Chéries-Chéris | |
Location: | MK2 Beaubourg and MK2 Quai de Loire / Quai de Seine, Paris |
Founded: | 1994 |
Language: | French |
Website: | cheries-cheris.com |
Chéries-Chéris (Festival du Film Lesbien, Gay, Bi, Trans & ++++ de Paris) is an annual international LGBT film festival held in Paris in October or November. Original titled "Festival of Gays and Lesbians of Paris", it was founded in 1994 by Yann Beauvais, Philip Brooks, Élisabeth Lebovici, and Nathalie Magnan. The festival is supported by the Ministry of Culture and the Direction régionale des affaires culturelles of Île-de-France.[1]
From 2006 to 2009, the Canal + Short Film Award was announced. In 2010, the prize was extended to the Grand Prix, Prix d'Interpretation, Grand Prix Chéries du film documentaire, Pink TV for Documentary Prize, the Grand Prix of the Festival and the Pink TV for Short Film and a Special Mention award.
Year | Film | Director(s) | Production country | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Uncle David | David Hoyle, Gary Reich, Mike Nicholls | United Kingdom | ||
2011 | Romeos | Sabine Bernardi | Germany | ||
2012 | Facing Mirrors | Negar Azarbayjani | Iran | [2] | |
2013 | Noor | Guillaume Giovanetti, Cagla Zencirci | France, Pakistan | ||
2014 | The Smell of Us | Larry Clark | France | [3] | |
2015 | Where There Is Shade (De l'ombre il y a) | Nathan Nicholovitch | France | [4] | |
2016 | The Ornithologist (O Ornitólogo) | João Pedro Rodrigues | Portugal | [5] | |
2017 | Call Me by Your Name | Luca Guadagnino | Italy, France | [6] | |
2018 | The Harvesters (Die Stropers) | Etienne Kallos | South Africa | [7] | |
2019 | Lingua Franca | Isabel Sandoval | Philippines, United States | [8] | |
2020 | Dry Wind (Vento seco) | Daniel Nolasco | Brazil | [9] | |
2021 | Great Freedom (Große Freiheit) | Sebastian Meise | Austria, Germany | [10] | |
2022 | Joyland | Saim Sadiq | Pakistan | [11] |