US PREMIERE

SHORT FILM PROGRAM

WORLD PREMIERE

FESTIVAL SPOTLIGHT

THROWBACK FROM 

2016

Wicked Queer 33

Even Lovers Get The Blues

Director
Laurent Micheli
Year
2016
Run Time
95
min
Country
Belgium
Language
French
PROGRAM Time
minutes
CONTENT WARNING:
Ana is sleeping with Hugo, Dalhia with Graciano, Léo with Louis, and Arthur with everyone. Parties and love affairs lead to heart searching, deep desires and the craving to live life to the full. *Even Lovers Get the Blues* draws the portrait of the love and sexual lives of disenchanted and passionate young people.
This film is presented in French with English subtitles.
This screening is proudly co-presented by [The Harvard-MIT Belgian Society](https://www.facebook.com/BelgianSociety/), [The Bisexual Resource Center](https://biresource.org/), and [the Honorary Consulate of Belgium in New England](http://www.belgianconsulateboston.com/).
Wicked Queer is proud to co-present this program with
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CONTENT WARNING:
Virginie, a charming girl girl, is waiting for an old girl friend she lost touch with but met up with again on the social networks. In the meantime, a man sitting in the bar takes his chance to approach her. Is he only a womanizer or more than that? Dir. Nicolas Fay. 12 min. France. 2016.
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US PREMIERE
WORLD PREMIERE
FROM 2016
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FREE

Sun, Apr 02 @ 10:00 pm
Brattle Theatre
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A music-mad 16-year-old outcast at rugby-mad boarding school forms an unlikely friendship with his dashing new roommate, in this funny and observant coming-of-age tale from Irish novelist and filmmaker John Butler. This tender look at the travails of teenage life is the story of the worst thing Ned (Fionn O'Shea) ever did. It's also the story of the best thing that ever happened to Ned. With his dyed hair, willowy build, and penchant for sexually ambivalent pop and rock from generations past, 16-year-old Ned has never fit in at the rugby-mad boarding school his father insists he attend. Determined to simply keep his nose down and weather another year of loneliness and bullying, Ned is pleasantly surprised when he develops a friendship with his dashing new roommate, Conor (Nicholas Galitzine), a rugby virtuoso with issues of his own. The boys bond over music and start to practice guitar together. At the encouragement of their English teacher (Andrew Scott), Ned and Conor enter a talent show at a local girls' school. As both talent show and rugby season loom, however, the pressure on Conor to choose between manly athletic discipline and more artistic pursuits threatens to tear him apart — while Ned is increasingly tempted to betray Conor's trust in order to save his own skin. This funny, observant coming-of-age film from Irish novelist and filmmaker John Butler — whose feature debut, The Stag, screened at the Festival in 2013 — reminds us that bravery and loyalty are not innate traits. They're qualities we earn under pressure. Ned and Conor both make mistakes, but in the end, what truly matters is that each learns to speak in his own voice. Desc. courtesy of the Toronto International Film Festival.
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