Adolescents is a documentary that explores the lives of teenagers as they navigate various challenges and experiences, including friendship, parent-child relationships, and coming-of-age. The film focuses on the journey of a group of teenagers in France and delves into their personal stories, struggles, and triumphs.
Come Undone is a drama and romance film set in Southern France. It follows the story of two teenagers, Mathieu and Cedric, who meet during a summer vacation. They develop a deep emotional connection and explore their feelings for each other while dealing with personal struggles and relationship problems. The film explores themes of first love, self-discovery, and the complexities of teenage emotions. Throughout the movie, Mathieu and Cedric navigate their complicated relationship, facing homophobia, family issues, and the challenges of growing up.
In the 50s and 60s, deep in the American countryside at the foot of the Catskills, a small wooden house with a barn behind it was home to the first clandestine network of cross-dressers. Diane and Kate are now 80 years old. At the time, they were men and part of this secret organization. Today, they relate this forgotten but essential chapter of the early days of trans-identity. It is a story full of noise and fury, rich in extraordinary characters, including the famous Susanna, who had the courage to create this refuge that came to be known as Casa Susanna.
Plein sud follows a young man on a road trip after the death of his father. Along the way, he explores his sexuality, encounters a variety of colorful characters, and confronts his own inner demons.
"Welcome to my life", Sylvie Hofmann repeats this sentence almost all day long. Sylvie has been a nurse for 40 years at the North Hospital of Marseille. Her life is running. Between patients, her sick mother, her husband and her daughter, she has always devoted her life to helping others. What if she decided to think a little about herself? To retire? Does she have the right, but above all, does she really want to?
A naked man is peacefully sleeping on his bed. The sun touches his skin. When he's awake, a melancholic boy appears to us.
Wild Side is a drama and romance movie that explores the journey of a transgender woman and her relationships with her dying mother, a male prostitute, and a Russian woman. Set in the French countryside, it delves into themes of identity, family, and sexuality.
Little Girl is a documentary that tells the story of Sasha, a transgender girl, and her journey of self-discovery and acceptance. The film explores the challenges and triumphs that Sasha and her family face as they navigate the complexities of gender identity in a society that often struggles to understand and accept transgender individuals. Through intimate interviews and candid footage, Little Girl offers a powerful and compassionate portrait of a young girl coming to terms with her true self.
Les Invisibles (2012) is a heartfelt documentary that explores the lives of aging LGBTQ individuals who have faced homophobia, fought for their rights, and formed meaningful relationships in a society that often overlooked them. The film focuses on their stories, struggles, and triumphs, capturing the essence of their experiences with authenticity and compassion.
Bambi was born Jean-Pierre Pruvot in a tiny Algerian village in 1935. Even as a child, she refused to meet the expectations of her extended family, choosing instead to find a way to become the woman she always knew herself to be. A Cabaret Carrousel de Paris performance in Algiers in the 1950s proved to be all the encouragement she needed to emigrate to the French capital, assume the stage name of ‘Bambi’ and lead the life she longed for on the music-hall stages.
Thérèse Clerc is one of the great figures of militantism. From the struggle to legalize abortion to the fight for equal rights of men and women and the battle for gay rights, she’s been on the front lines of all of them. She has just learned that she has an incurable disease and has decided to take a last look back over her life, a tender and lucid look at the battles and the love that went with them.
Born to a North African father and a French mother, 18-year-old Parisian high school senior Rémi works part-time in an Arab grocery store while studying management and commerce. He responds to a school ad seeking subjects for a film, and Marc, who placed the ad, auditions Rémi by filming an interview with him. Rémi and Marc wind up in bed, and Rémi soon has other sexual experiences – with a guy in a men's room and with a young woman who grabs him while she's dancing in the street.
A young Frenchman of Arab descent, Djamel, becomes convinced that his long-lost father is a rich factory owner in Grenoble. When the man coldly rejects him, Djamel plots a revenge that will implicate the man's closeted gay son.
A young woman named Juliette reminisces a series of recent confrontations. We hear, off-screen, the voices of her loved ones, her mother, her former lover, who burst in just as she was making the decisions that affected her life.
From the day she was born in Algiers, Marie-Pierre has always wanted to wear dresses and has stubbornly refused her given name: Jean-Pierre. At the age of 17, her life takes a major turn when she comes upon a drag show on tour: le Carrousel de Paris. Marie-Pierre becomes Bambi, and within a few years establishes herself as a legendary figure of the Parisian cabaret scenes of the 50s and 60s. This updated version of the film extends and deepens the short-film released in 2013 to become the feature-length version the director has always dreamt of making.
A unique and committed look at the representation of male homosexuality on French television. Without commentary, exclusively made up of archives, this film tells about the existence of the margin in the norm. A poetic and political work that highlights the power of the media over our imaginations.
In an arrestingly filmed interview (with the questions omitted), Denis offers a spirited and insightful discussion of her films and career. She talks about her films, her career, the directors she admires - such as Renoir and Ozu - the writing of Frantz Fanon, and her convictions in regard to light, sound, montage, tracking shots, and the role of dialogue, which is subordinate to image in her films.
Sébastien Lifshitz wandered around his grandfather's flat on Avenue de Lamballe in Paris. For months, until the place was sold, he filmed it, trying to preserve this trace of his family memory. In 2019, he is returning to these images for the first time.
French national Stéphane Bouquet, the illegitimate son of a U.S. soldier, goes looking for the father he never met in the United States' heartland.
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