
Drunken Noodles (2026) is the kind of film that sneaks up on you—funny, messy, intimate, and quietly devastating in all the right ways. Set against late nights, cheap takeout, and the fragile rhythms of chosen family, the film follows a group of queer friends as they orbit love, identity, and the moments that change everything when you least expect it. It’s disarmingly real—conversations that feel overheard rather than scripted, performances that linger, and a tone that shifts effortlessly between sharp humor and emotional gut-punch.
This is exactly the kind of film that lands best in a room full of people—where laughter ripples, silences hang, and recognition hits a little harder. For Pride Month, Drunken Noodles isn’t just representation—it’s reflection, community, and that rare sense of “oh, they actually got this right.” If you’ve been waiting for something that feels immediate, human, and just a little bit chaotic in the way real life is, don’t miss this one.
Trailer