Zurich
Samstag, 22. April 2017
Sonntag, 23. April 2017
90 min
Mittwoch, 26. April 2017
Donnerstag, 27. April 2017
Rob Epstein, Jeffrey Friedman · USA 1989 · E/d · 79 min



Freitag, 28. April 2017
Rob Epstein, Jeffrey Friedman · USA/GB/D 1995 · E/d/f · 102 min



E · 60 min
Samstag, 29. April 2017
Dagmar Heinrich · CH 1987 · D · 35 min

Gagik Ghazareh · ARM 2016 · Armenisch/e/d · 75 min



Sonntag, 30. April 2017
Pasquale Plastino, Stéphane Riethauser · D/CH 2016 · D/e · 61 min

Montag, 1. Mai 2017
Susan Seidelmann · USA 1985 · E/d · 104 min
Conny Scherrer · CH 1993 · Schweizerdeutsch · 60 min

Dienstag, 2. Mai 2017
Jochen Hick · D 2017 · D · 99 min






Swiss Premiere Documentary
In West Berlin in the 1960s it was possible to find bars where men could be left to themselves – a fact that was to turn the city into a magnet for young gay men. The protagonists of this film, all still active members of the community today, recall those early years in the city. Theirs are memories of a community that fought steadily for its existence, and of its change, right up to the fall of the Wall. Faced with considerable social repression in the 1970s, a collective gay identity began to emerge, and the ‘West Berlin homosexual campaign’ called for the abolition of paragraph 175 and the overthrow of patriarchy. Ruined buildings become the venues for new ways of living together such as all-male communes or the ‘queer house’. Cottaging, East-West affairs, leather bars, drag performances in the subway – an anarchic kind of joy outshines past suffering. A decade later, AIDS was to hit Berlin. After Out in Ost-Berlin (Out In East Berlin) Jochen Hick explores queer lifestyles in the West of the city and the roots of a fascination that the metropolis still holds as a refuge – and not just for gay men. A fascinating journey through time featuring previously unpublished archive material. (Berlinale Catalogue)
Mittwoch, 3. Mai 2017
Donnerstag, 4. Mai 2017
Donnerstag, 8. Juni 2017