James King (Will Ferrell) is an extremely wealthy hedge fund manager, engaged to his gorgeous gold-digging fiancée Alissa (Alison Brie). His car washer, Darnell Lewis (Kevin Hart), and his wife, Rita, are trying to put their daughter Makayla in a better school away from the bad neighborhood they live in. Darnell meets James when he accidentally frightens James in the parking lot. James makes a speech about how he got to his success, and to inspire Darnell to go for his. He pulls out a big wad of cash, only to give two singles as a "tip" for Darnell.
Dan Landsman is the self-proclaimed chairman of his high school's alumni committee. While planning for the 20th reunion he has the idea of convincing Oliver Lawless, the most popular guy in his graduating class, to return, thinking that this will make people want to attend.
Nolan Mack (Williams) has worked at the same bank for almost 26 years in a life of monotony. He and his wife Joy (Baker) have embraced their marriage as a convenient distraction from facing reality. However one day, what starts as an aimless drive down an unfamiliar street turns into a life-altering decision for Nolan. When he meets a troubled young man named Leo (Aguire) on his drive home, Nolan finds himself breaking from the confines of his old life and coming to terms with who he really is.
The drama is a coming-of-age genre film, and centers on fictional Danny Winters (Jeremy Irvine), a young gay white man from Indiana, who flees the conservative countryside in the late 1960s and moves to New York City. Before leaving, he comes out to his parents, who are horrified. He leaves behind his younger sister. After reaching Greenwich Village, he is befriended by a multiracial group of young, gay and genderfluid street kids and drag queens. He meets older men Trevor (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), who soon becomes his lover and roommate, and Ed Murphy (Ron Perlman), the manager of the Mafia-owned Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in the Village. Ed colludes with corrupt policemen and exploits homeless gay youth to his own advantage. Danny gradually learns about gay culture from his new friends.
Julia (Ashley C. Williams) is a young woman that was drugged and raped by Piers (Ryan Cooper) and his friends, who then left her for dead. She manages to make her way home, where the viewer discovers that Julia has spent most of her life being abused by various tormentors and has turned to self-harm as a result. Later Julia overhears someone discussing a therapy that has rape victims taking back power from their attackers. She's introduced to Dr. Sgundud (Jack Noseworthy) through the mysterious Sadie (Tahyna Tozzi). Under her guidance, Julia seduces a man (implied to be a rapist of one of the past patients of Sgrundud), lures him to her apartment, where the rest of the sisterhood restrain him, make Julia emasculate him (taking genitals as a trophy), and dispose the body.
Jérémie, un jeune homosexuel de 34 ans, va se marier avec Antoine. Cependant, un matin il se réveille dans le lit d'une jeune Suédoise, Adna, dont il tombe rapidement amoureux.
The film centers on Freddy (Silva) and Mo (Tunde Adebimpe), a gay couple trying to have a baby with the help of their friend Polly (Kristen Wiig). Freddy is also a performance artist who is attempting to make a short film entitled Nasty Baby which features himself portraying a screaming infant.
The film is based on the true story of Laurel Hester (Moore), a police officer in Ocean County, New Jersey. The story narrates the difficulties faced by a lesbian police detective and her domestic partner, Stacie Andree (Page). Following her diagnosis with terminal lung cancer in 2005, Hester repeatedly appealed to the county's board of chosen freeholders in an attempt to ensure her pension benefits could be passed on to her domestic partner.
In early 1920s Copenhagen, the illustrator and artist Gerda Wegener (Alicia Vikander) asks her husband, Einar Wegener (Eddie Redmayne), to stand in for a female model. The popularity of the portraits leads to Gerda painting her husband in further pictures as a woman. Einar develops an attraction for a female physical appearance and begins living as a woman named Lili Elbe. Ultimately Elbe becomes the first ever recipient of male to female sex reassignment surgery, and Gerda supports her decision, although their marriage becomes strained when Gerda comes to the realization that Lili is no longer the person she married. A childhood friend of Lili, Hans Axgil (Matthias Schoenaerts), shows up and forms a complex love triangle with the couple.
Vu vit avec des amis à Hô-Chi-Minh-Ville dans une maison au bord du fleuve. Son père qui vit à la campagne vient lui rendre visite, il aimerait que Vu épouse une des colocataires. Mais Vu est amoureux de Thang, un autre colocataire.
Charlotte (Sophie Verbeeck) et Michel, dit Micha (Félix Moati), vivent ensemble depuis plusieurs années et viennent de s’acheter une maison à Roubaix, dans le quartier de l’Hommelet. Pourtant, leur couple bat de l’aile, d’autant que Charlotte vit parallèlement une relation passionnée mais difficile avec sa jeune amie Mélodie (Anaïs Demoustier). Un soir, Michel déclare sa flamme à Mélodie et ses sentiments sont réciproques. Les deux histoires extra-conjugales vont alors se dérouler simultanément, dans un climat burlesque, jusqu’à ce que Charlotte et Michel se rendent compte qu’ils se trompent avec la même personne. Après un court et heureux ménage à trois, Charlotte décide malgré tout de se retirer et de laisser Michel et Mélodie vivre leur amour.
Sam et Céline se retrouvent sans emploi après la fermeture de Coquelet, l'usine de poulet dans laquelle elles travaillaient à Saint-Chamond, dans la Loire. Les deux amies cohabitent et peinent à joindre les deux bouts. Sam doit en outre se battre pour conserver la garde de sa jeune sœur, Kim, qui a d'importants troubles de comportement depuis un accident de la route dans lequel leur mère est morte alors que la jeune fille était à bord. Les services sociaux menacent de la placer en famille d'accueil.