
The annual celebration of LGBTQIA film has selected 15 films to showcase the power of queer storytelling
BY ELLA GAUCI, IMAGE BY LOUISA CONNOLLY-BURNHAM
The Iris Prize LGBTQ+ Film Festival has announced the 15 films up for the 2024 Iris Prize Best British Short supported by Film4 and Pinewood Studios. The annual celebration of LGBTQIA film brings together creators to showcase some of the best in queer storytelling. The 18th festival will take place in person from 8 – 13 October 2024.
The winner of the highly anticipated Iris Prize Best British award will receive an exclusive screening of their film at Pinewood Studios and will be invited to be part of the 2025 Iris Prize Best British jury.
Berwyn Rowlands, Iris Prize Film Festival Director, said: “Every year we are thrilled to share with our festival audience and juries the very best of LGBTQIA storytelling from across the UK, as Iris continues to be a celebration of global stories and Cardiff charm.”
“We are also pleased that this prize is supported by one of the most LGBTQIA-friendly broadcasters and champion of the Iris Prize, and each of the British films in competition will be available to stream on Channel 4 for 12 months following the festival. This is a brilliant and much-valued partnership which has helped Iris to reach a new audience for LGBTQIA stories.”
Here is the full shortlist for this year’s Iris Prize Best British Short.
Diomysus: More Than Monogamy | Dir: Emily Morus-Jones (5 mins)
An experimental film where a group of mice (voiced by members of the UK polyamorous community whose identities are masked using puppetry) discuss their experiences of polyamory. Diomysus asks the question – are we (the audience) more open to taboo ideas if unconscious bias is eliminated?
Divine Intervention | Dir: Ravenna Tran (17 mins)
To get the promotion of their dreams, a mischievous earth-bound angel must get two ex-best friends to finally admit their love to each other.
Everything Looks Simple from a Distance | Dir: Conor Toner (13 mins)
With tensions mounting in 1969 Northern Ireland, Noah tries to convince politicians, money men, priests, and paramilitaries that a trip to the moon may be the best route to peace.
Fairview Park | Dir: Aymeric Nicolet, Ellie Hodgetts (14 mins)
A film based on the murder of Declan Flynn, seen as a major catalyst for Ireland’s LGBTQ Pride movement.
G Flat | Dir: Peter Darney (18 mins)
An 84-year-old stroke survivor sends for a sex worker leading to an unexpected climax.
I Hope He Doesn’t Kill Me. | Dir: Lyndon Henley Hanrahan, Nora Dahle Borchgrevink (14 mins)
Buzz waits outside the apartment building of his anonymous Grindr hookup, imagining all the depraved ways this night could end. Horrified yet horny, Buzz buzzes the buzzer.
Making Up | Dir: Ryan Paige (15 mins)
It’s the late 1980s in East End London and drag queen Ted, who is diagnosed with a hereditary illness, must reconcile with his estranged daughter, Cassandra.
Miss Temperance | Dir: Jeremy McClain (13 mins)
In Glasgow’s alt-queer party scene, a drag artist navigates the night of their return to the stage after being one year sober.
Rage Consumes Me | Dir: Felix Waverley-Hudson (5 mins)
This is a poetic and provocative exploration of being non-binary in today’s society, of anger and despair as your personhood and identity are stripped away.
Rejoyce! | Dir: David Ledger (15 mins)
After the death of her husband, an elderly vicar’s wife unearths a book of erotic fiction that she wrote in her youth.
Sally Leapt out of a Window Last Night | Dir: Tracy Spottiswoode (20 mins)
Ireland 1778. Sally and Eleanor flout convention and scandalise society to escape the fate their families have planned for them. They elope. Inspired by the true story of the legendary ‘Ladies of Llangollen.’
Sister Wives | Dir: Louisa Connolly-Burnham (28 mins)
Two sister wives married to the same man start to develop feelings for each other.
Until Today | Dir: Megan Lyons (15 mins)
After her overbearing mother arranges a loveless marriage, a young aristocrat must consider the price of familial duty when it threatens a forbidden romance with her best friend.
Water’s Edge | Dir: Jason Barker (15 mins)
In near future rural Somerset, Anna is trying to be a happily married woman but the arrival of a troupe of travelling players on the farm tests her beliefs to the limit.
Who’s Kitty Amor? | Dir: Maik Diederen (22 mins)
From her South London upbringing, formative clubbing years at Nottingham University and running nights at the legendary Stealth nightclub and her international DJ success across the globe, Kitty Amor’s remarkable rise through the ranks of the UK scene and unwavering dedication to flying the flag for Africa’s Electronic Music is told like never before in documentary short.
Full details about the Iris Prize can be found here: www.irisprize.org
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