Lesbian Com 2021

Lesbian Com 2021




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Stream It Or Skip It: 'For Madmen Only' On VOD, A Documentary About Improv Comedy Guru Del Close
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Resort to Love' on Netflix, a Vacay-Rom-Com That's More About the Scenery Than the Jokes
Jake Johnson Didn't Want To Waste His Pandemic Year — So He Wrote, Produced, And Starred In 'Ride The Eagle'
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Plastic Cup Boyz: Laughing My Mask Off!' On Netflix, A Showcase For Kevin Hart's Entourage
Saginaw Grant, 'Breaking Bad' and 'Veep' Actor, Dead at 85
Is 'Stillwater' on HBO Max or Netflix? When Will Matt Damon’s Movie Be Streaming?
Meghan McCain Lines up First Post-'The View' Gig: Executive Producing a Lifetime Movie, With Heather Locklear
Venice Film Festival 2021 Lineup to Include HBO Max's 'Dune,' Netflix's 'The Power of the Dog' and 'The Hand of God'
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Myth & Mogul: John DeLorean', A Docuseries About The Auto Magnate, His Gull-Winged Car, And His Cocaine Bust
The Climate Change Documentary '2040' Offers An Optimistic Vision Of The Future We All Need Right Now
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Playing With Sharks' On Disney+, About The Daring Female Diver Who Has Dedicated Her Life To Sharks
‘Woodstock 99: Peace, Love, And Rage’ Is A Stomach-Churning Look At a Mosh Pit of Misogyny
Stream It Or Skip It: 'The Last Mercenary' on Netflix, Where Van Damme Does Damage But Also Gets Some Yuks
A Man, A Woman, A Boat, A River, And World War I — 'The African Queen's Influence On 'Jungle Cruise'
Paul Giamatti’s ‘Jungle Cruise’ Character Is Absolutely Delightful
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Jungle Cruise' on Disney+, a Typically Bloated, Mostly Entertaining Have-Fun-or-Else Disney Product
Celebrate MTV’s 40th Anniversary With 'Biography: I Want My MTV'
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Woodstock 99: Peace, Love And Rage' on HBO Max, A Doc About The Fest That Became An Aggro Horror Show
'This Is Pop: Festival Rising' on Netflix Examines The Evolution Of The Modern Music Festival
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Emicida: AmarElo: Live in São Paulo' on Netflix, An Enlivening Companion Piece To The Brazilian MC’s 2020 Doc
Stream It Or Skip It: 'The Resort' on Hulu, a Cheapo Horror Flick in Which Dumb People Go to an Exotic Island to Get Killed
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Blood Red Sky’ on Netflix, a Euro-Thriller That Puts Something More Dangerous on a Plane Than Snakes
'The Empty Man' Ending Explained: Go Ahead, Manifest My Tulpa
These 'Fear Street' Books Are the Perfect Summer Companion to the Netflix Movie Trilogy
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Centaurworld' On Netflix, Where A Battle-Tested Horse Finds Herself In A Musical World With Odd Creatures
From Books to Board Games, Shop This 'Jungle Cruise' Merchandise in Time for the Disney Movie
New Movies on Demand: 'Peter Rabbit 2,' 'Ride The Eagle,' + More
Pokémon Live-Action Series Reportedly in Development at Netflix
Keeley Gets Feely! Welcome To 'Ted Lasso's Sexiest Scene Yet
'Ted Lasso': Juno Temple, Brett Goldstein, and Phil Dunster Debate the "Real Love Story" of Season 2
'Ted Lasso' Season 2's Premiere Shatters Records for Apple TV+
How to Watch ‘Rick and Morty’ Season 5, Episode 7
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Centaurworld' On Netflix, Where A Battle-Tested Horse Finds Herself In A Musical World With Odd Creatures
How Old Is Rick in 'Rick and Morty'?
'Rick and Morty's Thanksgiving Episode Made Its Director "Never Want to Draw a Turkey Again"
'Below Deck Med': Is Lexi Wilson Engaged? This Is What Malia White Said on 'WWHL'
'Below Deck Med' Recap: Did Chef Mathew Really Just Quit AGAIN?
'Below Deck Med' Recap: Roy Orbison Jr. Got So Damn Drunk He "Peed Everywhere"
'Below Deck Med': Chef Mathew Shea Opens Up About His Panic Attack, Provisions, and That Pesky Pile
When is Meghan McCain's Last Day on 'The View'?
'The View': Meghan McCain Bickers With Joy Behar, Claims "I Have A Higher Likelihood Of Getting Shot ... Than Getting COVID"
Meghan McCain Throws Tantrum Over New COVID Restrictions on 'The View': "This is Stupid, I Don’t Want to Wear a Mask Anymore"
Meghan McCain Says Anti-Police Rhetoric Is "Equally Dangerous" as Capitol Rioters on 'the View'
'Evil' Season 2 Episode 5 Recap: "Z Is For Zombies"
'Evil' Paramount Plus Episode 4 Recap: "E Is For Elevator"
'Evil' Season 2 Episode 3 Recap: "F Is For Fire"
Stream It Or Skip It: 'Centaurworld' On Netflix, Where A Battle-Tested Horse Finds Herself In A Musical World With Odd Creatures
How Dove Cameron Found the Balance Between Sexy and Sweet in 'Schmigadoon!'
Apple TV+'s 'Ted Lasso' and 'Schmigadoon!' Are an Irrepressibly Optimistic Double Act
By Jennifer Still @jenniferlstill Jun 17, 2021 at 9:25am 636 Shares
