Matt Mathews’ first-ever comedy special, When That Thang Get Ta’ Thangin, was filmed LIVE at the legendary Alabama Theatre in Birmingham, AL, and let’s just say… the networks couldn’t handle it! So instead of waiting around, we’re giving it directly to the people—uncensored, unfiltered, and unapologetically.
New York City-based comedian Matteo Lane helps his audience members with their various problems in this live comedy special filmed at the Comedy Cellar.
After accidentally coming out of the closet, Deena must undo her mistake through the only logical method: time travel.
When two incompetent gardeners accidentally derail a political fundraiser, they embark on a desperate struggle to prevent their sexy boss from finding out.
A making of documentary of the film Jackass 2.5
Chaos ensues as a gay actor and his female costar fake being a couple as they try to save the press junket for their new television show.
In this short comedy drama, a trans South Asian person visits their family for Rakhi, a Hindu religious ceremony that symbolizes the bond between brothers and sisters. Celebrating a ceremony that is so centered around gender, this non-binary character must reconcile their gender identity with their deeply rooted family values.
Kyoko is an aspiring writer whose artistic vision is yet to be formed. When her girlfriend Rie asks her to move in with her, Kyoko begins to wonder about their uncertain future as a lesbian couple in Tokyo.
A young photographer takes nature shots and selfies for an online dating profile. During a break, another young man seemingly appears by chance, but as the conversation unfolds, it becomes clear that nothing is accidental when your image is on the internet.
Kaio is not from this planet. On a Saturday night, he goes out with his Earthling friends and tries to deal with his feeling of not belonging.
The film follows an old man who looks back on a fleeting love that illuminated his life, only for it to vanish without a trace.
In the 1950s, a seemingly sensible newlywed and her wayward brother-in-law undertake parallel journeys of risk, romance, and self-discovery.
„Ein Sommer“ tells the story of a young girl who is afraid to live the life she wishes for. As she gets to know the new girl in town, she reflects on all the things she would have loved to have done and is forced to face her fears.
A disillusioned teenager in the city follows a stranger to The Woods, and ends up learning about plants, their queerness, and a more beautiful purpose.
Love blossoms secretly between two old women at an elderly care home while the specter of patriarchy looms large overhead.
Marlena, a bisexual woman, is the victim of biphobia as she is outed by a gay man. Seeking support from her girlfriend, Diana, she musters the courage to confront the man who outed her in this exploration of biphobia within the LGBTQ+ community.
Two girls, Olive and Clementine, go through their day. They follow their normal routines, similar yet different in many ways. Olive is an easygoing and less driven girl who hides her personality insecurities with her clothing. At the same time, Clementine is an ambitious and anxious girl who takes a lot of medication and stays busy to distract herself from all her anxieties. The two oddly find each other and can't shake the feeling from when they first spotted one another. When they continue to see each other, they realize there must be something between them.
A documentary about Tadashi Hase, a gay poet born in 1929, who spent much of his life closeted due to homosexuality being classified as a "mental illness." Despite these challenges, he became an award-winning poet and continues to work at 94. Only later in life, as societal attitudes shifted, did he come out. Through Hase’s journey, the film explores the history of homosexuality in Japan.
Four masculine-presenting Nigerians challenge gender norms and share their profound journeys via animation and childhood memories.