Documentaries To Watch At BFI Flare

The 35th BFI Flare: London LGBTIQ+ Film Festival showcased the best new LGBTIQ+ cinema from around the world.

 

The festival's documentary selection was absolutely superb. I was lucky enough to watch nine doc features at BFI Flare and I loved every single one of these powerful and thought-provoking films.

 

The event was held virtually (for a second year - via the BFI Player platform to UK-wide audiences) and included 26 features and 38 free shorts from 23 countries. 

 

Let’s take a look at BFI Flare’s must-watch non-fiction films...

 

BFI Flare Documentary Features

BFI Flare was divided into three thematic strands:

  • Hearts - films about love, romance and friendship
  • Bodies - stories of sex, identity and transformation
  • Minds - reflections on art, politics and community.

Here are nine must-watch BFI Flare documentaries:

 

Rebel Dykes (Dir. Harri Shanahan, Sîan Williams) - Set in 1980s post-punk London, the film follows a tight-knit group of friends who met at Greenham Common peace camp and went on to become artists, performers, musicians and activists in London. 

Click here for my review

 

Aids Diva: The Legend of Connie Norman (Dir. Dante Alencastre) - A portrait of Connie Norman, a local LA activist who worked tirelessly to make a difference in the struggle for AIDS victims and for trans rights.

Click here for my review

 

Cured (Dir. Bennett Singer, Patrick Sammon) - Exploring the campaign by key US activists to remove homosexuality from the American Psychiatric Association’s definition of mental illness.

Click here for my review

 

Mama Gloria (Dir. Luchina Fisher) - The story of how fighter, organiser and survivor Gloria Allen became a local hero to younger Chicagoan trans women.

Click here for my review 

 

No Ordinary Man (Dir. Aisling Chin-Yee, Chase Joynt) - A documentary portrait of pioneering jazz musician Billy Tipton.

Click here for my review

 

Colors Of Tobi (Dir. Alexa Bakony) - Following a family in Hungary on their journey to understand teenage gender dysphoria.

Click here for my review

 

I Am Samuel (Dir. Pete Murimi) - The story of Kenyan couple, Samuel and Alex, who remain committed to each other despite the danger and hardship facing them in their country.

 

After its inclusion in BFI London Film Festival last year, I Am Samuel is now co-presented by BFI Flare on BFI Player and Human Rights Watch Film Festival (18-26 March) on Barbican Cinema On Demand.

 

Well Rounded (Dir. Shana Myara) - A celebration of body positivity, race, activism and queerness.

Click here for my review

 

PS. Burn This Letter Please (Dir. Michael Seligman, Jennifer Tiexiera) - The story behind the 2014 discovery of a cache of letters written by 1950s New York drag queens.

Click here for my review 

 

BFI Flare Documentary Shorts

This year’s BFI Flare Shorts programme was split across seven thematic selections: Beginnings and Endings, Heart’s Desires, Into the Unknown, Queer as in Question Everything, Shapes We Make, Spaces We Take, Striving to Be Seen and For the Record.

 

For The Record is a selection of short form documentaries designed to provoke and inspire in equal measures. The films included:

 

Above the Troubled Water (Dir. Joe Cohen) – Three Nigerian men are scattered across the globe after escaping homophobic violence.

 

All I Need Is a Ball (Dir. Elena Molina) – Freestyle champion Palermo and her grassroots campaign to create a female league of freestylers in her native Spain.  

 

Being Sascha (Dir. Manuel Gübeli) – In this discerning mini-doc, Sascha beautifully articulates and illuminates life as a trans non-binary person in the small city of Basel.  

 

Son of Sodom (Dir. Theo Montoya) –  Selected for the 2020 Cannes Film Festival, this portrait of a beautiful, young, rebel queer explores his life in the bohemian circles of Medellin.  

 

Tracing Utopia (Dirs. Catarina de Sousa, Nick Tyson) – Young queers connect in a sci-fi dream world to build a war machine of love and a virtual manifesto for the future.  


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Jane Douglas-Jones
Jane Douglas-Jones

E: jane@500daysoffilm.com


Disclaimer:

This site contains my own

thoughts and opinions on

films. Other opinions are

available but may not be correct.