Meanwhile, Adeel Akhtar and Claire Rushbrook find joy with one another in Clio Barnard’s Ali & Ava (in theaters July 29) despite their respective communities in Bradford, England, being initially suspicious about, baffled by, or outright hostile toward their unlikely romance. The same can be said for Emma Thompson, who plays a woman figuring out what’s next in the wake of her husband’s death in Good Luck to You, Leo Grande (on Hulu June 17) with the help of the stunning sex worker (Daryl McCormack) she hires in hopes of experiencing her first orgasm. Dale Dickey camps by the side of a stunning Colorado lake awaiting the arrival of an old lover (Wes Studi) in A Love Song (in theaters July 29), though the real romance she finds may be with herself. Claire Denis’s Both Sides of the Blade (in theaters July 8) pits Juliette Binoche and Vincent Lindon against each other in a series of bruisingly realistic fights after a former lover and business partner (Grégoire Colin) resurfaces and gives the pair an excuse to smash their seemingly happy marriage to bits.
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Love and sex aren’t exclusively domains of the youthful and limber, and just because a movie is about a relationship doesn’t mean it’s guaranteed to be a happy one.
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The aspiring graphic novelist in Playlist (in theaters May 27) bounces between romantic and professional disillusionment after ending an unwanted pregnancy and getting a job adjacent enough to what she wants to do that she doesn’t run screaming when her boss informs her, “I have to warn you: I’m a real asshole.” Finally, an out-of-step homebody (Elizabeth Lail) in Katie Aselton’s Mack & Rita (in theaters August 12) is so eager to skip straight to no-fucks-to-give senior-citizen status that she pulls a reverse 13 Going on 30 with the help of a magical sound-bath pod - emerging as Diane Keaton. The protagonist of Nana Mensah’s Queen of Glory (in theaters July 15), played by Mensah herself, is a Columbia doctoral student who’s all set to blow up her life and leave New York to join her married lover when her mother dies, sending her back up to the Bronx and the Ghanaian community where she grew up.
Despite its gay rom-com billing, Fire Island (on Hulu June 3) is as much about the relationship between two friends (played by Joel Kim Booster, who wrote the film’s script, and Bowen Yang) struggling to fit into a community that reflexively treats them as invisible. If you’re looking for something for the youngs, this summer has plenty of fodder about 20- and 30-somethings floundering in the world.