Image+Nation

All films

Shorts Programmes
Made au CanadaQueerment QuébecCompetition

Filters (1)

Made au CanadaQueerment QuébecCompetition
Screening Type
Sorting
33 films found
Sorting
PosterFeatureVIRTUAL
AMANTES[FOCUS FRANCE]104 minutes

Get ready for Amantes, a sexy trope-bender that defies love triangles, calling for a new shape to lesbian relationships and in a softer tone of feminist discourse. Set in romantic Paris, this series of intertwined stories from an all-female cast is sure to open minds just as much as hearts. Ruby, podcaster for Everybody Wants to Say I Love You is driven by psychological feminist theories as she explores the complexities of relationships between women—although her devotion to work leaves her wife Gabrielle wanting. Then there’s Nour, a fun and passionate singer who cannot resist the level-headed, down-to-earth Camille; and let’s not forget the gorgeous throuple: Rebecca, Laura, and Ophelie whose polyamory puts a delightful spin on relationship milestones like meeting the parents and having children. More women surround these relationships—friends, exes, and interested parties—all of whom are navigating the “unconscious contract of commitment.” More than your typical rom-com, Amantes delivers a refreshingly light-hearted and vulnerable narrative that bears resemblance to The L Word when she meets Sex and the City and invites Vicky, Cristina, Barcelona to tag along for an hour and a half of steamy sapphic fun.

PosterCompetitionFeature
Competition Icon
AT THE PLACE OF GHOSTS (SK+TE'KMUJUE'KATIK)[COMPETITION]87 minutes

The dangers of the past come in many forms. Two estranged Mi’kmaw siblings confront old animosities in an ancient forest, both in desperate need of healing. In their quest to rid themselves of the lingering evil that haunts them, they encounter the trail of their ancestors—and of their former selves. Mise’l (Blake Alec Miranda) is working a grueling shift when the jukebox warbles to life and an ominous presence from their childhood reveals itself, still capable of inflicting its wounds. Desperate, they seek out their younger brother, Antle (Forrest Goodluck). A task that requires them to part from their supportive partner and return home after many years away. Begrudgingly, their brother agrees to the journey, worried for his daughter’s safety if he does nothing, and they set out on a time-spanning mission. Elders are consulted. Strange creatures stalk them. Kinship is tested. The two heading deeper and deeper into nature at its most nurturing, and most menacing. From Bretten Hannam, the Two-Spirit L'nu filmmaker behind 2021’s acclaimed Wildhood (Opening Film I+N34, 2021), this is a ghost story of the highest order—equal parts eerie and edifying, and utterly unforgettable.

PosterCompetitionFeature
Competition Icon
BEARCAVE (ARKOUDOTRYPA)[COMPETITION]128 minutes

Passionate, provocative, and powerful—it’s easy to see why Bearcave was awarded the Europa Cinema Label at the 2025 Venice Film Festival. Set in a fictional remote village in the Balkan Mountains of Greece, a love story between two lifelong friends unfolds—but will their relationship survive the call of womanhood? Argyro is a farm girl—hard-working, unpretentious, and wholesome while Anneta is … in a bit of trouble. Whisked away by her law enforcement beau (and carrying his child) Anneta’s move to the city threatens to sever her friendship with Argyro for good, but their understated glances from across the crowd at a party one night tells a different story. The whisper of sweet nothings and foggy windows in Argyro’s pickup truck soon fade to memory, leaving behind a cloud of confusion and heartbreak, that is—until Anneta’s side of the story unfolds. Set against a backdrop of sweeping landscapes, a mystical cave, and nettle bushes, Bearcave is a film that’s steeped in tradition, then abruptly subverted, and not only by a sapphic love story, but a hybrid soundscape of folkloric and contemporary music, as well as ethereal sequences of cinematographic magic.

