Sister Wives

Sister Wives is a multi-layered love story that tells the tale of young women living in a strict, fundamentalist, polygamous society in 2003 Utah, USA. Kaidence and Galilee find themselves bound to one another, under the same roof, in the same marriage, as they develop scary, new, exciting feelings for each other. In a harsh, regressive, watchful community where being queer is considered a cardinal sin, they begin having thoughts of leaving the only life they have ever know behind. Sister Wives will offer a vital perspective to the canon of coming-out films; at its core, it is a story of female friendship, of allyship, a story of exploration, both physical and psychological, as together they find the courage to dream in tandem, of a world beyond the walls.

C.U.N.T.

C.U.N.T. captures a snapshot of a pocket of queer nightlife in the East Village of New York City, a gathering place for trans and non-binary people that uplifts their art and bolsters community called C U Next Tuesday.

LGBT: Always Human

In midst of rising threats, we see that sexual orientation is not above or a hindrance to the common human experience

July 11, 2025
1-2:30 PM

Court Square Theater
44-02 23rd St, Long Island City

Fruit Loops

A 30 something year old lesbian from NYC documents a series of horrible dates as she tries to find the one.

My Dear,

My Dear, is a self-reflective documentary about the will of a young Chinese director to express his own sexual identity in Europe.

A quiet sense of impending change threads together scenes from director Aragon Yao’s own life. Calls from his parents in China inquiring after his marital status blend with calls from his boyfriend asking about his job prospects, each underscoring the reality that the student visa that brought him to Europe will soon end. With time running out, Yao faces tough questions about his relationship with his family, culture, and his sense of self. Seeking release, he turns to drag. Shifting between observational footage, paper puppetry, and poetic symbolism, Yao explores expressions of sexual identity in this essay about queerness, immigration, and performance.