One of the most striking queer titles at Cannes this year came from Jane Schoenbrun with Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma, which walked away with the Queer Palm, the alternative prize celebrating films that tackle LGBTQ+ themes. Reappropriating the codes of the slasher – summer camp, teenagers, desire, danger lurking in the woods – Schoenbrun uses horror grammar to talk about trans identity, dysphoria and the terror of being seen in the wrong way.
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Rather than turning transness into a metaphorical “monster”, the film flips the genre on its head: what’s truly horrifying is the violence of normativity, the gaze that refuses to recognise who you are, the pressure to fit a body and a role that were never yours. Between blood, masks and final‑girl tropes revisited, Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma joins a growing wave of queer cinema that hijacks horror to make space for trans narratives that are messy, tender, furious and deeply alive. It is no coincidence that this was the film singled out by the Queer Palm jury this year – a sign that the future of queer cinema will also be written through genre.
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