From an American Mafia movie to a jaunt through Paris' gay district via a high-octane sci-fi Korean action-thriller, Cannes is offering a little bit of everything today as I took in two In Competition titles and a supremely queer animated midnight selection. Paper Tiger. Courtesy of Cannes Film Festival. Paper Tiger ★★★ 1/2Directed by James... Continue Reading →
Cannes 2026 Film Review: Flesh & Fuel (Du Fioul dans les artères) ★★★★1/2
When oil spills upon a wet surface, the opposing two fluids clash and when reflected in the sunlight a radiant iridescent glow is produced. Any parking lot, truckstop, or industrial sectors of our world are filled with these subtle moments of beauty. An interaction between two forces that unveil an elegance in the most innocuous... Continue Reading →
2026 Cannes Film Festival Diary Day 4: All of a Sudden, Sheep in the Box, & Flesh & Fuel
Away from the today's film offerings—featuring soulful performances, android children, and gay long haul truckers—my self-made The Substance jacket caught the attention of its filmmaker, Coralie Fargeat, who posted a snap to Instagram that she'd been sent of me proudly sporting it as I scurried along La Croisette from one screening to the next. All... Continue Reading →
2026 Cannes Film Festival Diary Day 3: Tangles, Club Kid, Marie-Madeleine, & Colony
Early mornings and late nights is the way of things. Day three brings a special screening, a Cannes Premiere, Un Certain Regard, a midnight and Queer Palm eligibility. Tangles. Courtesy of Cannes Film Festival. Tangles ★★★★★Directed by Leah Nelson / Special Screening Selection / Queer Palm eligible Leah Nelson’s feature debut superbly adapts Sarah Levitt’s... Continue Reading →
2026 Cannes Film Festival Diary Day 2: We Are Aliens, The Meltdown, Fatherland, Ken Russell’s The Devils & Species
Chilly day brimming with rich filmic opportunity. Five films on the docket today. All from different festival sections: Directors Fortnight, Un Certain Regard, In Competition, Cannes Classic, and our first Midnight Selection. We Are Aliens. Courtesy of Cannes Film Festival. We Are Aliens ★★★★1/2Directed by Kohei Kadowaki / Directors Fortnight Animated with a blissfully unique... Continue Reading →
2026 Cannes Film Festival Diary Day 1: Butterfly Jam, Nagi Notes, & Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma
There's a nice brisk wind today on the Riviera, the sun is shining, and cameras are flashing. After yesterday's official opening ceremony, everyone here in Cannes is eager for the next 10 days of film. Starting us off we have the opening film of the Director’s Fortnight, Butterfly Jam; the first of the films In... Continue Reading →
Cannes 2026 Film Review: Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma ★★★★★
In 1992, the term final girl was coined by Carol J. Clover in her book Men, Women, and Chainsaws, a canonical work of critical exploration of gender and sexuality in horror. Subsequently, the final girl would go on to live so many lives and so many deaths, ultimately becoming this symbolic and monolithic being. Rehashed,... Continue Reading →
Film Review: Tinsman Road ★★★★
If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, did it even make a sound at all? Or does it echo out as an ethereal song, haunting those who may have been hit by its ripples? The answer is unknown, the sound is unknown, and the only certainty left is... Continue Reading →
28 Slays Later – Film Review: Queens of the Dead ★★★★★
Rules to live by... #1 Be kind to yourself and others. #2 Focus on what you can control. #3 Don’t hook up with that headless torso DL guy from Grindr no matter how desperate you are. Yes, I’m looking at you, don't do it! #4 If you ever find yourself in a zombie apocalypse, make... Continue Reading →
Cannes 2025 Film Review: Pillion ★★★★1/2
Humanizing the submissive: a kinky, brilliant, bittersweet Cannes award-winning feature debut In recent years, there has been a perplexing pushback against sex in film. Whether it be on social media or in general conversation, it seems like sex, and especially kink, has been relegated into being taboo. Regressive to say the least. To combat this,... Continue Reading →
