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It’s currently streaming on HBO Max.

Hedda

Hedda stars Tessa Thompson as a 1950s British socialite navigating a lavish party while confronting the return of her former lover Eileen (Nina Hoss).

The “Drag Race” main stage responded not with solemnity, but with the same charisma, uniqueness, nerve, and talent it always brings. Based on Shannon Pufahl’s 2019 novel, the film is now streaming on Netflix and HBO Max.

Jimpa

Jimpa stars John Lithgow as an ageing gay man living in Amsterdam.

By centering familial partnership and artistic resilience in a time of hostility, “Come See Me in the Good Light” became more than a sensitive look at sickness and instead debuted as a rebellious and soft-hearted act of queer reflection. One of them, though, wants to leave the country, which splits the movie into parallel directions, between the Vietnam War and the real-life horror story of 39 Vietnamese refugees found in a refrigerated truck in 2019.

O’Brien delivers dual performances that critics have called career-best work. Melling spent time with the Gay Bikers Motorcycle Club to prepare for the role. The documentary “Come See in the Good Light” remembered poet Andrea Gibson and gave their wife, Megan Falley, a platform to reflect on the late artist’s life and the fleeting power of true love.

We live in a time restrained by hesitation but spurred on by the recent memory of limitless possibility.

hot gay film

We are highlighting the best R-Rated gay movies of all time. This masterful new film isn’t quite the shock “Stranger by the Lake” was for many — with unsimulated sex scenes and a marrying of queer love to criminality — but there’s something cozy about “Misericordia” that, even in its most profane moments, leaves you with a knowing grin shared by the movie itself. —RL

  • “Peter Hujar’s Day”

    A total vibe, “Peter Hujar’s Day” is both a fascinating historical document and a tribute to the pastime of shooting the shit with the smartest gay guy you know.

    Fionn O’Shea stars as Owen, a gay novelist confined to a psychiatric facility meant to “cure” his sexuality.

    Navigating ovarian cancer alongside their partner, Megan Falley, Gibson anchors the project as a tender beacon of humor and romance, battling to accept their illness as part of the world’s beauty. Director Sophie Hyde drew on her own experiences growing up in a queer family.

    —WC

  • “The Hunting Wives”

    Created by Rebecca Cutter, “The Hunting Wives” was engineered to provoke in every political direction. Creator Benito Skinner was inspired heavily by his own life — and pop culture obsessions — while making the series, which follows a teen named Benny as he heads off to Yates College and grapples with his sexuality.

    His daughter Hannah (Olivia Colman) and her nonbinary teenager Frances (Aud Mason-Hyde) visit, and Frances expresses a desire to stay with their grandfather for a year. Francis Lawrence’s adaptation of Stephen King’s brutal novel approaches its dystopian death march with a kaleidoscopic sensitivity that’s attuned to the private fears, bonds, and longings of the young men facing extermination.

    Dennis emerges as a fascinatingly complex queer character, a sort of gay incel who’s jealousy at Roman’s romantic relationships and clear lust for his friend threatens to break their precarious friendship. Backlash against trans and nonbinary authorship rippled across the global art scene, while book bans and drag queens still dominated local chatter in the U.S.

    But it wasn’t all bad news.

    It’s available to rent on major platforms.

    Most of these films are available to stream now.