Easter is bringing us a whole lot of queer TV (ironic). We’re talking the most anticipated queer TV comeback of the decade, the final season of a show that basically became required viewing for sapphic audiences, an A24 film with a cast so stacked it’s almost offensive, and a bisexual lead in one of Netflix’s biggest teen franchises. Whether you’re clearing your schedule for weekly drops or planning a full easter egg and Netflix binge (treat yo’self), here’s what to have on your radar this month.
XO, Kitty season 3 – Netflix (2 April)
Kitty Song Covey (Anna Cathcart) is back at the Korean Independent School of Seoul for her senior year – and if you’ve been following this To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before spin-off, you’ll know that things have got progressively gayer since season one. Kitty is bisexual, having discovered her feelings for classmate Yuri (Gia Kim) back in season one and fully embracing her identity since. The show also features Q (Anthony Keyvan), a gay character who’s one of Kitty’s closest friends, and Yuri’s girlfriend Juliana (Regan Aliyah).
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Fair warning: season two drew some criticism from sapphic viewers for sidelining the Kitty/Yuri romance in favour of pushing the Min Ho storyline. Whether season three corrects course remains to be seen – but a bisexual lead in a mainstream Netflix teen series still matters, and Lana Condor returning as Lara Jean for a Covey sisters reunion is a nice bonus. All eight episodes dropped at once.
Watch on: Netflix (UK and US). All episodes streaming now.
Hacks season 5 – HBO Max / Sky (9 April US / 17 April UK)
This is the big one for anyone who’s spent the last four years emotionally invested in Deborah Vance and Ava Daniels. Hacks is back for its fifth and final season, and if you’re not already watching this show, get in it. Jean Smart has won four consecutive Emmys for playing Deborah, the ageing Vegas comedian, and Hannah Einbinder’s Ava remains one of the best queer characters on television. Einbinder is openly queer, Ava is bisexual, and the Deborah/Ava dynamic is one of the most compelling relationships on screen right now, romantic or otherwise.
The final season picks up after TMZ falsely reports Deborah’s death, and sees the pair return to Las Vegas to cement her legacy once and for all. Ten episodes, airing weekly – with double episodes dropping on 30 April and 7 May, and the series finale on 28 May. Clear your Thursday evenings.
Watch on: HBO Max (US) 9th April / Sky Atlantic and NOW (UK) 17th April.
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Euphoria season 3 – HBO Max / Sky (12 April)
This is the one. After four years of delays, rewrites, and industry drama, Euphoria is finally back for its third and final season. The show jumps five years into the future, taking the characters out of East Highland and into their messy mid-twenties. Rue (Zendaya) is in Mexico, still tangled up in debt to Laurie. Jules (Hunter Schafer) is in art school. Cassie and Nate are engaged and living in the suburbs. Lexi is assistant to a showrunner. Maddy is hustling in Hollywood.
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Zendaya’s Rue remains one of the most compelling queer characters on TV, and Hunter Schafer’s Jules continues to be a landmark role for trans representation. The full original cast is back, joined by newcomers including Rosalia, Sharon Stone, and Natasha Lyonne. Eight episodes, weekly on Sundays from 12 April – with the finale landing on 31 May. The season was shot on brand new Kodak film stock in 35mm and 65mm, so expect it to look absolutely stunning.
Watch on: HBO Max (US) 12th April / Sky Atlantic and NOW (UK) 13th April.
Mother Mary – in cinemas (17 April)
Clear your diary for this one. A24’s Mother Mary is a psychosexual pop thriller directed by David Lowery, starring Anne Hathaway as an iconic pop star and Michaela Coel as her estranged best friend and former fashion designer. When the two reconnect on the eve of Mary’s comeback performance, long-buried wounds and an intense dynamic between the pair take centre stage.
Hunter Schafer also stars (yes, she’s having an April), alongside FKA twigs, Kaia Gerber, and Sian Clifford. The soundtrack features original music from Charli xcx, Jack Antonoff, and FKA twigs, which feels extremely correct. Lowery himself described the film as “a weird, weird film” – weird, you say? We’re in! Limited release from 17 April, wide release from 24 April.
Watch: In cinemas (UK and US). 17th April.
Forbidden Fruits – in cinemas now / Shudder
If you missed this in late March, it’s still in cinemas and heading to Shudder soon. Forbidden Fruits is a witchy horror comedy from director Meredith Alloway, produced by Diablo Cody (Jennifer’s Body), and starring Lili Reinhart, Victoria Pedretti, Alexandra Shipp, Lola Tung, and Emma Chamberlain in her acting debut.
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A group of women working at a high-end mall boutique called Free Eden secretly run a femme witch cult in the basement after hours. When a newcomer named Pumpkin (Tung) starts questioning their sisterhood, things take a bloody turn. The cast is packed with queer actors – Reinhart is bisexual, Shipp is pansexual, and Pedretti is a sapphic icon at this point. It’s sitting at 77% on Rotten Tomatoes and reviewers have praised the performances and the camp factor. Catch it on the big screen while you can, or bookmark it for when it lands on Shudder.
Watch: In cinemas now (UK and US). Coming to Shudder.
In case you missed it: Your queer TV guide for March 2026
Happy Easter,
Nonchalant x




