Followed by a talk with Adamska Rakhilkina, Noa Momo, Silicone pussy, Harvey Rabbit
Rebel prostitutes take the screen to share their realities, desires, fears and dreams. These films offer intense, daring, and impactful reflections on queer bodies and sex works that disrupt society’s gaze. Seen through the lens of sex workers themselves, Prostitutes’ Visions sculpts personal, political, vulnerable and fierce depictions of sex work and makes way for rebellious, unruly narratives to emerge. (LV)
The Hypochondriac Whore
Noa Momo, Germany, 2025, 6 min. German with English subtitles
No Refunds
Adamska Rakhilkina, USA, 2025, 8 min. English with English subtitles
The Chemo Darkroom
Harvey Rabbit, Germany, 2018, 17 min. English
You’re not a regular: A porn made for Almans
Silicone Pussy, Germany, 2025, 25 min. English, German, Farsi
Feverish
Fabienne Garçonne, Jamal Phoenix, Switzerland, 2025, 5 min. English with English subtitles
online issues
Cathy Moon, Spain, Germany, 2025, 11 min. English
Adamska Rakhilkina is an award-winning filmmaker, visual artist, and essayist born in Russia and later educated in the UK and the USA.
Noa Momo is a Berlin based writer, artist and filmmaker
Silicone pussy (he/it) is trans visual artist, filmmaker and sex worker based in Berlin, originally from Iran. His work focuses on queer archives and sex work narratives from migrant and trans perspectives.
Harvey Rabbit is the writer, director and producer of the feature film “Captain Faggotron Saves the Universe” (2023, distributed by Salzgeber.) He has taught consent workshops, physical theater workshops and DIY filmmaking workshops for a number of years. A former sex worker, he is a bisexual trans faggot who sees the personal and political and vice versa.
Lube Visions: A one-day festival of €r0t1c content in a city where there is almost no space for political p0rn and €r0t1c works by marginalized s€x workers.
This program brings together films that use the €r0t1c as a sharp, political tool and dream of overturning and burning down oppressive systems, imagining a new world together: juicy, pulsating, and dripping with queer desire. These are films that break through the veil of suppression and censorship.
The festival focuses on films that reflect the lived experiences of marginalized s€x workers facing multiple, intersecting oppressions and showcases works from filmmakers who face exclusion and censorship by film circuits and cultural institutions. The Lube Visions screen belongs to tr4n$ €sc0rts, migrants, and racialized people and is a space where these works are given the care and attention that is so often denied. It is a space to gather around radical €r0t1c visions, to witness their power...and to let them shake us, seduce us, and demand new ways of seeing and being! (LV)