Kenny Lofton makes movies now, and perhaps this topic might be meaty and personal enough for him to tackle for his next project.

The former All-Star outfielder — whose latest film, an MMA/murder story titled “Chokehold,” is showing Wednesday and Thursday at 8 p.m. at Williamsburg Cinema in Brooklyn — was one-and-done in voting for the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2013.

While he still has a chance to be among the players inducted by the Cooperstown museum’s various Veterans Committees in the future, Lofton basically believes he was overlooked in the BBWAA voting — falling below the 5 percent cutoff with 3.2 percent of the vote — because the PED era has cluttered the ballot with candidates he considers cheaters.

“I just don’t like it. It pisses me off when they still talk about the guys who did PEDs still have the opportunity to get in. You cheated the game,” Lofton told The Post in a phone interview. “Look at somebody like Pete Rose not in the Hall of Fame. I’m not saying what Pete Rose did was right, but his numbers that he put up were real numbers. If it’s all about numbers, guys who cheated the game shouldn’t be in. PED guys piss me off. I just get irked every time I hear people talk about it.”

Lofton also has a specific problem with former Yankees teammate Alex Rodriguez, who was suspended in 2014 for his PED involvement, serving as one of the game’s top television analysts for Fox and ESPN.

“You’ve got Fox having a guy who got caught with PEDs doing the World Series. I can’t even watch the World Series now,” said Lofton, who played with Rodriguez in 2004. “That’s sad, you have a game that I love, I played 17 years in it, and you have Major League Baseball allowing a guy that knowingly cheated the game twice, and he’s the face of baseball, doing the World Series. That is not cool.

“To see somebody who cheated the game blatantly is doing the World Series? Come on, people. You’re basically telling kids nowadays that it’s OK to cheat the game of baseball. It’s OK to cheat. You will still get a job being a commentator, being the face of baseball. I don’t see how that flies with anyone.”

Lofton batted .299 for his career with 2,428 hits and 622 stolen bases, compiling 68.2 WAR. He made six All-Star appearances in 17 seasons with 11 teams, most notably 10 years with Cleveland. He also won four Gold Glove Awards, and his teams qualified for postseason play 11 times. He received 18 votes of 569 ballots cast in 2013 Hall of Fame voting, the 20th-most votes in that cycle.

“I was expecting to do better. But I’m a realist,” Lofton said. “I look back at the situation, and at that time, I think what happened for me was I came out on the ballot in the wrong year. There was so many people on the ballot, and so many people who had a potential situation with the performance-enhancing drugs. I felt a lot of voters wanted to keep those guys on the ballot, and that was votes taken away from me.”

Lofton, 51, remains optimistic he might have a chance for induction via the Hall’s various Veterans Committees, now known as the Eras Committees, which have voted in Jack Morris, Alan Trammell, Lee Smith and Harold Baines the past two years.

“They know the era I played in and all the things I was dealing with. I played against steroids guys and I still was competing during that time. At my position, I felt like I stood out,” Lofton said. “I just feel like the Veterans Committee should look at my defense and my offense and what I did on the base paths. Even though I felt good to see that Harold Baines got in, he played one position, or one side. He was a hitter. Baseball is about two sides of the field. I felt like I helped my teams on both sides of the field. Hopefully that will be looked at differently now.”

Lofton added he would be open to an opportunity to work in baseball part time in an advisory role, but most of his time is devoted to the production company, FilmPool, he started with business partner Brenton Earley, in 2005.

“Chokehold,” a story about a female MMA fighter who infiltrates the underground Russian fighting world to determine who killed her father, previously has been screened in Los Angeles, Phoenix, Cleveland and Chicago.