DVD: Keep the Lights On

Ira Sachs' Sundance hit furthers gay cinema

Director Ira Sach's autobiographical tale of Erick and Paul's 10-year relationship shows the passion and destruction that can occur in any relationship. Here, we follow the decade of ups and downs that happen between documentary filmmaker Erik (Thure Lindhardt) and his attorney boyfriend Paul (Zachary Booth) as drug addiction takes its toll.

The Judas Kiss, Duke of York's Theatre

Rupert Everett has a quiet melancholy as Oscar Wilde in a so-so David Hare revival

David Hare's 1998 play wasn't terribly well received when it was first produced by the Almeida; several critics regarded it as a thin work, weakly directed by Richard Eyre, and opined that Liam Neeson was miscast in the role of Oscar Wilde. Now comes a revival, directed by Australian Neil Armfield that has, on the face of it, dream casting in Rupert Everett as the Irish playwright hounded by the British ruling classes for his homosexuality.

Hero, Royal Court Theatre

EV Crowe’s new play about a gay primary school teacher is both thought-provoking and entertaining

Is discretion really the better part of valour? This question arises in a particularly acute form in this new play, which looks at Danny, a gay primary school teacher who decides to come out — despite the risk of being seen as a paedo. But although it is great to enjoy EV Crowe’s follow up to her 2010 debut Kin, which was an account of a posh girls boarding school in the 1990s, does her latest — which opened last night — have a lesson to teach us about the meaning of courage in daily life?

DVD: Codependent Lesbian Space Alien Seeks Same

The ups-and-downs of relationships are no stranger when you're dating an alien

With a title like this, you know you’re getting something different. Madeleine Olnek’s first feature is a quirky love story set in her native New York, which is portrayed with enchanting zaniness. Where else would you expect the arrival of female space aliens, with bald heads and distinctive collared costumes (to hide their gills, since you ask) to pass unnoticed? Welcome to Olnek’s micro-budget, stylish black-and-white world that revels in its Fifties B movie sci-fi ancestry, complete with juddery spacecraft.

Yossi

YOSSI Israeli gay indie follows a journey from near-catatonia to a blossoming of the heart

Israeli gay indie follows a journey from near-catatonia to a blossoming of the heart

Stubbled, chubby and aged beyond his 34 years, Yossi, the eponymous hero of Israeli director Eytan Fox’s film played by Ohad Knoller, has a hang-dog loneliness to him that stands out a mile away. He may be a qualifying cardiologist, but his own heart seems stuck at the glacier stage.

Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles, Epstein Theatre, Liverpool

EPSTEIN: THE MAN WHO MADE THE BEATLES, EPSTEIN THEATRE, LIVERPOOL New play about The Beatles' troubled Svengali opens the refurbished theatre that bears his name

New play about The Beatles' troubled Svengali opens the refurbished theatre that bears his name

Those of us growing up in the heady days of 1960s Liverpool knew that four local lads were taking the world by storm. Some really grown-up people might even have been to The Cavern and seen the phenomenon in their early days. And yet there was always an enigma in the background: the figure who made it happen but about whom we knew almost nothing.

Keep the Lights On

KEEP THE LIGHTS ON Love is a drug in a sensitive New York gay relationship story

Love is a drug in a sensitive New York gay relationship story

American indie director Ira Sachs’s last film was Married Life, and he returns to similar territory in Keep the Lights On, which could just as easily be titled Scenes from a Relationship. Episodes over the decade from 1998 onwards tell the story of the coming together - and falling apart - of a New York gay relationship, one that Sachs has said draws on his own life.

DVD: Beauty

Darkness at the heart of South African story of one man's gradual breakdown

There’s little beauty of any conventional kind in this tale of the hidden queer - "gay" would have associations of a very different world - life of South African patriarch François (Deon Lotz) imploding. He falls for Christian (Charlie Keegan), the 20-something son of an old friend, with violent and wrenching consequences: the closet door may be opening, but the cracks are in a deeply repressed family life.

Circumstance

CIRCUMSTANCE Gay love struggles for life in Maryam Keshavarz's Tehran-set feature debut

Gay love struggles for life in Maryam Keshavarz's Tehran-set feature debut

Recent Iranian cinema has seen the best of times - and the worst of times. From the 1990s onwards the phenomenon of the "Iranian New Wave" has captured worldwide festival attention, with directors like Abbas Kiarostami, and father and daughter pair Mohsen and Samara Makhmalbaf among the leaders of the list of those who brought a new view of their nation to international eyes.

DVD: North Sea Texas

First love proves tentative in Bavo Defurne's gay-themed Flemish-language debut

Bavo Defurne’s North Sea Texas is a more than distinguished addition to the coming-of-age film genre, catching the painful moments of approaching maturity. Set in a Sixties provincial seaside town in Belgium, the poignancy of 16-year-old hero Pim discovering his gay sexuality rings very true, and movingly.