Doc Corner: Queer x3 to Japan, NYC and Manchester

By Glenn Dunks
LGBTIA people of colour are seen far less on our screens so I wanted to use this week’s column to focus on a few films that give them a spotlight which are now accessible to audiences. Of the three titles, the one that feels the most urgent is Graham Kolbeins’ exuberant Queer Japan that traverses the (often quite interconnected) underground scene of Japan’s queer population. If Kolbein’s film is vibrant and busy, then Gustávo Sanchez’s transgender narrative of I Hate New York manages to somehow find the grit and the dirt in NYC long after it seemingly vanished. Lastly, while that city’s Harlem ball scene has been well memorialized on screen, Deep in Vogue by Dennis Keighron-Foster and Amy Watson finds a different angle across the pond in England’s scene...