Happiest Season - Trailer (Official)
While many of us don’t need an excuse to tuck into some serious lady-loving media, Pride Month is a great time to dig into some of the best lesbian moments on film and truly celebrate women who love women. From campy classics like But I’m A Cheerleader to more artsy, cinematic features like Portrait of a Lady on Fire, it’s refreshing to see so many of these stories being told and enjoyed by audiences from all walks of lives and all sexualities.
Admittedly, lesbian cinema has left a lot to be desired over the years, with many movies resorting to cheap tropes and what can only be described as softcore porn rather than focusing on real, relatable same-sex relationships between women around the world. Things are getting better, thankfully, but there’s still a long way to go. However, given the more mainstream and critical success of several recent releases, there’s a good chance we’ll be seeing more of these stories being told in the near future.
In the meantime, there are plenty of lesbian movies available to stream online that are well worth your time. Whether you’re a fan of period pieces or you prefer something a little more quirky and lighthearted, there’s something on this list for everyone and they’ll entertain you all throughout Pride Month and beyond.
New(ish) movie Ammonite has everything: moody beach scenes, lots of fossils, Saoirse Ronan sitting on Kate Winslet’s face… To be clear, you’ll have to sit through roughly 3/4 of the movie before you get to that last part, which is not only pretty explicit but also meticulously planned out by the actresses themselves and filmed on Ronan’s birthday as a “gift” of sorts. However, let’s back up a second because there’s actually a really important and moving story being told here about the real 19th-century paleontologist Mary Anning (Winslet) and her longtime friend Charlotte Murchison (Ronan). It should be noted here that there are some pretty big liberties taken here with both women’s lives, but writer and director Francis Lee manages to toe the line between speculation and disrespect. Ammonite has been criticized by some for being overly dreary and at times a bit boring, but the moody nature of the setting perfectly accompanies the drama between the main characters and their lives (and yes, the sex scene is pretty great too).
While it doesn’t necessarily hold up well in the annals of cinematic experience, 1996’s Bound, the neo-noir crime thriller starring Jennifer Tilly and Gina Gershon is sexy in the way you would expect of a ’90s lesbian movie. Directed by the Wachowskis, it follows lesbian ex-con Corky (Gershon) who becomes a handyman at a local apartment building. Soon after, she’s seduced by one of the residents, Violet (Tilly) and pulled into a world of violent crime and danger. Think of this as a lesbian Thelma and Louise, of sorts, with a Sopranos vibe. If that’s not enough to pull you in, I don’t know what will be.
Any lesbian worth her U-Haul has likely seen Blue Is the Warmest Colour, and likely more than once. The French drama starring Léa Seydoux and Adèle Exarchopoulos and based on the graphic novel of the same name is another peek at the youthful discovery of love and the agony that comes along with it. When teenager Adèle (Exarchopoulos) falls for aspiring painter Emma (Seydoux), they embark on an intense affair that proves to be an eye-opening experience for the younger woman and ultimately the painful kind that’s so necessary to growing up. What this movie does so well is capture the almost obsessive nature of first love and how all-encompassing it can be. It’s so authentic that it’s sometimes hard to watch, but you’ll be glad you did.
Natasha Lyonne plays high school cheerleader Megan Bloomfield, a lesbian whose parents send her to a conversion therapy program that doesn’t work. In fact, quite the opposite – Megan actually learns to love herself for who she is and finds love in the process. A feel-good romantic comedy with a bit of satirical humor mixed in, But I’m A Cheerleader also boasts appearances from the likes of RuPaul, Clea DuVall, and Michelle Williams. Fun fact: this movie was originally given the rating of NC-17 by the MPAA and director Jamie Babbitt had to make cuts to get it down to an R rating. She later criticized the MPAA and their discrimination against movies with gay content as part of an interview in This Film Is Not Yet Rated.
Photo: Wilson Webb / Weinstein Company / Courtesy Everett Collection
No lesbian movie list would be complete without Carol. Based on the 1952 novel The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith, it stars Cate Blanchett in the titular role as well as Rooney Mara as Therese, a young salesgirl who immediately becomes enamored with the older woman after selling her some gloves at Bloomingdale’s. If that’s not the basis for a grand romance, I don’t know what is! Together, Carol and Therese go on a road trip together to take their minds off of the fact that Carol’s ex-husband is trying to take her children away from her based on a “morality clause” due to her homosexuality. While not the most memorable movie on the list, it’s one you still need to see. Sarah Paulson also stars, because of course she does!
