logo logo
  • home
  • News
  • Review
  • Short Films
  • Stories
  • home
  • News
  • Review
  • Short Films
  • Stories
  1. Home
  2. Tag
  3. childhood trauma
Solo (Canadian French)

Review Solo (Canadian French)

Discovering one’s identity and seeking love can be quite a challenging journey. For many in the queer community, drag serves as a means to explore and understand oneself more deeply. The act of applying makeup, donning glamorous outfits, and wearing extravagant wigs can unleash a hidden confidence. However, the French Canadian film Solo doesn’t focus…

554 Views 0 Comments
Review 2025-02-13
Article Search
GayRR: LGBTQ+ Culture and Life
GayRR: LGBTQ+ Culture and Life
LGBTQ+ Culture and Life
users
1
articles
337
Comments
2741
Views
199384
Random Articles
Amsterdam Marks 25 Years of Same-Sex Marriage With New Midnight Ceremony

Amsterdam Marks 25 Years of Same-Sex Marriage With New Midnight Ceremony

Amsterdam marked the 25th anniversary of legal same-sex marriage in the Netherlands with a new midnight ceremony at city hall, echoing the historic moment on April 1, 2001 when the world’s first same-sex marriages were performed there.
My Bias Is Showing?! Review: A Sweet Korean BL Idol Romance With Just Enough Chaos

My Bias Is Showing?! Review: A Sweet Korean BL Idol Romance With Just Enough Chaos

My Bias Is Showing?! turns idol fandom into a breezy Korean BL romance about a shy teacher, a famous singer, and a revenge plan too silly to survive its own feelings. Lightweight but charming, it works because the series never loses its warmth.
Griffin in Summer Review: A Funny and Sensitive Coming-of-Age Story About First Desire

Griffin in Summer Review: A Funny and Sensitive Coming-of-Age Story About First Desire

Griffin in Summer is a warm, funny coming-of-age film about artistic ambition, adolescent awkwardness, and the first flicker of same-sex desire. Modest in scale but sharp in observation, it captures a fragile turning point in queer self-awareness with real charm.
Karvaan Review: A Bold Partition Drama That Weaves Queer Desire Into Historical Trauma

Karvaan Review: A Bold Partition Drama That Weaves Queer Desire Into Historical Trauma

Karvaan revisits the India-Pakistan partition through a deeply personal lens, blending family memory, women’s suffering, and queer desire into a layered historical drama. It is heavy material, but the film’s emotional ambition makes it a striking watch.
Light Up Review: A Warm Atlanta Documentary on Black Queer Resilience and Self-Acceptance

Light Up Review: A Warm Atlanta Documentary on Black Queer Resilience and Self-Acceptance

Light Up profiles five Black queer people in Atlanta as they reflect on prejudice, secrecy, faith, masculinity, and the healing power of community. Simple in form but emotionally direct, it works best as an affirming portrait of survival and self-acceptance.
 Theme by Puock