A Filipino family’s coming out story

It Runs in the Family screens at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival

It Runs in the Family screens at the 2016 Vancouver Queer Film Festival.

Angelina Cantada/Daily Xtra

Vancouver filmmaker Joella Cabalu credits a film she saw several years ago on Christian families grappling with their children coming out as part of her inspiration to direct It Runs in the Family.

“I began to think about what would that story look like for my own family, for an Asian family, for a Filipino immigrant family,” she says.

Daily Xtra caught up with Cabalu and her gay brother Jay to talk about the film, their search for gay relatives, connection and shared understanding in a Catholic society, and the true meaning of family.

It Runs in the Family
Tuesday, Aug 16, 9pm
International Village, 88 W Pender St, Vancouver
queerfilmfestival.ca

Read all our 2016 Vancouver Queer Film Festival coverage:

What happened to the gay dancers who toured with Madonna?

Re:Orientations: What does Asian Canadian queer identity look like today?

Chemsex: sensationalist film or useful warning?

In particular, barbara findlay: Meet Vancouver’s pioneering lesbian lawyer

How a Beyonce concert in Brazil helped build queer community

Why four Latina lesbians were accused of raping children

Aligarh rooted in India’s flip-flop on gay rights

Can a gay man be attracted to a bisexual woman?

Troublemakers: When young queers tell their elders’ stories

Two Soft Things, Two Hard Things uncovers LGBT Inuit history

And our paid sponsored content, written by the Vancouver Queer Film Festival:

Top picks for queer flicks at Vancouver Queer Film Festival 2016

The steamiest scenes at the 2016 Vancouver Queer Film Festival

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TV & Film, Video, Culture, Vancouver, Arts

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