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Since this film was having its 25th-anniversary edition released (in a gorgeous 4k Steel book), I felt it was the perfect film to shine a light on.
For the second Inquiring Minds we tackle the 1965 Jean-Luc Godard sci-fi noir feature, Alphaville.
On the first Inquiring Minds column, we dive into the recent science fiction Appletv+ hit Severance!
Queerly Ever After #60 focuses on Baldvin Zophoníasson’s Icelandic film Jitters, a teen drama filled with first crushes and tragic events.
The Queerly Ever After column celebrates its 50th entry with Christophe Honoré’s 2007 film Love Songs (Les Chansons D’Amour).
A fun, sexy, romantic comedy, Just Friends is a Dutch TV movie about two young men falling in love.
Page To Screen contrasts Love, Simon and its original source, showcasing what’s lost when a coming-out story is re-molded for the screen.
Private Romeo is an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet that transposes the action to the fictional McKinley Military Academy.
For this Queerly Ever After, Amanda Jane Stern takes a look at the 1996 film: Different for Girls.
Saving Face is a beautifully crafted movie about the fight between family tradition and finding a new way for yourself.
The 10 Year Plan is a traditional rom-com, it is not about coming out of the closet, it is just about two best friends who realize they’ve been in love.
Critics’ complaints that Xanadu was bland, uninspired, and outright confusing are valid concerns, however, there is no denying how much heart this film has.
Earth Girls Are Easy manages to both subvert and give in to the conventions of its time, so singularly absurd and campy that you can’t not enjoy it.
In this limited column, Manon de Reeper outlines how she went from an idea for a story to bringing her first short film, Uncontrol, to life.
Invisibility. Camouflage. They are plot devices in many science fiction and fantasy stories, but do we have anything really like it in real life? How does it work?