Category: LGBTQ

  • “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” is Sitcom Diversity Done Right

    “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” is Sitcom Diversity Done Right

    This side-splitting workplace comedy features a diverse cast and tackles challenging social issues. Other sitcoms should take note.

  • “Portrait of a Lady on Fire”: A Beautiful, Lush Love Story Between Two Women

    “Portrait of a Lady on Fire”: A Beautiful, Lush Love Story Between Two Women

    Portrait of a Lady on Fire, from director Céline Sciamma, tells the story of Marianne (Noémie Merlant), a painter living in eighteenth century France who is tasked with painting a portrait of Héloïse (Adèle Haenel), a woman who is to be married off soon. Initially painting her in secret, Marianne develops a close bond with…

  • Saint Maud & The Madness of Fanaticism

    Saint Maud & The Madness of Fanaticism

    TW: Sexual Assault, Mental Illness, Body Horror // Minor Spoilers Below Rose Glass’ directorial debut, Saint Maud, explores the term “god complex” to an extreme. The film follows Maud, a young nurse who has recently been “saved” by God (through Catholicism) and believes she has a bigger purpose for it. She tries to implement her…

  • ‘A Secret Love’: A Moving Documentary That Falls a Little Short

    ‘A Secret Love’: A Moving Documentary That Falls a Little Short

    Heartfelt and moving, Netflix’s documentary A Secret Love (2020) shows the 72 year love story of two women. Director Chris Bolan, great-nephew to Terry Donahue and Pat Henschel, tells the story of his great-aunts and their love and devotion to each other. The story that the film tells is tender, and it’s incredibly sweet to…

  • Millennial Woes Done Right

    Millennial Woes Done Right

    A messy millennial in an on-and-off relationship with liminal job prospects has been a saturated archetype since Lena Dunham stretched it to its limit for 5 years in her series Girls. It has been haphazardly recreated in many character study-esque television series and tries to worm its way in as b-plots in coming-of-age films. Occasionally…

  • Dog Day Afternoon’s Flawed But Progressive Message

    Dog Day Afternoon’s Flawed But Progressive Message

    Sidney Lumit’s Dog Day Afternoon (1975), based on a true story, opens with several wholesome shots of urban America à la A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), but fifty years later. After seeing a boy play baseball, a dog rifle through trash, and a boat pull up to a loading dock, you might think you’re…

  • How Ts Madison Stole the “Zola” Trailer

    How Ts Madison Stole the “Zola” Trailer

    On March 31st, International Trans Day of Visibility, following some COVID related delays, the trailer was finally dropped, and although Taylour Paige and Riley Keough look to impress as lead characters Zola and Stefani, a brief cameo from a queer icon was what convinced me I have to see this movie.

  • Whitest Season: Privilege Comes First in ‘Happiest Season’

    Whitest Season: Privilege Comes First in ‘Happiest Season’

    TW: Racism, Ableism / Spoilers Below After years of being plagued with Hallmark’s wonderbread, puritanical, heterosexual holiday fun, it was refreshing to finally have a Christmas movie that is not about a middle-class (though sometimes royalty if you’re lucky enough to be Vanessa Hudgens or Ben Lamb) straight relationship where they overcome an instant hatred…

  • In ‘Ammonite,’ an Aching and Incomplete Love Story

    In ‘Ammonite,’ an Aching and Incomplete Love Story

    Kate Winslet and Saorise Ronan deliver stellar performances in a film that doesn’t live up to its potential.

  • A gay ice skating anime made me believe in love again

    A gay ice skating anime made me believe in love again

    ‘Yuri!!! on Ice’ turned queerbaiting on its head and gave me hope when I needed it the most.