Unicorns
When hard-working single father Luke stumbles across an underground nightclub, he meets Aysha, a beautiful, seductive woman. Their first kiss yields fireworks — which are immediately followed by Luke’s sobering realization that Aysha is not the cisgender woman he thought, but a remarkably femme drag queen. Unable to deny the spark between them the pair are forced down the unexpected path of transformation, where they must question their identities and confront their individual truths.
Trailers & Videos

UK Trailer

Teaser :15

Ben Hardy & Jason Patel read Letterboxd reviews for 'Unicorns'

First Meeting

The surprising homage to Jaws in Unicorns and how Ben Hardy nailed his first scene | Film Firsts

The Kiss

Unicorns' Ben Hardy and Jason Patel share their FRIENDS knowledge | My Film Firsts with BAFTA

Carpool

Clip

TIFF 2023 | Q&A with Ben Hardy, Jason Patel, Sally El Hosaini & James Krishna Floyd
Cast

Ben Hardy
Luke

Jason Patel
Aysha / Ashiq

Sagar Radia
Faiz

Michael Karim
Hammad

Nisha Nayar
Shamim

Hannah Onslow
Emma

Kate Lindsey
Charlie

Taylor Sullivan
Jamie

Ali Afzal
Karen

Jenny O'Leary
Janine

Ravin J. Ganatra
Imran

Angela Phinnimore
Nurse Nicholson
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
"Luke" (Ben Hardy) stumbles upon a bar where the largely young and beautiful Asian clientele are enjoying a dazzling performance on stage from "Aysha" (Jason Patel). Despite the fact that he's only just got laid in a field, he's captivated by her and so when she comes to say hello after her routine, he is quite besotted. Thing is - well those Adam's Apples - they are a dead giveaway and "Luke" flees in polite terror, but terror nonetheless. This leaves "Aysha" with a problem, though, as her possessive pal "Faiz" (Sagar Radia) goes off in a strop leaving her without a lift to a lucrative gig in Birmingham. She was also a bit smitten by "Luke" so tracks him down to the garage he works in with his father, and offers him £200 to be her chauffeur. Reluctant, he remembers that he has promised is son "Jamie" (Taylor Sullivan) a trip to Disneyland, and that's not going to pay for itself. The journey isn't really that far, but when a few other drag queens cadge a lift, too - well, let's just say that "Luke" gets a look at a culture he's never experienced before. The plot itself is fairly predictable, not dissimilar to "Femme" from last year, but there's a fun degree of chemistry between Hardy and Patel that maybe a little too simplistically, but still entertainingly, both challenges and reinforces stereotypes. What's eminently clear is that "Ashiq" is an unhappy and unfulfilled man who comes alive when his alter ego takes over, but is there any future at all in a friendship quite so viscerally at odds. It's tightly cast, and works best when it's just the two lead actors engagingly messing about, getting to know and trust each other and, well... who knows? To be fair, it doesn't need a cinema screening but it is an amiable, occasionally bitchy, film and I quite enjoyed it.
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