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It Used to Be Witches Under the Spell of Queer Cinema

  • Writer: Daniel May
    Daniel May
  • 2 hours ago
  • 1 min read

(Book Talk) & Screening of Appropriate Behavior


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Film critic Ryan Gilbey presents It Used to Be Witches, his new book mapping a non-linear path through queer cinema history, in a special in conversation with Cian Smyth at this year's Belfast International Arts Festival.


It Used to Be Witches is a playful blend of memoir, criticism and candid interviews with filmmakers from across the LGBTQ+ spectrum. Andrew Haigh, Cheryl Dunye and Isabel Sandoval are among the directors who reveal how queer artists use film to express personal truths—and to challenge a world that would rather they didn’t exist.


Gilbey asks whether cinema can be an effective weapon of resistance and celebrates an outlaw spirit which refuses to die.


After the talk, Gilbey will introduce a screening of Appropriate Behaviour (2015). Writer-director-actress Desiree Akhavan’s debut is a witty, Iranian, hipster date movie. After her girlfriend dumps her, Shirin (Akhavan) scrambles to hold her life together in modern-day Brooklyn.


Date | Tuesday 28 October , Time | 6:00pm, Venue | Queen’s Film Theatre, Ticket Prices | £13 / £11 



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