Premiering in a midnight screening at the Cannes Film Festival, JIM QUEEN is already shaping up to be one of the most anticipated queer films of the year. This animated comedy dives head‑first into LGBTQIA+ realities – especially gay male communities – with a mix of sharp humour and tenderness, tackling nightlife, party culture, HIV, living with HIV, family acceptance and the power of chosen family.
To celebrate its Belgian release in cinemas on 24 June, JIM QUEEN will have a special avant‑première in Brussels on 19 June at cinema GALERIES, in the presence of the directors and Brussels‑based community organisations.

When heterosexuality becomes… an infection
Jim is a sexy, untouchable icon of the Paris gay scene: nightlife royalty, sculpted body, magnetic charisma and countless followers. Until everything crashes. He contracts Heterosis – a strange virus that turns gay men into heterosexuals. Overnight, his world collapses: the community turns its back on him, his status evaporates, and his place in gay culture crumbles.
The only one who doesn’t walk away is Lucien, Jim’s last follower – and first real fan – a young man who is still struggling to accept himself. Together, they embark on a wild quest to find a mysterious cure, save Jim, and stop the complete extinction of homosexuality.
By turning heterosexuality into the “disease” to be feared, JIM QUEEN flips the script on how queer people have historically been pathologised. The film uses satire and absurdity to expose stigma, shifting the “problem” onto the norm itself and opening space for a very queer kind of revenge fantasy.
Sex, nightlife, HIV, family: talking honestly through comedy
Behind its outrageous premise, JIM QUEEN speaks to very real issues for queer and especially gay male communities:
- the codes, freedoms and traps of the nightlife scene
- different ways of consuming and partying in gay spaces
- HIV and living with HIV, treated with nuance rather than tragedy or moral panic
- coming out and family reactions, between rejection, silence and slow reconciliation
- the care and kindness of friends – that queer chosen family that catches you when everything else collapses
Because the creators are themselves part of the community, the film leans into self‑mockery without punching down. The tone is unapologetically queer, mixing punchlines and camp excess with moments of vulnerability and emotional truth.
A very queer avant‑première at GALERIES
Before its Belgian release on 24 June, JIM QUEEN will be shown in a special avant‑première in Brussels on 19 June at cinema GALERIES. For this occasion, the directors will be present, together with actors from the local associative and community sector, to connect the film with current LGBTQIA+ realities: sexual health, HIV today, representations of gay men on screen, and how humour can be a tool for survival.
The event promises to be a proper community moment: watching a queer film with a queer crowd in the heart of the city, and having the opportunity to talk, react and process it together afterwards. Keep an eye on KET’s platforms – you might just get the chance to win tickets.
Trailer
While you wait to see it on the big screen, you can already watch the trailer for JIM QUEEN:
KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers based in Brussels. Get in touch to share your thoughts or tell us about your activities. You can also promote your events on our website or support our work with a donation. Contact us at Info@ket.brussels.
You may also like
-
Royalties Day: Various Voices 2026 Crowns Brussels Its Queer Choir Kingdom
Day three of Various Voices Brussels 2026 comes with a clear theme: royalty. Between the
-
Various Voices 2026: Brussels Turns Up the Heat (Again)
Day two of Various Voices Brussels 2026 and one thing is clear: this festival is
-
Shape of absence: when Villa Empain makes disappearance visible
From 18 June 2026 to 24 January 2027, the Boghossian Foundation presents Shape of absence at Villa Empain, an exhibition that
-
Midis-Minimes 2026: 40 years of lunchtime music in the heart of Brussels
IntroIn 2026, the Midis-Minimes Festival celebrates its 40th anniversary and returns from 1 July to 28 August with a
-
Bruxellons! 2026: musicals under the stars at Karreveld
For summer 2026, the Bruxellons! Festival returns to the Château du Karreveld with a programme that puts Belgian talent
