Directing
Julieta Bazán is a filmmaker based in Tijuana, México.
José, a street performer who dreams about becoming a telenovela star, is recruited by a talent manager who promises him great success, but soon realizes the job is actually dancing in a gay strip club. Away from his home and enjoying the newfound fame he has acquired with his new job in the city, José starts wondering if turning his back on his family and himself is worth it now that he's the club's biggest star, nicknamed "El Pistolero."
Set during the 30th LGBTTTIQ+ Pride March in Tijuana, this short documentary presents a queer archivist whose career as a journalist has documented key moments in the region’s queer history, alongside an activist who uses drag performance and outspoken advocacy to challenge the stigma surrounding people living with HIV. Through archival imagery and alternative spaces like Enclave Caracol, located in the city’s historic downtown, the film reflects on memory, erasure, and the urgent need to tell our own stories.
A night security guard finds an unexpected sense of belonging when he ventures into an underground drag show in tijuana, where an encounter confronts him with his identity and his fear of isolation.
This documentary short quietly follows a simple routine: injecting a biweekly dose of Estradiol. Through scattered clips from daily life, childhood memories, and present reflections, the film acts as a personal time capsule—marking not a transformation, but a moment of continuity and self-recognition.