Queerly Ever After
Queerly Ever After looks into the 2006 teen romantic-comedy The Curiosity of Chance, where a new guy tries to find his place in a new school.
Queerly Ever After #46 analyzes 2015’s Akron, where two young men find love despite a tragedy that links their families together.
This is ultimately an enjoyable musical rom-com, and fun adaptation of a Shakespeare classic.
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.
In the latest Queerly Ever After, Amanda Jane Stern looks at the lack of driving plot in From Beginning to End and the story that could have been.
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.
Nils Bokamp’s You & I follows two men on a road trip, whose friendship is brimming with unresolved sexual and romantic tension
In this week’s Queerly Ever After, we take a look at The Falls Trilogy, which examines the relationship of two men in the Mormon Church.
If you’re feeling nostalgic for early oughts movies like She’s All That, then Latter Days from C. Jay Cox is for you.
The Perfect Wedding is what you would get if Hallmark decided to make a gay Christmas movie, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that.
While it had the potential to have been an interesting film, Say Yes is hampered down by heavy-handed plot contrivances.
Mambo Italiano is a comedy so broad and uncommitted it doesn’t know what to do with itself, leaving much to be desired.
At the end of the day, Plan B is a sweet little story that turns a familiar plot on its head in a positive way.