PosterCompetitionFeature
Competition Icon
BEAUTIFUL EVENING, BEAUTIFUL DAY (LIJEPA VEČER, LIJEP DAN)[COMPETITION]137 minutes

A tight-knit group of revolutionary gay filmmakers in late-1950s former Yugoslavia are shackled by the state to Emir, a communist bureaucrat conditioned to see sabotage everywhere. When the group endeavours to use the Tito regime’s ideological weapons against them, an upended system or the horrors of Barren Island await. Desire—for all of us—can be a heady cocktail. In a society that turns desire inside out, with trust shaken and lover pitted against lover, it becomes a minefield. Dancing cheek to cheek and screwing with abandon turned into revolutionary acts, art a tool for undermining authority. All tactics taken up by professional and romantic partners Lovro (Dado Cosic) and Nenad (Djordje Galic) and their fellow filmmakers (Slaven Doslo, Elmir Krivalic). The four friends determined to savour glimpses of the beautiful lives possible if defense mechanisms could safely fall—a boogie-woogie record; a secluded, seaside house in Istria—as they risk their lives for the cause of freedom. In Croatia’s official submission for the 2025 Academy Awards, the sex is explicit, the stakes and brutality intense, the cinematography stunning. A gutting and rarefied concoction immortalized by writer-director Ivona Juka’s daring cinematic achievement.

PosterCompetitionFeature
Competition Icon
BETWEEN DREAMS AND HOPE (MIAN ROYA VA OMID)[COMPETITION]106 minutes

Azad is a transman and aspiring film student who lives discreetly, but happily, with his girlfriend Nora in Iran’s bustling capital, Tehran. After the long and grueling process of acquiring gender affirming care, one last step stands in Azad’s way of medically transitioning–a signature of consent from his estranged father. Farnoosh Samadi presents the heart-wrenching tale of young love strained under the confines of social oppression, where sumptuary legislation enforces dress codes and women can be subjected to ‘virginity tests.’ Even darker shadows lurk beneath the stunning scenery of the remote Iranian village where Azad hails from–a place he is no longer welcome for bringing shame to his conservative and superstitious family simply by being himself. Plagued by strange premonitions, in intermittent and surreal dream sequences, Nora soon finds herself suspicious of her partner’s true whereabouts when Azad suddenly goes missing and his family insists that he has returned to Tehran without her. A slow burn that eventually heats up with riveting intensity, Between Dreams and Hope tells a remarkable story of strength, courage, and resilience that leaves a profound and lasting impression long after the credits have rolled.

PosterFeature
BLOOD LINES[ZEITGEIST]89 minutes

The latest from Gail Maurice, the director of Rosie (Opening Film, I+N35, 2022), Blood Lines is breath-taking and evocative, bringing visibility to the lives of indigenous adoptees. Set in a remote Métis village, this woman-centric tale braves the nuances of intergenerational trauma with not only courage but humour. Director Gail Maurice delivers a poignant cameo as Leonore, seeking amends for her disappearance from her daughter Beatrice’s life. Meanwhile, Beatrice (clerk of the Eager Beaver gas station) meets Chani (a new transplant from the city in search of her birth family) but from here: a love story that’s anything but typical. With dialogue in the Michif language, which has less than 1200 speakers left, this urgent film shows the various ways women support one another—in particular, how Leonore’s closest friends “The Grannies” bring joy (and perhaps a bit of mischief) to each day despite hardships, past and present. Whether through sharing laughter, breaking bread, or extending an olive branch, it’s by their grace the next generation can see how patriarchy and colonialism have disempowered them and then held them to blame—until now, when stories finally fall on ears that listen.

PosterCompetitionFeature
Competition Icon
DEPARTURES[COMPETITION]82 minutes

With the verve of a Guy Ritchie caper and the popping-hearts swoon of Heartstopper, writer-director-actor Lloyd Eyre-Morgan brings us a tale of troubled men and a soured affair. When two frequent flyers from the north of England cut ties, one sifts through the past to master his heartbroken present. According to “fit AF” Jake (David Tag), his sexuality is 70/30—the 30% of himself set aside for men. With one weekend a month in Amsterdam saved for sweet, searching Benji (Lloyd Eyre-Morgan), who he meets after a cancelled flight. The two seeming opposites wade through emotional and societal baggage to find the sweet spot: a short-term rental in Amsterdam where they can meet away from homegrown obligations. But the closer Benji gets to Jake’s gooey center, the more Jake approaches romance with the bumper rails up, flip-flopping between encouraging and squashing Benji’s vulnerability—and his own. In addition to its sex-soaked escapades and visual flair, Departures is written with care and complexity, peeling off layer after layer of what builds bonds, only to have them break. Self-funded by a collective of working-class LGBTQ+ filmmakers, this Manchester-made feature is confident, can’t-miss filmmaking.

