All the films in this year's Sydney Queer Screen Film Fest
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All the films in this year's Sydney Queer Screen Film Fest
The full program of films for the 12th Queer Screen Film Fest has been announced, ahead of the event taking place in Sydney in the final week of August.
Queer Screen Film Fest will take over Event Cinemas George Street from August 27-31, in what organisers are billing as a “bold and dynamic program that highlights emerging voices, international excellence and community celebration.”
The festival opens with Plainclothes, a romantic thriller about a closeted undercover cop torn between duty and living his truth, starring audience favourites Russell Tovey and Tom Blyth.
Closing the festival is Really Happy Someday, an intimate drama about a transmasculine musical theatre performer who loses vocal control after starting testosterone, which won Best Canadian Feature at the 2025 Inside Out Toronto 2SLGBTQ+ Film Festival.
Marking the 40th anniversary of ACON and 30th anniversary of Timothy Conigrave’s cult-classic Australian memoir, Queer Screen will also be holding a special 10th anniversary screening of Holding the Man at the Sydney Opera House Playhouse on Saturday, September 6.
Opportunities for filmmakers
This year’s festival also sees the introduction of an inaugural Emerging Narrative Feature Competition, a juried competition awarding a $2,500 cash prize to one of six filmmakers presenting their first or second narrative feature.
The festival will also continue its support for emerging talent through the popular Queer Screen Pitch Off short film pitching competition, with a combined prize pool of $20,000 (AUD), in partnership with Screen Australia’s Gender Matters Taskforce.
Over the festival’s five days, Queer Screen will present a selection of new queer cinema, including 14 Australian Premieres and the return of the popular Mixed Shorts.
This year’s Mixed Shorts films
This short film screening collects six films about people across the LGBT+ spectrum.
In Anyway, I Piss Sitting Down, Sasha dreams of swimming shirtless post-top surgery in his Quebec hometown on a road trip with friends.
In A Bird Hit My Window and Now I’m a Lesbian, an impromptu pigeon funeral prompts unexpected self-discovery.
Dandelion follows a social worker’s race against time to find a rebellious teen a foster home.
One Story at a Time: Celeste Lecesne reflects on his journey from Oscar winner to co-founding The Trevor Project.
In Where We Stay, unspoken feelings between lifelong friends resurface under the weight of illness.
Finally, in Zari, an Indian-American teen forms an unexpected bond with a sari shop clerk who’s secretly a drag queen.
Queer Screen welcomes you
“It is an exciting new chapter for Queer Screen,” Queer Screen CEO Benson Wu said of this year’s festival.
“This new team has worked tirelessly to bring this festival to life in a short timeframe, and we are proud of the strength, diversity and heart that this year’s program delivers.”
“We look forward to welcoming audiences back into cinemas to share in the joy of queer storytelling.
“At a time when people around the world aim to silence and divide the LGBTIQ+ community, Queer Screen continues to offer a vital opportunity to come together and support each other,” Andrew Wilkie, Programming & Industry Manager, said.
“All the films in this program share that ethos.”
“Stories of people who feel isolated or unseen finding community, friendship and love.
“Of perseverance and joy.
“Every film is a chance to not only see ourselves onscreen, but step into someone else’s shoes and gain new perspectives.”
Among this year’s festival highlights are award-winners from the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, including Twinless, a whip-smart, wholly original dark comedy starring Dylan O’Brien and writer-director James Sweeney.
And Cactus Pears, a tender, slow-burning romance from India that took home the World Cinema Dramatic Jury Prize.
Other standouts include Love Letters, a touching French drama highlighting the blurring of the personal and political in LGBTQIA+ life as a lesbian couple prepares for the birth of their first child.
And Niñxs, a joyful and quietly revolutionary coming-of-age documentary told through the eyes of a Mexican trans child, premiered at Visions du Réel.
South Korea is strongly represented this year with Lucky, Apartment from award-winning documentary filmmaker Kangyu Ga-ram.
And the bold, brash comedy Manok about finding intergenerational queer friendship and joy in a rural small town.
Other anticipated titles include Outerlands, a poignant and introspective drama starring Asia Kate Dillon and Lea DeLaria, following a cash-strapped non-binary nanny navigating complex emotional terrain.
Sauna, a steamy Danish romantic drama about two men from different worlds: one whose life revolves around the hypermasculine gay sauna where he works, the other who’s navigating the early stages of his transition.
Closer to home, local filmmaker Bina Bhattacharya (Here Out West) makes her feature directorial debut with From All Sides.
A subversive and sexually frank portrayal of a seemingly typical middle-class family in Western Sydney unravelling at the seams.
Tickets for all films are on sale now, including Flexi 3 and Flexi 6 Festival Passes. Visit queerscreen.org.au, download the app or call (02) 9280 1533 to book.
You can also become a Queer Screen member for discounted tickets and priority entry to sessions.
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