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Watch Robin Williams in His Final Film, Stars as a Closeted Gay Man

The Oscar winner stars as a man grappling with his sexual orientation

By Marc Malkin Jul 15, 2015 10:12 PMTags

Hollywood will never see another like the late Robin Williams.

Fortunately, the Oscar winner's movies live on.

And only E! News has an exclusive sneak peek at his final film, Boulevard, an indie drama starring Williams as suburban husband and dad grapping with his sexual orientation.

In the clip above, his wife (Kathy Baker) finally confronts him back at home after he abandons her at a work dinner to deal with a crisis with the hustler he's infatuated with.

Todd Williamson/WireImage.com

"What does he do for you that I don't?" Baker asks.

"It's not that," Williams says, fighting back tears.

Baker goes into a rage. "Does he clean your clothes for you," she says. "Does he listen to your stories—your boring f**king stories? Because I don't think he does. Does he tell you everything's OK even when it isn't? Because I am sure he doesn't do that…My God, the arrogance of you."

When Williams tries to apologize, Baker screams, "Don't God damn accommodate me!"

Williams committed suicide by hanging himself on Aug. 11.

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Shortly after this tragic passing, Williams' wife, Susan Schneider, spoke out about her late husband's struggles with addiction and depression. "Robin spent so much of his life helping others. Whether he was entertaining millions on stage, film or television, our troops on the frontlines, or comforting a sick child — Robin wanted us to laugh and to feel less afraid," she shared in a statement.

"Since his passing, all of us who loved Robin have found some solace in the tremendous outpouring of affection and admiration for him from the millions of people whose lives he touched. His greatest legacy, besides his three children, is the joy and happiness he offered to others, particularly to those fighting personal battles."

Schneider also said his sobriety was "intact" at the time of his death, but he also continued to struggle with depression, anxiety as well as the early stages of Parkinson's Disease.

Boulevard is in theaters on July 17.

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