I Made You The Horror Trailer Cut of “Carol” We’ve All Been Waiting For
Just in time for the holidays!
Just in time for the holidays!
15 horror movies that we can’t promise you won’t regret watching, but at least mostly avoid some of the more eye-rolling tropes of queer women in horror.
This film explores some of my favorite themes all in one glossy, campy, self-aware package: misandry, women being extremely gay together, principled revenge, and the triumph of aught culture.
Natasha Negovanlis and Elise Bauman bring the magic to our laptops one more time.
When the air turns crisp and leaves turn orange, I only yearn for one thing: for a virgin to light the damn candle and bring my favorite trio of witches back from the dead.
Demi talks about her struggles with addiction and mental health, her winding career path, and how she’s openly dating men and women in her new documentary “Simply Complicated,” available for free on YouTube.
Haircuts in film are often melodramatic, but they can be sexy, too!
Writer/director/longtime lesbian favorite Angela Robinson has done a really subversive thing with the most talked-about period film of the fall: She’s brought an ardent screenplay, a soaring score, and unapologetically gauzy sunlight to bear on the story of the man, his wife, and their lover who created the most iconic female superhero of all time in the hopes that she would prepare the world for matriarchal rule — and a healthy side of bondage.
Natasha and Elise talk about what’s in store for their characters in the upcoming feature-length Carmilla movie.
Though her life was characterized by solitude and her love for it and the freedom it gave her, CHAVELA is a story of a remarkable person told by the people who loved and admired her most.
“Billie Jean King — a gay icon, a feminist idol, one of the greatest athletes in history, an unshakable pillar of indomitable humanity here in 2017 — becomes even more powerful in Battle of the Sexes, but the film also offers audiences the gift of undoing her invincibility in our imaginations by allowing her to fall in love.”
These are the documentaries that changed our lives and/or made us better people and/or entertained us. Maybe you’ll like them too!
Carol is live on Netflix. Come join me as I watch it on loop.
Everyone who made this movie needs to go to bed.
“While Can I Be Me speculates that Houston was bisexual, no one seems willing to define her connection to Crawford as anything other than a solid friendship.”
“The violins kept getting more and more excited and so did I and by the end of that three-minute scene I was gay.”
“This is one of the best portrayals of the Strong Black Woman Syndrome I’ve seen in a long time.”
“Jessi showed me that it was cool to focus on my ambitions and to form deep relationships with other girls instead of being boy-obsessed.”
They’re nonchalant about their sexuality, confident in their bodies, and their chemistry together is an absolute joy on screen. I adore them.
Atomic Blonde is a stunning, queer action romp dressed in killer coats.