe films are 60 minutes long with opening night speeches at the start and a Q&A afterwards. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nAudio Description Credits for short film ixwa blue:\nPerformed by Sri Gordon\, written by Elizabeth Capot\, QC by Stephen Christopher\, Production and Sound Engineering by Stephen Kellner \nAudio Description Credits for short film Space 2:\nPerformed by Sri Gordon\, written by Elizabeth Capot\, QC by Stephen Christopher\, Production and Sound Engineering by Stephen Kellner
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/sqiff-2021-opening-night-shorts/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Audio description,BSL,Deaf,Films,Shorts,Trans
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/EVERYMAN_DUALITY_OF_MAN-e1631414683205.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211007T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211007T191000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211007T134937Z
UID:10339-1633629600-1633633800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Queer Asia SOLD OUT
DESCRIPTION:**Please note this event is now sold out – we may be able to release more tickets nearer the screening. CCA Box Office are operating a waiting list for sold out events – please contact them directly to be added to this!** \nThis event hosts films that provide insight into contemporary queer Asian life. The films present tender moments of love and acceptance as well as conflict. We are often shown the pain\, protest\, and fear of being queer in Asia in the media. This is important – the global queer community should be aware of such intersectional struggles. But there are moments of humanity too. Even though this screening depicts vulnerability\, it also explores queer joy. \nFeaturing three short films about queer Asian people\, including Faraz Arif Ansari’s Sheer Qorma. \nCurated by Nat Lall. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627545′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 16+. \nEnglish audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation by Lisa Li and live captioning by Norma Machaye for intro.\n \nThe films are 67 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/queer-asia/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/SheerQormaPress3-2-e1631618037565.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211007T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211007T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094134Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211006T084340Z
UID:10344-1633631400-1633636800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:LUX Scotland Presents: After the  Ice\, the Deluge
DESCRIPTION:Artist\, writer\, and educator Linda Stupart screens their new experimental moving image work After the Ice\, the Deluge\, a mostly diptych film which consists of both Linda’s performance as well as their research in the Arctic. The work also makes use of degraded film to enhance its theme of traumatised bodies and climate change. The screening will be followed by a discussion with Linda Stupart about their work and the way it engages with queer theory and environmental crises. \nIn partnership with LUX Scotland\, a non-profit agency dedicated to supporting\, developing\, and promoting artists’ moving image practices in Scotland. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627546′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 16+. \nEnglish audio with English language captions. BSL interpretation by Catherine King and Yvonne Strain for the discussion. Please note with apologies we may not have live captioning available for the intro.\n \n90 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/lux-scotland-presents-after-the-ice-the-deluge/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Discussion,English language,Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Linda-Stupart-still-4-e1631618974622.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211007T210000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211007T221000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211004T204121Z
UID:10348-1633640400-1633644600@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Rollick/Dance: From dirty to sensuous
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an evening of music videos that will have you glad to be alive! In this screening\, we present music videos and dance interpretations that encourage us to be carefree\, to frolic\, and to ponder the links that bind us all together as a Queer community. Prepare to be challenged\, entertained\, and to fight the urge to join in the dance: express yourself! Featuring Miguel Ángel Romero Yepes’ exploration of drag queen cabaret in The Red Pearl Queen. \nCurated by Jamie Rea. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627547′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 12+. \nEnglish and Spanish audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Catherine King and Yvonne Strain for intro. Please note with apologies we may not have live captioning available for the intro.\n \nThe films are 67 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/rollickdance-from-dirty-to-sensuous/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/TRPQ_FOTO_1-e1631547053575.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211008T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211008T192000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211007T135005Z
UID:10351-1633716000-1633720800@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Queer Brazil SOLD OUT
DESCRIPTION:**Please note this event is now sold out – we may be able to release more tickets nearer the screening. CCA Box Office are operating a waiting list for sold out events – please contact them directly to be added to this!** \nThis screening is a raw look into various Brazilian queer cultures. Despite the challenges faced by queer people in Brazil\, this event was curated to primarily celebrate queer joy and community love. Tattoo\, BEAT 97 and From time to time\, I burn show the powerful connections between queer relationships. And whilst The Uninhabitable Ones takes an experimental approach into documenting queer Black diaspora\, Unliveable explores the love and empathy in intersectional communities. \nCurated by Indigo Korres. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627550′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 16+. \nPortuguese audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Chloe Elder and live captioning by Francis Barret for intro. \n79 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/queer-brazil/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Cópia-de-Foto-Luara-Monteiro5-e1631547718550.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211008T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211008T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211007T135035Z
UID:10372-1633717800-1633723200@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Spill your Kinky (kink) SOLD OUT
