Queerly Ever After
A Danish gay spy thriller? That is based on a real life story? Amanda Jane Stern starts off her investigation into the truth of this story with a review of the film.
Make The Yuletide Gay is a light, fluffy holiday movie that makes you happy, which is exactly what you want when watching this kind of film.
Queerly Ever After is a bi-monthly column where I take a look at LGBT+ films…
Regarding Billy is the kind of movie you watch if you enjoy formulaic holiday films, but you’d like your Hallmark cheese with a dash of gay.
Boys takes a well-worn story of self-acceptance and turns it into a beautiful piece of internal struggle.
Back Soon is certainly an enjoyable bad movie, but for any bold statements on sexual fluidity you’re better off watching something else.
In this week’s Queerly Ever After, Amanda Jane Stern considers the 1997 film All Over Me, a coming-of-age story about the relationship between two girls.
Sometimes, a movie is so bad it’s just bad, such is the case with 2011’s The Love Patient, a movie so offensively, irredeemably bad it’s hard to sit through.
Amanda Jane Stern had the opportunity to speak with actor Martin Bruchmann about his time filming the 2012 gay film Silent Youth.
Ever week, we take a look at an LGBTQ+ film that gave their characters a romantic happily-ever-after. This week: the German film Silent Youth.
Queerly Ever After is a bi-monthly column where I take a look at LGBT+ films…
Amanda Jane Stern had the opportunity to speak with co-writers Michael Waite and Roger Stigliano about their 1989 film Fun Down There.
Fun Down There defies the conventions of storytelling through its radical depiction of a couple who is non-monogamous on screen – and to do it so calmly is unheard of.
A beautifully poignant piece, Princess Cyd is a breezy treatment of sexuality, spirituality and women’s relationships in lieu of drama for drama’s sake.