Léa Pool’s We’ll Find Happiness: A Bureaucratic Strip Search of Queer Lives
Léa Pool’s We’ll Find Happiness (On Sera Heureux) follows Reza and Saad, queer lovers and asylum seekers whose love story is literally put on trial by Canada’s refugee system, forcing them to expose, edit, or weaponize their intimacy to survive. The film is at its strongest when it shows the brutal absurdity of having to “prove” one’s sexuality to bureaucrats and traces the precarious journey through camps, borders, and administrative suspicion. But it leans heavily into melodrama and symbolic burden…
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