Screams From the Tower —Digital Debut April 14
Here’s a premise that feels both overdue and perfectly timed: Screams From the Tower, Cory Wexler Grant’s indie coming-of-age comedy following the intersecting lives of...

Here’s a premise that feels both overdue and perfectly timed: Screams From the Tower, Cory Wexler Grant’s indie coming-of-age comedy following the intersecting lives of a queer group of high school outcasts in 1995, arrives on Digital HD April 14, 2026, from TLA Releasing. The film pays homage to John Hughes’ classic ’80s touchstones like The Breakfast Club and Sixteen Candles alongside evergreen favorites Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Dazed and Confused, asking the question audiences might not have realized they needed answered: “What if John Hughes had centered one of his films on two closeted gay high school boys?” After winning Best Feature Film at the LGBTQ+ Toronto Film Festival, Best Screenplay at the Midwest Film Festival, and the Audience Award for Best Feature Film at the Reeling Film Festival, Screams From the Tower brings its festival-circuit success to wider audiences through Apple TV, Prime Video, Fandango at Home, and other digital platforms.
The Hughes Question#
The premise positions Screams From the Tower within a specific lineage while carving out territory that lineage never explored.
John Hughes defined ’80s coming-of-age cinema with films that captured adolescent longing, social hierarchy, and the desperate desire to be understood. The Breakfast Club put five archetypes in detention and discovered their common humanity. Sixteen Candles navigated birthday disappointment and romantic yearning. These films became templates, their DNA visible in virtually every teen movie that followed.
But Hughes’ protagonists were straight, their romantic plots heteronormative by default rather than explicit choice. Screams From the Tower asks what happens when you apply the Hughes formula, the warmth and humor and genuine affection for teenage experience, to characters whose closeted reality shaped everything about their high school navigation.
The 1995 setting matters. This is pre-internet dominance, pre-social media, an analog world where coming out meant something different than it does now. Director Wexler Grant describes wanting to show “the current generation an analogue world, when the Internet was slow, and social media had yet to descend, a simpler time, an awkward time, arguably a more innocent time.”

The Midwestern Story#
Screams From the Tower follows Julien Rosdahl, his best friend Cary, and their queer, outcast group of friends through high school in the mid-1990s.
The Midwestern setting distinguishes the film from coastal queer narratives that dominate the genre. High school in the heartland during the Clinton era carried its own textures, its own pressures, its own particular combination of conservatism and possibility. Julien and Cary navigate terrain that feels specific rather than generic.
When their dream of having their own show on the high school radio station is finally realized, it brings them popularity and infamy they never imagined. The radio station premise provides both plot engine and metaphor: voices finding audience, private selves becoming public, the risk and reward of being heard.
The Festival Recognition#
Screams From the Tower earned its theatrical life through festival success that validated its approach.
The world premiere at LGBTQ+ Toronto Film Festival resulted in Best Feature Film recognition, the kind of launch that signals a film connecting with its core audience. Best Screenplay at the Midwest Film Festival acknowledged Wexler Grant’s writing specifically, the craft underneath the concept. The Audience Award for Best Feature Film at the Reeling Film Festival, Chicago’s LGBTQ+ festival, confirmed that audiences rather than just juries responded to what the film offered.
Additional screenings at Dances with Films NYC, Cinejoy, and the Iris Prize LGBTQ+ Film Festival extended the film’s reach and reputation. The festival circuit provided the validation that independent films need, particularly queer independent films operating outside studio infrastructure.
The Love Letter#
Wexler Grant frames Screams From the Tower as something more personal than genre exercise.
“Above all, Screams From the Tower is a love letter to my best friend,” the director explains. “We met when we were eight years old, my gay brother from another mother. This film is a romantic comedy about our lifelong friendship.”
That personal foundation presumably grounds the film in emotional truth that pure nostalgia exercise might lack. The friendship between Julien and Cary draws from real relationship, real history, real affection developed over decades. “I hope audiences enjoy it,” Wexler Grant continues. “I hope they see themselves in it. And I hope they watch it and share it with their best friends.”
The invitation to share the film with best friends acknowledges that Screams From the Tower is about connection as much as identity, the bonds that sustain us through adolescence and beyond.

The New Crop#
Wexler Grant positions Screams From the Tower within evolving queer cinema.
“So many coming-of-age films, particularly queer films, have focused on drugs, sex, and parties, parental persecution, religious bigotry, unrequited high school crushes,” the director observes. These narratives served purposes, telling necessary stories about struggle and survival. But they also created patterns that could feel limiting.
“I’d like to think Screams From the Tower falls sweetly into a new crop of queer films and television shows that anyone can relate to regardless of one’s identity.” The ambition is universality through specificity, queer experience rendered with enough warmth and humor that the human elements transcend identity categories.
The John Hughes comparison supports this goal. Hughes made films about specific teenagers in specific circumstances that somehow felt universal, that audiences recognized even when the details didn’t match their own lives. Screams From the Tower apparently pursues similar alchemy.
Who Should Stream April 14#
If John Hughes films shaped your understanding of coming-of-age cinema: Screams From the Tower applies that template to stories Hughes never told, filling gaps in a beloved genre.
If you came of age queer in the ’90s: The 1995 setting, the analog world, the pre-social-media reality might resonate with your own experience in ways contemporary settings can’t.
If you appreciate festival-validated indie cinema: Best Feature at Toronto, Best Screenplay at Midwest, Audience Award at Reeling. The recognition suggests quality that transcends niche appeal.
If you want queer cinema that emphasizes joy alongside struggle: Wexler Grant’s emphasis on friendship and romance rather than persecution suggests lighter touch than trauma-focused narratives.
If you want to share a film with your best friend: The director’s hope for the film includes exactly this experience, watching together, seeing yourselves reflected.
April 14 Turns On the Mic#
Screams From the Tower arrives on Digital HD April 14, 2026, available to rent or own on Apple TV, Prime Video, Fandango at Home, and other platforms.
Two closeted gay high school boys. Their queer outcast friends. A radio station that brings unexpected attention. The Midwest in 1995, when the internet was slow and social media hadn’t yet descended.
What if John Hughes had centered one of his films on these characters? Cory Wexler Grant answers the question with a love letter to friendship, a romantic comedy about bonds that sustain us, a film that hopes you’ll see yourself in it regardless of your identity.
April 14. The tower is broadcasting.







