Patricia Rozema once said in an interview: “I wanted to make a film where two women fall in love and nothing terrible happens.” Mission accomplished. And in a world still fighting for the right to love freely, that’s not just art. That’s an act of hope. Directed by Patricia Rozema Starring Pascale Bussières, Rachael Crawford, Henry Czerny Available on digital platforms (Criterion Channel, Kanopy, and for digital rental).
Petra has lost her luggage and needs dry clothes. Camille, flustered, offers her a sweater. Within hours, Camille is watching Petra’s circus troupe perform—bodies flying through air, fire eating, and raw, unapologetic physicality. The collision between Camille’s theological order and Petra’s carnal chaos is immediate, electric, and terrifying. when night is falling -1995-
If you haven’t seen it, you’re not alone. Despite winning the Teddy Award for best queer feature at the Berlin International Film Festival, When Night Is Falling was overshadowed by bigger-budget contemporaries. But for those who found it—on a late-night VHS rental, a university film studies course, or a quiet streaming discovery—it has never let go. The film follows Camille Baker (Pascale Bussières), a quietly repressed professor of mythology at a Christian college in Toronto. She lives a scripted life: a handsome, devoted boyfriend (Henry Czerny), a choir directorship, and an apartment full of beige. Then, in a laundromat on a cold night, she meets Petra (Rachael Crawford), a bold, sharp-tongued circus performer with a mane of dark curls and a panther’s grace. Patricia Rozema once said in an interview: “I
