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..... | Two luckless friends (played by James Corden and Mathew Horne) head to a hamlet in the Welsh countryside for a hiking holiday, only to find all the women of the village enslaved by an ancient vampire curse. Armed with crucifixes, axes and anything else they can add to their arsenal, the duo prepares to fight for their lives. Paul McGann and Silvia Colloca also star in this bitingly funny tale of horror from director Phil Claydon. |
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..... | Uptight literature professor Vivian Bell (Helen Shaver) heads to Reno, Nev., in 1959 for a quickie divorce. While staying with Frances Parker (Audra Lindley) at her ranch to establish residency, Bell meets Parker's adopted daughter (Patricia Charbonneau), a casino worker 10 years her junior. Bell finds herself increasingly drawn to the open and self-assured lesbian, and their developing intimacy releases buried emotions Bell has never explored. |
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..... | Brash lesbian Camille "Max" West (Guinevere Turner) is looking for romance in this hip, film festival favorite. Sick of hearing Max whine about her love life, her roommate sets Max up with the bashful, older -- and frumpy -- Ely (V.S. Brodie). Not surprisingly, their meeting doesn't exactly set off fireworks. But just as Max begins to believe she's destined to be alone, she discovers that life's best surprises sometimes come in ordinary packages. |
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..... | This fantasy comedy stars J. Andrew Keitch as a gay man who returns to high school and learns that being part of the in crowd isn't all it's cracked up to be. At 40, single Brad Jenkins (Keitch) feels like a loser -- till he's magically transported back to high school, where nearly all the students are now homosexual. Brad dates the hot jock (Tim Hammer), but everything changes when Brad's best pal (Joan Lauckner) arrives on the scene. |
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..... | Studly Jarod (Jonathan Chase), nerdy Griff (Mitch Morris), flamboyAnt Nico (Jonah Blechman) and innocent Andy (Michael Carbonaro) all wAnt the same thing -- to lose their virginity -- and they'll paint the town lavender to do so in this gay take on the teen comedy genre. With naughty gags aplenty, there's lots to laugh at in this send-up that also features Lypsinka as one of the boys' mothers and a cameo from "Survivor" star Richard Hatch. |
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..... | Nine African American butch (masculine) lesbians individually talk to an unseen and unheard interviewer about various aspects of the butch lifestyle and their own personal lives. Topics include their look (clothing, hairstyles, lack of makeup, etc.), their realizations that they were "different" and their eventual coming out, their relationships with various family members, their partners, and other societal groups, the perceptions of society, and what it means to be "butch". |
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This DVD will be release in the Spring of 2010 Our Review Coming Soon |
Hannah and Rachel grew up as little girls in the same small Midwest town, where traditional gender expectations eventually challenge their deep love for one another. Hannah becomes an adventurous, unapologetic lesbian and Rachel a strong but quiet homemaker. Weaving back and forth between past and present, the film reveals how the women maintained their love affair despite a marriage, a world war, infidelities, and family denial. |
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| When she develops a physical attraction for her best friend, Delilah, the conflicted Kiran must keep her feelings secret for fear of ostracism from her traditional Indian village. But when a young man begins to court Delilah and asks Kiran to help him compose love letters, she sees a way to express herself. Delilah eventually discovers who's behind the passionate notes and realizes that she shares Kiran's feelings -- to their families' dismay. | ||
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