Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Caracas Avenue
  • Our Body Is an Expanding Star
  • Family (A)
  • Given Names
  • Serpent’s Skin (The)
  • Christophers (The)
  • Marc by Sofia
  • Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma
  • Accused
  • Touch Me
  • Champion
  • Este cuerpo mío
  • Narciso
  • Another Man
  • River Dreams
  • Animol
  • Surfacing
  • Sunny Dancer
  • Black Burns Fast
  • Warla
  • Beyond the Fire: The Life of Japan’s First Pride Parade Pioneer
  • To Dance is to Resist
  • Ugly Stepsister (The)
  • West of Greatness: The Story of the Westwego Muscle Boys
  • Washed Up
  • These Sacred Vows
  • Deepest Space in Us (The)
  • ìfé: (The Sequel)
  • Mickey & Richard
  • On the Sea
  • Madfabulous
  • Outlasting - Living Archives of Older Queers
  • Beast in Me (The)
  • God Will Not Help
  • Mistake
  • Oh. What. Fun.
  • Where Comes Mulan
  • There Was Such a Thing Before
  • Isan Odyssey
  • Far from Maine

Of Love & Law

Country: Japan | UK | France, Language: Japanese, 94 mins

  • Director: Hikaru Toda

CGiii Comment

Whoever said there is no such a thing as a good lawyer ought to meet this couple!

Both under-paid, self-employed lawyers...really, for the greater good, this Japanese gay couple open their hearts and minds for all the world to see. They are complete opposites...who are perfectly synched to each - there is a certain tragi-comedic vein to their relationship. In places, it's emotional, it's funny...but, most of all, it's utterly, utterly charming.

If a documentary's raison d'être is to enlighten, educate and entertain...then, Of Love & Law fulfills the criteria admirably. Learn about Japanese culture and ' reading the air' - hear some pretty nifty legal arguments and listen to some truly awful singing!

An affectionate film that will warm the cockles of your heart. Quite, quite lovely.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Fumi and Kazu have a lot to teach us about love. When they decide to stick their necks out and create the first LGBTQ+ law firm in Japan, they are drawn into the lives of people searching for protection and support. Despite their own relationship having no legal status, they work pro-bono for long hours, all the while foster-parenting a teenager. We meet with a colourful cast of misfits, dissidents and artists – from a delightful eccentric being prosecuted for her kitschy vagina sculptures, to a troubled outsider who, as the child of an ‘immoral woman’, has no legal identity. A saying is repeated throughout the film, that one must ‘read the air’ – conform to the tacit conservatism that forbids sexual diversity. With love, humour and serious legal chops, Fumi and Kazu do exactly the opposite.

Jay Bernard