After the critically acclaimed, Oscar and Emmy award-nominated “How to Survive a Plague” and “The Death and Life of Marsha...
The annual awards-season staple – which, a few years ago, threatened to fade into irrelevance – was this year largely...
Jacob Tierney’s adaptation of Rachel Reid’s novels has become a streaming sensation on both sides of the border, trading the...
In 1982, Mephisto, directed by István Szabó, became the first Hungarian film to win the Academy Award for Best International...
Rosa von Praunheim was born in a Latvian prison. A key figure of the New German Cinema movement, who made...
GAY45’s annual selection is a thoughtful, rigorously curated reflection of the year in queer cinema. Our list has emerged from...
Omar Little, a character from the critically acclaimed television series The Wire, is considered one of the most important queer...
For this year’s AIDS Remembrance Day, it seemed worth considering not simply the devastation wrought by the epidemic but the...
Udo Kier, the openly gay German actor whose hypnotic presence illuminated more than 275 films—from Fassbinder’s turbulent epics to Hollywood...
Oliver Hermanus’s “The History of Sound” opens in 1910 Kentucky, where young Lionel possesses perfect pitch—a gift that will lift...











