Human Rights Watch 2016 Offers Powerful, Topical Films On Women's Rights, LGBT Issues, More

The Human Rights Watch Film Festival, now in its 27th year, once again presents powerful, topical films encompassing a great number of burning political and social issues. The festival screens through June 19 at the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the IFC Center. 

This year's festival focuses especially on women's rights and LGBT issues, with more than half of the 18 feature film selections directed or co-directed by women. The opening and closing night films powerfully bear this out. Nanfu Wang's acclaimed documentary Hooligan Sparrow, the opening film, follows the titular Chinese women's rights activist as she becomes an intensely surveilled target of the authorities. Closing is Rokhsareh Ghaem Maghami's Sonita, also named after its subject, an aspiring female rapper in Iran struggling to navigate both her undocumented immigrant status, as well as the legal edicts against women singing in public.

LGBT issues are vividly illuminated in such films as Inside the Chinese Closet, documenting the experiences of gay men and lesbians in China, as well as Growing Up Coy, which tackles the very timely topic of the attempt to pass and enforce discriminatory laws regarding the right of transgender people to use the bathroom of their choice.

Below are my recommendations of a few notable films. For more information of what's on offer, and to purchase tickets, visit the festival's website.

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