Gay kino in frankfurt
Gay Frankfurt
Frankfurt — or "Bankfurt," as it has sometimes been called — is the country's financial hub. Dating advocate to around the first century CE, Frankfurt is a town of ancient wonders and current marvels. Its architecture is a brilliant blend of new and old; for instance, it is one of the only European cities that has a significant number of skyscrapers. Fortunately for Frankfurters, the gay scene is anything but buttoned-down. After exiting those sleek towers downtown, locals turn on the juice for an active and sophisticated homosexual nightlife.
Getting here
Frankfurt am Main Airport is the busiest airport in Germany, and the third busiest in Europe. S-Bahn lines S8 and S9 and Regional Express (RE) numbers 59 and 75 will get you to and from the city. At the long-distance train station there is rail service to other German cities. See their English-language site To & From for other train, bus and shuttle connectons to the city center.
InterCity and EuroCity trains unite you to cities in Germany and the rest of Europe from
Gay Party Calendar & Dates for Frankfurt am Main
Golden Hour @ Metropol-Sauna
Jack Kenworthy( Queer Travel Maestro )
Queer travel expert Jack Kenworthy turns + town adventures into your mentor for safe, vibrant, and inclusively fabulous global journeys.
Often overlooked as the dull financial powerhouse of Germany, Gay Frankfurt is Main is a wonderfully multicultural, cosmopolitan and tolerant urban area where LGBT people are embraced as a spontaneous part of society. They don’t call it ‘Mainhattan’ for anything…
Frankfurt is not like any other German city, and you would be forgiven for thinking you were in a modern American city with all the glinting glass, steel, and concrete skyscrapers – rather than a historic city in main Europe.
Home to million inhabitants, Gay Frankfurt-on-the-Main (pronounced ‘mine’) is a high-powered, fast-paced finance and business housing one of the world’s largest stock exchanges, Germany’s busiest airport and the polished headquarters of the European Central Bank.
Many of the world’s most prestigious trade fairs are also held here, attracting thousands of
Intentional Elasticity. Queer Cinema and Mainstream Films
Jan Künemund
Defining homosexual cinema is essentially a simple matter, even if, like most people, you only see this as a genre that reveal stories about forms of desire and constellations of characters from the LGBTQIA+ spectrum. A straightforward response that would do justice to both aspects of the composite (queer and cinema) would be that film, as a moving-image medium, lends itself to the portrayal of unpindownable objects, categories and bodies. Given today’s endless succession of superhero franchises, Transformer films and masked characters that blockbuster films acquire long employed to trigger massive self-satisfying buzz and hype, does anyone really feel the inclination to talk about fixed identities based on origin, race, class, gender or sexual orientation? In cinema, montage provides the context, not binary social classifications favor woman/man, inside/outside, private/public, homo/hetero and cis/trans. Film relies on a range of techniques that can resolve apparent contradictions, yet still render what is depicted