I do gay movie
The gay romcom, “I Think I Do,” written and directed by Brian Sloan, is being reissued in a 4K version on iTunes and Amazon on April 19 for its 25th anniversary. The film, which features a wonderful ensemble cast, is as fresh and as frothy now as it was upon release.
“I Assume I Do” opens at George Washington University, where six friends are roommates. Carol (Lauren Vélez) and Matt (Jamie Harrold) are coupled. Beth (Maddie Corman) wants to be coupled with Eric (Guillermo Díaz). And Bob (Alexis Arquette) is crushing on his straight roommate Brendan (Christian Maelen), who flirts with Sarah (Marianne Hagan). After Bob makes an unwanted overtake at Brendan at a Valentine’s Morning party, there is tension between the guys.
Cut to five years later, when Carol and Matt are getting married. Bob is a bridesmaid, and now dating soap opera star Sterling Scott (Tuc Watkins), who wants to wed him. Beth is still chasing Eric, and when Brendan unexpectedly shows up, Sarah keeps hoping to bed him. However, Brendan is fixated on — and wants to fix things with — Bob. Needless to say, complications ensu
Oops
Description
Whilst looking after his niece and sister-in-law (Alicia Witt), Jack (David W. Ross from 90s boy band, Bad Boys Inc) a British gay man living in in New York City, finds himself at risk of losing his family when his function visa is denied. Threatened with deportation he has to compromise his ideals in order stay in the USA and enters into a marriage of convenience with his woman loving woman best friend, Ali (THE SOPRANOS star, Jamie-Lynn Sigler). The couple quickly wed but have to verify the validity of their marriage to the authorities.
Whilst Jack and Ali dwell a contented married existence, Jack meets the Spanish, Mano (Maurice Compte) and they fall madly in love with each other. Because of this whirlwind romance Ali feels that her new husband is neglecting her and decides that she wants to leave. What occurs is a revelation that Jack had never considered; his gay relationship is not recognised in the eyes of American federal law.
Glenn Gaylord (producer of Exit IT ON THE FLOOR) directs a contemporary affectionate drama addressing equality issues and personal dilemmas. Featuring a
The coming out process always involves a little bit of historical re-contextualizing — your emotional attachments to your female best friends or your unexamined aversion to the way men smell in the morning suddenly take on recent meaning when looking backwards through brand-new homo-tinted glasses. Your pop-cultural loves are no exception.
Today we peek at some of the early-to-mid 90s films that defined the youths of young queers born in the 80s. These arent gay films, because successfully, there really werent many gay films back then (not like there really are now either though), but films with undertones or secret stories that queers heard loud & clear whether the mainstream knew it or not.
If you like this list, youll also like our list of Badass Miss Team movies, which celebrates flicks about girl gangs, girl sports teams, and otherwise group-related girl activities.
Regardless of when you grew up, what were the films that define your queer retrospective? And why do so many of ours star Whoopi Goldberg?
Fried Green Tomatoes ()
This story is multi-generational,