Sarnt Utamachote is a Southeast Asian nonbinary filmmaker and curator based in Berlin. They curated the exhibitions Young Birds From Strange Mountains at Schwules Museum in 2025 and In Nobody’s Service at Galerie Wedding in 2024, as well as at the Thailand Biennale in 2025. Additionally, they research exiled Cambodian artists who studied in East Germany, resulting in exhibitions such as Echoes of Brother Countries of HKW Berlin in 2024 and Kunst Raum Mitte in 2025. They are a member of the collective Cruising Curators and the collective un.thai.tled, which organises festivals and discourses focusing on the Thai and Southeast Asian diaspora. They also work as a film programmer for XPOSED Queer Film Festival Berlin, Short Film Festival Hamburg, and Sinema Transtopia. Their short film, I Don’t Want to Be Just a Memory, premiered at the 74th Berlinale in 2024. Their works have been exhibited at venues such as IFFR, the Asian Art Museum Berlin, and Schwules Museum.
Sarnt Utamachote
Sarnt Utamachote participated in “Greatest” Short Films of All Time 2025, a first-ever poll of its kind as a collective love letter to the art of short-form moving image. yanco and Kurzfilm Festival Hamburg, in collaboration with Talking Shorts, invited filmmakers, curators, distributors, critics, and scholars worldwide to nominate 10 audiovisual works under sixty minutes that they personally consider the “greatest” of all time. This was Sarnt Utamachote’s submission:
My list is a mix of experimental to conventional films that remain in my heart until now as stand-outs for, especially, queer cinema. I hope they would serve as prime examples and inspirations for younger filmmakers in the future, to look at and see what queer cinema can really be.
— Sarnt Utamachote| Movie | Original Title | Director | Country | Year | Duration | |
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| It’s All Because of a Katoey กะเทยเป็นเหตุ | Ledger Group | Thailand | 1954 | 13’ | ||
This 1954 cinematic narration of the entity "katheoy" (in Thai means "ladyboy" or roughly "queer") is a proof that non-Western LGBT+ terms (be it katheoy in Thai context, as well as many others) did exist before the birth of American LGBT+ stonewall movements in 1969. |
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| Moune Ô | Maxime Jean-Baptiste | Belgium, French Guiana, France | 2022 | 16’ | ||
The director' choice to slow down or intervene the continuous flow of (colonial and globallly mediated) footage serves as example of how to experiment not simply with the content of the found footage but also with its pacing, way of unfolding, questioning how it reveals itself. |
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| Playback Playback. Ensayo de una despedida | Agustina Comedi | Argentina | 2019 | 14’ | ||
Agustina's use of existing footage - hearing unfulfilled wishes of queer persons who later died (after the filming of AIDS) - by re-enacting and making the "better" ending for them remains to me one of the most touching cinematic approaches done for LGBT+ communities recently. |
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| Night Ride | Todd Karehana | New Zealand | 2021 | 10’ | ||
Its simplicity - story of how the director's mother attempts to catch the stray cat via messy means - and how it curves its narration from her denial of failure to her denial of grief: loss of director's brother, stays with me until now as example of how simple queer cinema can be. |
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| Breakwater Quebramar | Cris Lyra | Brazil | 2019 | 27’ | ||
Its story: of queer kinship, trauma, sharing safe space, intimacy, is something we see often in queer cinema, yet rarely so touching and sharply executed like this film. Its simplicity remains the gem of short queer films I have seen. |
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| Inflorescence | Nicolaas Schmidt | Germany | 2020 | 8’ | ||
This film stands by itself as the art of short film (or video art) making, the act of slowing down, lagging the music, the footage, almost a comedic play with the audiences and cinema. It remains iconic in itself, as much as it represents the director's extremely unique approach to cinema. |
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| Sunrise In My Mind ថ្ងៃរះក្នុងចិត្ត | Danech San | Cambodia | 2020 | 14’ | ||
The film looks at a very mundane social situation in hair salon, where people subtly indirectly express their desire for intimacy and each other - something I can relate to well as queer person (even its not a queer film). Combining with archive footage from an old film, the music, the atmosphere of urban city, this short film is well-crafted blend of fiction and hybrid character. |
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| Sea In The Blood | Richard Fung | Canada, Trinidad | 2000 | 26’ | ||
This rare video art brings stories tied by blood - one being Richard's biological kin (aunt), Chinese immigrant to Trinidad - another being Richard's chosen kin (husband), who suffers from AIDS. Resembling discourses written, for example, by Glissant, in how ocean is the site of colonial encounters between diverse groups, this queer film stays as a hallmark of such story. |
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| Hold Me Close | Aurora Brachman, Latajh Weaver | USA | 2025 | 19’ | ||
In midst of America's rise of racism, transphobia and fascism, this domesticated, quiet, transcendental, and healing piece of conversations in a household: of parenthood, trauma, intimacy, care stands strong as the proof of queer resilience, in the world that wants them eradicated. |
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| Red Aninsri; Or, Tiptoeing on the Still Trembling Berlin Wall อนินทรีย์แดง | Ratchapoom Boonbunchachoke | Thailand | 2020 | 30’ | ||
Ratchapoom is Thailand's most recent and exciting queer filmmaker (since Apichatpong), who - as genius - questions mode of image- and audio-production, in this case, via cinema of Cold War. He continues his approach in deconstructing narration, depiction, history-writing in cinema, and with a plus, with such comedic tone, which we barely can find in experimental cinema. This film, a part of his trilogy, is truly a hallmark of Southeast Asia's experimental scene. |
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