IMDb 0 2023 HD

Dead Lesbians

Dead Lesbians

2023
Comedy Drama Fantasy Romance
13 min NR Australia
0 IMDB

As she prepares for a first date, Isabelle is pestered by the apparition of Dorothy Ainsworth, a chain-smoking, well-spoken, long-since deceased author of 1950’s lesbian pulp novels. Isabelle…

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Eva Justine Torkkola
Starring
Yassica Switakowski / Jennifer Vuletic / Shamita Sivabalan

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

intriguing witty meta thought-provoking spectral frustrating bold uneven charming critical unique performative

Reviews

B
Ben Carter
Mar 23, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

'Dead Lesbians' offers a spectral twist on the legacy of storytelling, pitting a modern woman against the ghost of her literary forebear. The film centres on Isabelle, played with relatable frustration by Yassica Switakowski, who finds herself haunted…

A
Anya Sharma
Mar 23, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

A truly original voice emerges in 'Dead Lesbians,' a film that dares to confront the often-painful history of lesbian representation with humour and intelligence. Yassica Switakowski is excellent as Isabelle, a character burdened by the weight of narrative…

G
Genevieve Dubois
Mar 23, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

'Dead Lesbians' presents a fascinating, if sometimes unwieldy, concept: a living woman is tormented by the ghost of a prolific lesbian pulp novelist. Yassica Switakowski navigates Isabelle’s anxieties with a grounded presence, while Jennifer Vuletic revels in the…

M
Marcus Thorne
Mar 23, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

In 'Dead Lesbians,' the spectral is intertwined with the satirical. Director (uncredited) crafts a film that is both a supernatural encounter and a sharp critique of how lesbian characters have historically been treated in storytelling. Yassica Switakowski delivers…

E
Eleanor Vance
Mar 23, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

A curious premise fuels 'Dead Lesbians,' a film that attempts to exorcise the ghosts of narrative past. Yassica Switakowski anchors the piece as Isabelle, a woman haunted by the spectral presence of Dorothy Ainsworth, a 1950s lesbian pulp…

FAQs

Although the director is uncredited, the film's premise suggests a style that balances spectral encounters with grounded emotional reality. The tone, likely a mix of spectral unease and sharp wit, would necessitate careful handling of both the comedic and thematic elements. A director would need to navigate the visual representation of the apparition, the anxieties of Isabelle, and the period flavour of Dorothy's influence, likely favouring a nuanced, character-driven approach.