EVENTS


“Funeral Parade of Roses” at Jacob Burns Film Center
Jun
26

“Funeral Parade of Roses” at Jacob Burns Film Center

Join us for a screening of director Toshio Matsumoto’s shattering, kaleidoscopic masterpiece Funeral Parade of Roses, followed by a Q&A with Kyle Turner, author of The Queer Film Guide: 100 Great Movies that Tell LGBTQIA+ Stories.

Long unavailable in the US, Funeral Parade of Roses is one of the most subversive and intoxicating films of the late 1960s: a headlong dive into a dazzling, unseen Tokyo night-world of drag queen bars and fabulous divas, fueled by booze, drugs, fuzz guitars, performance art, and black mascara. Stanley Kubrick cited the film as a direct influence on his own dystopian classic A Clockwork Orange.

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The Wedding Banquet (on 35mm) at Nitehawk Prospect Park
May
25

The Wedding Banquet (on 35mm) at Nitehawk Prospect Park

Brokeback Mountain may have changed LGBTQIA+ cinema’s place in the mainstream in 2005, but Ang Lee has long been fascinated with the codes of masculinity, tradition, family, and queerness. For his 1993 romantic comedy The Wedding Banquet, part of his “Father Knows Best” Trilogy, Lee looked back to the ingredients of classic screwballs and farces for the modern New York tale of a gay interracial relationship that’s foisted back into the closet when the family of the Taiwanese half comes to visit. Co-written with longtime collaborator James Schamus and Neil Peng, and starring Winston Chao, Mitchell Lichtenstein (director of Teeth), and Lee mainstay Lung Sihung, The Wedding Banquet is a bracingly funny and tender look at the imperfect path to love and happiness in the new world.

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QUEER CINEMA, TOP TO BOTTOM at Museum of the Moving Image
May
20
to Jul 2

QUEER CINEMA, TOP TO BOTTOM at Museum of the Moving Image

For much of cinema’s history, queerness was woven secretly into its fabric. As the decades wore on, and as queer artists wrestled with often inhospitable cultures and government or industry restrictions loosened, they began to assert their perspectives and sensibilities, playing with aesthetics to articulate a sense of queerness, decisively and cinematically. To mark the release of The Queer Film Guide: 100 Films That Tell LGBTQIA+ Stories, out May 16 from Smith Street Books and RIzzoli, author and critic Kyle Turner has guest programmed a selection of films that epitomize the complex, contradictory, and compelling ways queerness finds itself as code, language, or point of view, and underline how cinema can look back at itself, disassembling notions of desire, selfhood, and identity. These ten films are separated into three categories for your viewing pleasure: vers (Mulholland Drive, The Watermelon Woman), bottom (Morocco, Rope, The Fly, Jennifer’s Body), and top (Nitrate Kisses, Farewell My Concubine, Querelle, O Fantasma).

QUEER CINEMA, TOP TO BOTTOM

May 19 — Jul 2, 2023

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The Queer Film Guide: LIVE!
May
16

The Queer Film Guide: LIVE!

Join us for a drag celebration of Kyle Turner's new book, THE QUEER FILM GUIDE. Brooklyn's finest drag cinephiles will gather to give performances inspired by the dynamic films featured in Turner's vivid new survey of queer cinema. Tied to each performance will be live readings from the book to create a thrilling fantasia of drag, film, and criticism.

Following the show, there will be a book signing with author Kyle Turner and beats from DJ Malice throughout the night.

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Seed of Chucky (on 35mm) at IFC Center
May
15

Seed of Chucky (on 35mm) at IFC Center

This screening will be followed by a book signing and conversation between critic Matt Zoller Seitz and author Kyle Turner, launching Kyle’s new book The Queer Film Guide: 100 Great Movies That Tell LGBTQIA+ Stories.

In Seed of Chucky, Mancini merges a clever tale of wacky parentings into an allegory of the conflicting forces of influence from the people you love and the images you’ve been fed, a sly riposte to cinema’s unkind treatment to those on the margins (including a superb performance from Tilly, taking aim at Hollywood’s misogyny), and how those things shape who you really are.” –Kyle Turner, author of The Queer Film Guide: 100 Great Movies That Tell LGBTQIA+ Stories.

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