LGBT+
Call Me By Your Name review - a star is born in a heartbreaking gay romanceFriday, 27 October 2017![]() It's not every day that an actor breaks your heart playing a character who surrenders his. But that's among the numerous achievements of Timothée Chalamet's knockout performance in Call Me By Your Name. Playing a culturally savvy and... Read more... |
Alan Hollinghurst: The Sparsholt Affair - pictures at an exhibition, with telling gapsSunday, 08 October 2017![]() Television has paid its dues to the 50th anniversary of the Sexual Offences Act - rather feebly, with some rotten acting, in Man in an Orange Shirt; brilliantly, with mostly superb performances, in the monologue sequence Queers, surely due a second... Read more... |
DVD: Centre of My WorldSaturday, 07 October 2017![]() Director Jakob M Erwa's Centre of My World may be a coming-of-age story, but it’s definitely not a “coming out” one. Youthful hero Phil (Louis Hofmann) has barely reached the third sentence of his voiceover narration before he tells us he’s gay, and... Read more... |
God's Own Country review - a raw, rural masterpieceFriday, 01 September 2017![]() There are many outstanding things in writer-director Francis Lee’s remarkable first feature, and prime among them is the sense that nature herself has a distinct presence in the story. It brings home how rarely we see life on the land depicted in... Read more... |
DVD/Blu-ray: My Beautiful LaundretteThursday, 31 August 2017![]() This rerelease of Stephen Frears’ My Beautiful Laundrette comes as part of the wider BFI programme marking the 50th anniversary of the passing of the Sexual Offences Act 1967, and its presence in that strand, as one of the foremost works of its time... Read more... |
Tom of Finland review - engaging biopic of gay pioneerFriday, 11 August 2017![]() Finnish director Dome Karukoski has made a sympathetic and quietly stylish biopic of Touko Laaksonen, the artist who did as much as anyone to define 20th century male gay visual culture. There’s a degree of irony in the fact that we know him by... Read more... |
Man in an Orange Shirt, BBC Two review - soft-focus view of 1940s gay love affairTuesday, 01 August 2017![]() As chat-up lines go, “I can’t do my fly up single-handed” is pretty full on – even if it is true. Thomas March (James McArdle) is speaking to James Berryman (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), who not only went to the same public school but has also just saved... Read more... |
Coming Clean, King's Head Theatre / Twilight Song, Park Theatre reviews - gay-themed first and last plays falterTuesday, 01 August 2017![]() Like his smash-hit My Night With Reg, Kevin Elyot's first and last plays have a role to play in the history of gay theatre, but do they work? Emphatically not in the case of Twilight Song (★★), completed – one is tempted to say, sketched – shortly... Read more... |
Queer as Art, BBC Two review - showbusiness and the gay revolutionSunday, 30 July 2017![]() Part of the BBC's Gay Britannia season, here was a programme fulfilling what it said on the tin: prominent LGBTQ (when will all these expanding acronyms cease to confuse us all) figures narrating, examining, discussing, analysing, letting it... Read more... |
Against the Law, BBC Two review - uplifting and deeply movingThursday, 27 July 2017![]() The thing almost no one remembers about the great Nora Ephron/Rob Reiner 1989 romcom When Harry Met Sally is that the love story is intercut with real couples talking to camera about the mechanics and longevity of their true-life loves. It shouldn’t... Read more... |
Victim review - timely re-release for attack on homophobiaSunday, 23 July 2017![]() Victim was released in 1961. Six years would pass before the passing of the Sexual Offences Act cautiously exempted from prosecution men over 20 who had consensual sex in private. Yet the Basil Dearden suspenser probably played an equally important... Read more... |
50 Shades of Gay, Channel 4 review - no better place in the world to be gay?Tuesday, 04 July 2017![]() It’s half a century since homosexuality was partially decriminalised in England and Wales, so who better to cast his gaze over the lie of the land than stately homo Rupert Everett? The accomplished actor (and even finer diarist) started as he meant... Read more... |