DESCRIPTION:**Please note this event is now sold out – we may be able to release more tickets nearer the screening. CCA Box Office are operating a waiting list for sold out events – please contact them directly to be added to this!** \nJoin us to talk about all things kinky. This screening includes films which focus on how we view and experience sex in an age of technology from the seemingly simple to the more extreme. These filmmakers offer us a space to consider our own understanding of sex and the journey we have been on or could take\, as well as an openness about accepting our own sex preferences. With love stories across genders and sexual identities\, these films are funny and disturbing as well as erotic and profound. Sex is a story waiting to be told. \nCurated by Jamie Rea. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627551′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 18+. \nEnglish\, Italian\, Russian\, and Spanish audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Catherine King and Yvonne Strain and live captioning by Louisa McDaid for intro. \nThe films are 59 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/spill-your-kinky-kink/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/daniela3-e1631548036308.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211008T203000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211008T213500
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094531Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211004T203659Z
UID:10374-1633725000-1633728900@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Reimagining Filmmaking
DESCRIPTION:This screening brings together a diverse range of work with each artist taking a unique approach to what it means to make a film. From videography to animation\, these films play with the technical and artistic aspects of filmmaking. They offer provocations around the idea of experience and what we might think makes for exciting and intriguing viewing. Featuring various innovative experimental films such as Clodagh Chapman’s First Kiss (With a Girl); Grace Whitfield’s We Two; and Shantel Liao’s One Middle Ground. \nCurated by Jamie Rea. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url= ‘https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627572′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 18+. \nEnglish audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Catherine King and Yvonne Strain and live captioning by Francis Barret for intro and Q&A. \nAudio description is available. Headsets available at the cinema entrance.\n \n65 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/reimagining-filmmaking/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Audio description,English language,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/onemiddleground_still01-e1631619339268.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211008T210000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211008T220000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211007T134918Z
UID:10376-1633726800-1633730400@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Horror Hour with Final Girls Berlin SOLD OUT
DESCRIPTION:**Please note this event is now sold out – we may be able to release more tickets nearer the screening. CCA Box Office are operating a waiting list for sold out events – please contact them directly to be added to this!** \nPrepare yourselves for an hour of very spooky and very queer cinema. In partnership with the feminist horror film collective\, Final Girls Berlin\, we have put together a selection of otherworldly shorts. The screening is an amalgamation of the best queer horror submissions sent in to the SQIFF open call as well as FGB’s open call. Expect screaming dykes and plenty of bloodshed!  Featuring the likes of furry-legged lesbians (Lone Wolf)\, crazy cat ladies (The Elephant Joke)\, and bloodsucking lust (You are a Lesbian Vampire)\, this thrilling selection is one not to be missed. \nCurated by Nat Lall and Final Girls Berlin. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627571′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 16+. \nEnglish and Korean audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Chloe Elder and live captioning by Louisa McDaid for intro. \n57 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/horror-hour-with-final-girls-berlin/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Around one hour or less,Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/elephantjoke006-e1631549027244.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211009T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211009T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T095831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210916T095831Z
UID:10378-1633780800-1633788000@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Workshop: Queer Sounds in Music Production with TAAHLIAH
DESCRIPTION:Local legend TAAHLIAH will lead an electronic music production workshop for members of the queer Black and people of colour community. Attendees will be given an introduction as to how she created her experimental pop project\, Angelica. There will also be opportunities for one-on-one advice. An exciting event feeding TAAHLIAH’s skills and expertise back into the community she dearly loves. \nCurated by Nat Lall. \nPlease note this workshop is open to Black people and people of colour only. \nPlease get in touch by emailing info@sqiff.org if you have any access requirements to attend this workshop. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627580′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nAll ages. \n120 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \n 
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/workshop-queer-sounds-in-music-production-with-taahliah/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/PRESS-2-e1631619496975.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211009T124500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211009T142500
DTSTAMP:20260403T195031
CREATED:20210916T094952Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211004T203441Z
UID:10448-1633783500-1633789500@www.sqiff.org
SUMMARY:Category Is...
DESCRIPTION:Come and join us for some quality filmmaking from the Queer community. An eclectic mix of genres from horror to love stories to family drama – we’ve got you covered all in one screening. Come and share in film journeys about what it is to be Queer across the modern world. You’ll laugh (well\, maybe.) You’ll cry (well\, I did). You’ll learn something and carry it with you as you leave us. But\, most of all\, you’ll love this showcase of queer filmmakers’ work from across the globe. \nCurated by Jamie Rea. \nTickets are on a pay what you can sliding scale of FREE\, £2\, £4\, £6\, or £8. To book\, click the button below or call the CCA Box Office on 0141 352 4900. \n[bra_button text=’Buy Tickets’ url=’https://ccaglasgow.ticketsolve.com/shows/873627574′ target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ style=’rounded’ color=’pink’] \n  \nACCESS \nThis screening has an age recommendation of N/C 18+. \nArabic\, English\, German\, Spanish and Taiwanese audio with English language captions. BSL-English interpretation by Catherine King and Yvonne Strain and live captioning by Norma Machaye for intro and Q&A. \n100 minutes long. \nWe have an Audience Access Fund for travel and internet data top-up costs. If you would like to take this up\, please contact info@sqiff.org. \nIf you have any questions about accessibility at SQIFF 2021\, please contact info@sqiff.org.
URL:https://www.sqiff.org/event/category-is/
LOCATION:Centre for Contemporary Arts\, 350 Sauchiehall Street\, Glasgow\, G2 3JD\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Films,Shorts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.sqiff.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Before-the-EruptionSTILL-3-e1631550085366.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR