4 mins
Celebrating New Irish Queerness
Gearing up for its second edition, Queer Spectrum Film Festival is a celebration of LGBTQ+ stories in motion. As Pradeep Mahadeshwar puts it, it is a vibrant tribute to journeys of migration, nostalgia of the land and language left behind, and transformation in a new country.
Marungka Tjalatjunu (Dipped in Black) 2023 dir.
Matthew Thorne
Queer Spectrum Film Festival (QSFF) is Ireland’s first film festival dedicated to centring LGBTQ+ people of colour and immigrant voices. It stands as an act of joyful resistance, claiming space where it has long been missing. Projects like QSFF are weaving an alternative cultural fabric, creating a welcoming space where LGBTQ+ people of colour, immigrants, and allies can connect, share stories, and embody the living, breathing reality of ‘New Irish Queerness’—one that embraces the full beauty of diversity.
This year holds particular significance as we mark the 10th anniversary of Ireland’s Marriage Referendum. This landmark moment reshaped the landscape not only for those born here, but also for queer migrants from the Global South and East who saw Ireland as a beacon of hope and new beginnings. At QSFF, storytelling moves beyond traditional coming out narratives. The festival is drawn to stories of queer lives in motion—stories of transition not just in terms of gender or sexuality, but across place, culture, and identity. It’s about the in-between spaces, the act of becoming, the quiet, continuous transformations that define who we are. The films capture the emotional, psychological, and physical journeys of those evolving into someone different from where they began—a celebration of shifting selves and reimagined futures.
The 2025 festival is proudly organised by Queer Asian Pride Ireland (QAPI), led by QSFF Founder, Director, and Programmer Pradeep Mahadeshwar, alongside Co-Founder, Manager, and Programmer Lee Isac. With generous support from LGBT Ireland, Outhouse LGBTQ+ Centre, Dublin LGBTQ+ Pride, and Maharani Gin, the Queer Spectrum Film Festival celebrates those who carry the sounds, colours, and dreams of distant homes within them—individuals whose presence is redefining what it means to be Irish and queer today. The 2025 edition will be proudly hosted at the Irish Film Institute (IFI) on June 13 and 14, featuring 22 powerful films that will light up the screen.
Feature Film — Festival — QPOC
Everybody’s Gotta Love Sometimes 2023 dir.
Sein Lyan Tun
Sabar Bonda (Cactus Pears) 2025 dir.
Rohan Kanawade
The programme is crafted with care, comprising two feature films—one to open and one to close—and three short film blocks. The first block, Resilient Joy, features six films that chart intimate journeys across borders of place, body, and memory. Blending myth, migration, and resilience, these films celebrate the courage to transform, to remember, and to imagine new worlds beyond the familiar. The second block, Beyond the Known, takes us from basketball courts to coastal villages, exploring queer joy, resilience, and unexpected tenderness. Through stories of love, survival, and reunion, these films capture the quiet revolutions of becoming—even in the face of violence, loss, and distance. Finally, Born Anew honours resilience, love, and the quiet fight for authenticity. From Kerala to Paris, Dublin to New York, these six films weave tender stories of remembrance, transformation, and the fierce beauty of living truthfully.
This year, the team was especially moved by the strength and depth of short films submitted from Myanmar, Brazil, and India. The richness of these stories made selection a joyful challenge, and there will be as many showcased as possible, offering audiences a global journey through the heart of queer experience.
Opening the festival is Neirud, a feature documentary directed by Fernanda Faya from Brazil. Neirud unravels the haunting mystery of the director’s aunt, a woman who lived under layers of secrecy, leaving behind little trace of her past. Through a deeply personal investigation, Faya reconstructs Neirud’s extraordinary story: once a wrestler in an underground, all-female circus troupe, performing across Brazil during the volatile decades of the ‘60s through the ‘80s. Neirud’s controversial ring persona, Gorilla Woman, becomes a key to unlocking larger themes of race, identity, and queer life in a country where such intersections were perilous. The film is a luminous reflection on memory, identity, and the hidden lives that shape us, perfectly resonant with the festival’s spirit of uncovering the untold, the unseen, and the brave.
Our closing film, Sabar Bonda (Cactus Pears), directed by Rohan Kanawade from India, offers a tender, aching story of connection and choice. Anand, a city dweller called back to his ancestral village for a 10-day mourning period, finds an unexpected bond with a local farmer—a relationship blooming quietly amidst western India’s dry, rugged beauty. As mourning ends, Anand is confronted with the realities of returning to a life shaped by expectation and silence. Cactus Pears is an exquisite meditation on grief, love, and the spaces in between, echoing the quiet revolutions that occur in the margins of our lives. It reminds us that sometimes, the most radical acts are tenderness, connection, and the refusal to let go of joy.
QSFF 2025 would not be possible without the steadfast support of the festival’s sponsors and partners. The team is deeply grateful to Outhouse LGBTQ+ Centre, Dublin LGBTQ+ Pride, and Maharani Gin for believing in the vision, and extends heartfelt thanks to the festival collaborators—GAZE International LGBTQIA+ Film Festival, KASHISH Pride Film Festival, and TITE Film Festival—who continue to champion queer cinema across the globe. The team also thanks its non-film collaborators, Shamrock Sióga and Dublin Bears and honours the invaluable support of the Irish Network Against Racism, GCN, and GORM, whose work strengthens the fabric of solidarity and community. A special thanks also goes to the IFI team and to Greg and Sam from GAZE, whose encouragement and guidance have helped make this edition possible.
Queer Spectrum Film Festival is more than a showcase of films—it is an invitation to witness, to feel, and to imagine new worlds together. Through every frame and every shared moment, it affirms that our stories matter, our lives are art, and our futures are ours to shape. Welcome to QSFF 2025. Welcome home.
Book tickets for Queer Spectrum Film Festival at ifi.ie/queer-spectrum-film-festival.