The ICO interviewed us for their blog to mark our first decade of queer feminist programming.

Continue reading “ICO blog: Club des Femmes’ decade of queer feminist programming 12.5.2017”
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The ICO interviewed us for their blog to mark our first decade of queer feminist programming.
Continue reading “ICO blog: Club des Femmes’ decade of queer feminist programming 12.5.2017”
Dazed invited us together with five other rad film organisations to weigh in on representation in the film industry, tools for change and whether we should disregard the importance of awards ceremonies altogether.
Continue reading “Where are we really at with diversity in hollywood? 26.2.2016”
Greenham was an alternative world, an anti-nuclear protest by hundreds of thousands of women activists.
Continue reading “openDemocracy: The legend of Greenham Common women’s peace camp 2.2.2016”
With the release of Todd Haynes’ Carol, Selina remembers some of the greatest lesbian films from the USA.
Continue reading “BFI 10 great American lesbian films 26.11.2015”
In honour of our Ada & After: Women do Science [Fiction] season, the awesome website Porno Kitsch celebrating the wonders of geek culture asked us what we thought was our kind of queer feminist science fiction cinema.
Continue reading “Friday Five: 5 of the best … GRRLS IN SPACE! 20.11. 2014”
We were invited by Orlando to write something about our collective, who we are and what we are doing.
Continue reading “Orlando Issue 0: This is what we are doing – Club des Femmes LIVE October 2015”
12 November 2014, 18:27 The F Word
Continue reading “Ada & After: Women Do Science [Fiction] guest blog for The F Word”
Selina Robertson reviews New Yorker Madeleine Olnek’s debut feature and chats to the director about sci-fi B-movies from the 1950s and the advantages of video over film
It’s tricky to pinpoint the moment when the movie world could proclaim the first openly lesbian film. Identifying early cinematic representations of lesbianism was like collecting crumbs off the top table.
Selina Robertson talks to British queer filmmaker Campbell X about her first feature, gay-lesbian friendships and how buying flowers for a lover is a feminist thing