Photo: Everett Collection / Everett Collection
One of those really great movies that passed you by if you weren’t paying attention, Disobedience isn’t your typical lesbian drama, most notably because it follows the lives of people within the Orthodox Jewish community. Rachel Weisz plays Ronit Krushka, a photographer who left behind her conservative religious community years ago but is called home when her father dies. Back in London, she reunites with her adopted brother of sorts, Dovid (Alessandro Nivola) and her former best friend and now Dovid’s wife, Esti (Rachel McAdams). As the story develops, it becomes clear that Ronit left behind far more than her religion when she moved across the Atlantic and now that she’s back, everything changes in some very major ways.
This South Korean erotic thriller starring Kim Min-hee and Kim Tae-ri isn’t just beautifully shot, it’s wonderfully told. A con man called Count Fujiwara (Ha Jung-woo) plans to rob an heiress named Lady Hideko of her inheritance. To do so, he hires a pickpocket to work as her maid and hopefully encourage Hideko to marry him. This part of his plan works, but unfortunately for the Count, things go downhill from there as Hideko and Sook-hee turn the tables in multiple ways. The illicit nature of many of the things that happen in The Handmaiden lends a sense of excitement and intimacy to it that’s rare and difficult to achieve in cinema but works so perfectly here.
Sure, this one is seasonal (Christmas in July, anyone?) and at times incredibly corny, but that’s what makes it so charming. It also helps that it was written and directed by Clea DuVall. The movie follows Abby (Kristen Stewart, natch) and Harper (Mackenzie Davis) as a happy and in love couple who decide to spend the holidays together at Harper’s parents’ house. There’s just one problem: Harper’s parents think she’s super straight and they’re desperate to set her up with her high school boyfriend again. What follows is a somewhat predictable yet incredibly relatable story about feeling secure in your identity and living in your truth. If that isn’t enough of a pull on its own, you should also know that the cast includes the great Dan Levy, Mary Steenburgen, Aubrey Plaza, Alison Brie… the list goes on and on.
If you’re a cinephile, chances are you’ve heard of this one and perhaps even seen it regardless of your sexuality. Céline Sciamma’s French-language historical romantic drama tells the story of an aristocrat and the artist hired to paint her portrait and the love affair they embark on despite the conventions and limitations of the time. Noémie Merlant and Adèle Haenel really shine as Marianne and Héloïse, bringing an earnestness and passion to the project that really elevate it to the next level. And, because this is a French movie, you can bet that there are a few steamy scenes included. The good thing is that given that the movie was written and directed by a woman, it never seems provactive and instead feels incredibly authentic (and yes, hot).
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A 17th-century nun in Italy suffers from disturbing religious and erotic visions. She is assisted by a companion, and the relationship between the two women develops into a romantic love affair.
Somewhere along the mid-19th century American East Coast frontier, two neighboring couples battle hardship and isolation, witnessed by a splendid yet testing landscape, challenging them both physically and psychologically.
Has anyone seen the world to come? Opinions?
La fracture was previously set for 2021 but we'll see: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt13321730/? ... flmg_act_2
Someone let me know when a non periodic movie is coming out
I'm sick of looking at hairy armpits. Someone make a movie set in recent times.
Nice to see this place is still full of men. 

Anyway The World to Come is trash and produced and acted in by abuser Casey Affleck... so, yeah. Hard fking pass.
This looks like a reprise of the French movie The Page Turner 

Same But Different was a fun movie, although I could barely handle the cringe at times. Laugh out loud funny in bits, and a happy ending.  
'Til Death Do Us Part' Official Trailer (2017) | Taye Diggs, Annie Ilonzeh - YouTube
Anyone with a link for the Google drive movies?
Not from 2021, but never saw if mentioned, so I'm going to mention it. Borrowed this movie from my library. Looked like a indy science fiction movie, so didn't know what to expect. Did not expect the lead character to turn out to be a lesbian LOL.


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Lesbian Com 2021


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