LAYLA
LAYLA
The vibrant debut of Amrou Al-Kadhi, a Sundance sensation. Layla, a non-binary British-Palestinian drag performer searching for her identity, falls in love with Max. A colourful, energetic and sharply contemporary portrait of a queer London, a city shaped by the descendants of immigrants.
One of the most talked-about and exuberant debuts of the year, LAYLA took Sundance and Berlinale by storm. It marks the feature directorial debut of Amrou Al-Kadhi - a non-binary writer and drag performer (better known as Glamrou) - one of the most distinctive voices in Britain’s queer community. The result is a film that feels utterly personal, pulsing with authenticity and passion born directly from lived experience.
At its heart is Layla (played by the magnetic Bilal Hasna), a London-based drag queen of Palestinian descent still finding her footing both on stage and in life. Everything changes when she meets Max - a confident, successful gay man who seems to embody the very stability and self-acceptance Layla has been craving. A deep connection blossoms between them, yet it brings a painful question to the surface: to keep Max, must Layla tone down or even give up the most vibrant part of herself - her bold, flamboyant stage persona? And how can she reconcile who she is with the expectations of a traditional family still bound by rigid social roles?
Amrou Al-Kadhi creates a portrait of contemporary, queer London, vibrant with colour, music and energy, far removed from the stereotypical British gloomy social realism. It is a celebration of uniqueness, joy and the strength that comes from a ‘chosen family’. It is also a penetrating analysis of internal tensions within the LGBTQ+ community, where the pressure to be a ‘proper’ gay man can be as painful as external prejudice.
Fresh, fearless and gloriously colourful - this is a cinema that wears its heart and its sequins, proudly on its sleeve!
Text: Karolina Kulig
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