No Strings – Review/Summary (with Spoilers)
Perhaps saving the best for last, No Strings delivers a sense of longing that reminds you how much we’re willing to compromise or settle for the sake of company.
In the LGBT tag, you’ll find posts featuring productions with LGBTQIA+ storylines, or productions with prominent characters who identify under one of the acronyms.
Perhaps saving the best for last, No Strings delivers a sense of longing that reminds you how much we’re willing to compromise or settle for the sake of company.
The seduction of someone older and more mature meets realizing their maturity doesn’t mean they are ready for you.
Stanley buries the lead with sex and ends before you feel it gets to the good part.
A man with a secret finds himself in the company of the other person who knows what he lusts for.
In Lolo, you’ll feel like you are watching the childhood years of a group of friends before the time jumps to them as adults.
In It’s A Sin, we’re reminded what can matter more than the right school or job is finding your people — especially if you’re gay men in the 80s.
In White Lie, you watch as a con artist desperately tries to maintain their story of having cancer, seemingly by any means necessary.
You ever think to yourself, “I built up a tolerance to this kind of stuff?” Yeah, “Run Hide Fight” may test that theory.
The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina comes to an end, and, honestly, you’re reminded more so of where the series went wrong than what it did right.
Adachi and Shimamura takes the slow and steady approach to love. Thus giving you something which may feel annoyingly slow at times, but often authentic.