August is typically the monththat the summer season starts to wind down. Kids prepare to goback to school, while adults figure out how to spend the last few days of vacation they have left for the season. On the movies and streaming front, however, the schedule remains as busy as ever, and that holds true for content about the LGBTQ+ experience.
In theaters, the comedyBottomsand the dramaPassagesshowcase the highs and lows of love, while the hit Netflix streaming showHeartstopperreturns for a second season. In addition, there’s an incisive documentary about a famously closeted gay Hollywood star on Max whilePrime Videodebuts a charming rom-com about the First Son and the Prince of England having a secret romance. There’s something for everyone, and these fiveLGBTQ moviesand shows are sure to keep you entertained well into the fall.

Rock Hudson: All That Heaven Allowed (out now)
You may think you know all there is to know about Rock Hudson, but asAll That Heaven Allowedproves, there’s more underneath the pretty surface than you may think. For those who don’t know who Rock Hudson is, here’s a brief overview: Hudson was a matinee idol of the 1950s and 1960s who lived as a closeted gay man for most of his life. He was only outed in the mid-1980s as it was revealed he was quickly dying of AIDS.
Unlike mostdocumentariesthat focus on closeted life,All That Heaven Allowedemphasizes just howhappyHudson was as a major movie star who also explored his sexuality, albeit discreetly and carefully. This emphasis on queer joy, and reinstating Hudson’s importance in the gay community and role in the public acceptance of the AIDS epidemic, is what sets the documentary apart. It’s also surprisingly funny and raunchy, with surviving members of Hudson’s inner circle telling entertaining stories about Hudson’s sexual escapades and Tinseltown anecdotes.
All That Heaven Allowedis now streaming onMax.
Heartstopper season 2 (August 3)
Netflix’s twee tween hitHeartstopperreturns for another season on August 3, and there’s sure to be more longing looks, animated swoons, and a dozen perfectly timed needle drops in its next batch of 10 episodes. The season more or less adapts volumes 2 and 3 of Alice Roseman’s charming graphic novel series of the same name, which see leads Charlie and Nick grapple with being in a romantic relationship for the first time, the gradual coming out process to friends and family, and a class trip to Paris which opens them both up to a wider world of acceptance and temptation.
When the first season debuted on Netflix in April 2022,Heartstopperwas rightly praisedfor its low-key charm and deeply sympathetic approach to its teenage characters. Season 2 promises more of the same, with more attention given to its talented supporting cast, particularly Yasmin Finney’s Elle and William Gao’s Tao, who both begin to wonder whether their friendship is morphing into something more with each episode.Heartstopper‘s lo-fi cuteness may irk some, but for most people, the show is a rare depiction of teens as sensitive, intelligent creatures. It’s the anti-Euphoria, and that alone is worth the price of admission.
Season 2 ofHeartstopperwill stream on Netflix on August 3.
Passages (August 4)
Are you like me in thinking 2023 has been severely lacking in adult dramas that deal honestly with love and sex? Ira Sachs’ NC-17-rated dramaPassagespromises to fill that need with a provocative tale of a love triangle gone terribly wrong. The film stars rising German actor Franz Rogowski as Tomas, a filmmaker in a happy and stable marriage to Martin (No Time to Die‘s Ben Whishaw). One night in a crowded dance club, he meets Agathe (Blue is the Warmest Color‘s Adèle Exarchopoulos), a young schoolteacher who ignites a lust in Tomas that surprises even him. Soon, Tomas and Agathe begin an affair, which jeopardizes Tomas’ marriage to Martin, who begins his own affair.
Erotic dramas used to be a staple of summertime moviegoing; rememberUnfaithful, the Adrian Lyne movie that came out in May 2002 and nabbed star Diane Lane an Oscar nomination for Best Actress?Passagesmay not have as much of a mainstream appeal as that movie, but early reviews indicate it’s as cerebral and sensual as its intriguing trailer suggests. IfHeartstopperis about the beginning of young love,Passagesshowcases the endpoint of a relationship that’s been exhausted by too much freedom.
Passageswill be released in theaters on August 4.
Red, White & Royal Blue (August 11)
Silly rom-coms aren’t just for straight people anymore. The premise ofAmazon Prime Video‘s movieRed, White & Royal Blueis deliberately absurd: the son of the U.S. President, Alex Claremont-Diaz, must befriend his hated rival, Prince Henry, to smooth over relations between America and England. Their forced partnership quickly becomes something more, and they embark on a secret romance that, if exposed, could ruin Alex’s mother’s chances of re-election and threaten the British Monarchy. How’s that for stakes?
Red, White & Royal Blueleans into the outrageous plot, and in the process, becomes the rare rom-com that’s actually kind of romantic and funny. As played by relative newcomers Taylor Zakhar Perez and Nicholas Galitzine, Alex and Henry have a classic love/hate relationship that carries on the rom-com tradition of the two leads grudgingly falling in love with each other as the movie progresses. The genre lives or dies based on the leading stars’ chemistry, and Perez and Galitzine have it.Red, White & Royal Bluewon’t rock your world likeOppenheimeror evenBarbie, but it’s a charming diversion from a real world that has far too few buttercream cake fights and romantic walks in the moonlight.
Red, White & Royal Bluewill stream on Prime Video on August 11.
Bottoms (August 25)
AfterNo Hard Feelingsin June andJoyridein July, Raunchy Girl Summer concludes with Emma Seligman’sBottoms, a delightfully filthy comedy that won over audiences at South by Southwest earlier this year. The movie features rising stars Rachel Sennott (who also co-wrote the film) andThe Bear‘s Ayo Edebirias PJ and Josie, two queer teenagers who are too dorky and socially awkward to get dates with the high school cheerleaders they lust after. They decide to form an all-girls fight club to gain the attention of their objects of affection. Naturally, things don’t go quite as planned, and hijinks ensue.
Described by Seligman as “a campy queer high school comedy in the vein ofWet Hot American Summer, but more for a Gen-Z queer audience,”Bottomsdials up the awkward humor and doesn’t flinch from portraying its central female protagonists as desperate, horny, and funny as hell. The movie’s rapturous reception at SXSW, combined with its hilarious trailers, promises to close out the summer of 2023 with a few well-earned laughs … and maybe a life lesson or two as well.