A Revry original, Unconventional is a really well-liked queer dramedy that feels totally different from the usual stuff. The heart of the story is about two pretty eccentric queer siblings and their partners trying to build a family that doesn't follow the traditional rules. It takes a super raw and unfiltered look at queer life, diving deep into things like mental health, addiction, and how complicated identity and relationships can get. It’s not afraid to get messy or show people at their most vulnerable, and it really pushes boundaries while showing a lot of different queer experiences. The first season has nine episodes, and each one is about a half-hour long. The story centers on Noah, a grad student who’s been struggling for years to wrap up his PhD. He’s been with his husband, Dan, for nine years, and they’ve recently gotten married and moved to Palm Springs. While they're trying to figure out how to start a family and have a baby, they decide to shake things up by in...
Miss Rosewood is quite a provocative and intimate documentary that charts the uncompromising life and performances of New York-based gender-bending artist Rose Cory, also known as Miss Rosewood. The film plunges us into the flamboyant, anarchic, and unapologetically raw world of underground performance art in New York City. It provides an unfiltered glimpse into her artistic expression and the extent she pushes boundaries while performing in the city’s underground scene.
Miss Rosewood, who likes to call herself a transgender terrorist, has a notorious act where she defecates on stage, sprays her bodily fluids over the audience after prancing around naked showing off her she/he body. The extreme nature of what she is prepared to do attracts an edgy celebrity crowd always desperate for the next best thing. At The Box a very exclusive NY theatre club Miss Rosewood has made Page 6 headlines by dosing Leonardo DiCaprio with a condom full of sperm and vomiting on Susan Sarandon. In her former life as a cisgender male he was married to his former therapist who talked on camera now about how their friendship remained after he wanted to transition. How celibate for a couple of decades, we see Rose preparing for breast implant surgery , which does not go smoothly at all. One of the saddest parts of the film is when Rose calls her very supportive father to break the news about the problems with her new breasts.
The director shot her film over a decade and leaves you with a feeling that Miss Rosewood’s stage antics are reaching their sell-by date, but possibly by now as she has undergone more surgery to feminise herself, that she’ll be ready for the next act in her life. The camera doesn’t shy away. It bears witness. It follows Rosewood through intimate transitions—surgical, emotional, spiritual—and documents how performance art becomes a survival mechanism, a scream of resistance, and a declaration of self. The film is interesting and it helps that the duration is just over an hour. It also does a good job of not taking sides or giving an opinion. It's for the viewers to watch and learn more about this person. (4.5/10)

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