PosterFeature
DES PREUVES D’AMOUR (LOVE LETTERS)[FOCUS FRANCE]97 minutes

The city is Paris, the year is 2014, and same-sex marriage has recently been legalized in France. Céline and Nadia—both in their thirties—decide to get married and start a family (via insemination) but as pioneers of lesbian parenting, they quickly discover how far from equality they actually remain. A remarkable debut from Alice Douard, Des preuves d’amour (Love Letters) explores the trials of lesbian parenting, with plenty of laugh-out-loud moments to help ease the tension of unrelenting obstacles. While most would agree that one can never truly prepare for parenthood, Douard’s film shows the barriers that a lesbian couple must overcome—to name a few, there’s mandatory marital status, adoption papers for the non-gestational parent, and fifteen letters of attestation from friends and family (PS–they can’t all be lesbians!). Though these demands compound an already overwhelming milestone, Céline (Ella Rumpf) and Nadia (Monia Chokri, Les amours imaginaires) persist, enduring character judgments and microaggressions as they navigate through the endless bureaucratic hoops that no heterosexual couple would have to surpass. But the most significant challenge for Céline will be to reconnect her estranged mother Marguerite—a famous concert pianist who’s currently in Paris for a tour—from whom Céline needs a letter.

PosterFeature
ENZO[FOCUS FRANCE]102 minutes

Seaside La Ciotat, its cicadas droning, is a far cry from the battlefields of Ukraine. A distance that vexes 16-year-old Enzo, who is drowning in ennui. Drawn to danger, cavalier about consequences, he is convinced a dashing Ukrainian bricklayer is his ticket to a more audacious future. Enzo (Eloy Pohu) makes for an irksome masonry apprentice: he slacks off, scoffing at superiors. He seems engineered for his privileged life at his parents’ hillside villa, cooling off in the pool under an unrelenting sun. But, he bucks his parents’ high aspirations and boss’ low expectations, determined to be part of something that lasts. Equally determined to insinuate himself into the trajectory of his 20-something colleague, Vlad (Maksym Slivinskyi). While Enzo must debate which vacation to take, Vlad is torn epically between a newfound Frenchness and wartorn Ukraine. Vlad becoming a romantic and narrative ideal Enzo will do anything to attain. Dying in the midst of Enzo’s creation, auteur Laurent Cantet passed the baton to longtime collaborator Robin Campillo (120 BPM), who encapsulates the fascinating ambiguities of sexuality, class anxiety, and valour. Situating them amongst the half-built shelters and ineffable ruins of our time.

PosterFeature
FOUR MOTHERS89 minutes

Irish author Edward Brady is beside himself when literary success calls to him from the US, but the timing couldn’t be worse: he must care for his ailing mother. Then, when his friends—who are (self-proclaimed) THE worst—abruptly fly to Spain for Pride, they saddle him with three more elderly mothers. Edward’s mother, mute from a recent stroke, communicates to him through wry facial expressions and an iPad that imparts her needs, requests, and matronly advice in a feminine robot voice. “Be. Con. Fi. Dent,” she taps onto her keyboard as Edward rushes to answer a Zoom call to give an author interview. Thanks to TikTok, he is now gaining long-awaited recognition for his queer coming-of-age novel, though his decision to travel overseas for a book tour is put on hold when he suddenly finds himself anchored, like the walls of a house, by four elderly mothers. With plenty of claustrophobic close-ups from the camera, Edward is neither here nor there, but loveably neurotic as he stumbles to get out of his own way long enough to claim his future, discovering among his uninvited guests a most unexpected allyship.

Nerd Studio