Iconic gay movies
20 iconic must-watch movies & TV shows about coming out
FX
Ryan Murphy hit it out of the park with Pose, his drama series focusing on a group of trans and queer folks in New York City of the s and initial s. It is particularly notable for its inclusion of many trans women of color and their stories, and coming out, in many senses of the word, is a key element of many of these characters’ story arcs. The series is at times humorous and at times deeply heartbreaking, and it paints a fascinating portrait of a key historical period for the LGBTQ+ community.
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'Will & Harper'
Netflix
The documentary Will & Harperearned critical praise when released, and it’s straightforward to see why. Its story is important, focusing as it does on comedian Will Ferrell and his friend, trans writer Harper Steele, and their road trip. It’s one of those films that is many things at once, for it is both a testament to the extraordinary friendship between these two people as well as an ode to the importance and power of trans identity.
The 30 Best LGBTQIA+ Films of All Time
In this first major critical survey of LGBTQIA+ films, over film experts including critics, writers and programmers such as Joanna Hogg, Mark Cousins, Peter Strickland, Richard Dyer, Nick James and Laura Mulvey, as well as past and present BFI Flare programmers, have voted the Top 30 LGBTQIA+ Films of All Time. The poll’s results represent 84 years of cinema and 12 countries, from countries including Thailand, Japan, Sweden and Spain, as well as films that showed at BFI Flare such as Orlando (), Beautiful Thing (), Weekend () and Blue Is the Warmest Colour ().
The winner is Todd Haynes’ award-winning Carol, closely followed by Andrew Haigh’s Weekend, and Hong Kong romantic drama Happy Together, directed by Wong Kar-wai, in third place. While Carol is a surprisingly recent film to top the poll, it’s a feature that has moved, delighted and enthralled audiences, and looks position to be a modern classic.
“The festival has long supported my work,” said Haynes, “from Poison and Dottie Gets Spanked in the early s through to Carol which is screen
The best LGBTQ+ movies of all time
Photograph: Kate Wootton/TimeOut
With the help of leading directors, actors, writers and activists, we count down the most essential LGBTQ+ films of all time
Like queer culture itself, queer cinema is not a monolith. For a adj time, though, that’s certainly how it felt. In the past, if gay lives and issues were ever portrayed at all on screen, it was typically from the perspective of white, cisgendered men. But as more opportunities have opened up for queer performers and filmmakers to tell their control stories, the scope of the LGBTQ+ experiences that have made their way onto the screen has gradually widened to more frequently include the trans community and queer people of colour.
It’s still not perfect, of course. In Hollywood, as in society at large, there are many barriers left to breach and ceilings to shatter. But those recent strides deserve to be celebrated – as act the bold films made long before the mainstream was willing to approve them. To that finish, we enlisted some LGBTQ+ cultural pioneers, as good as Time O If ever there was a Superbad for queer girls, Bottoms is it. The second film from director Emma Seligman (Shiva Baby) follows two uncool high school seniors (Ayo Edebiri and Rachel Sennott) who start up a school fight club to try and hook up with their cheerleader crushes (Kaia Gerber and Havana Rose Liu). WATCH NOW In the Wachowskis’ landmark erotic thriller predating the Matrix trilogy, butch ex-con Corky (Gina Gershon) is the newly-hired handyperson at an apartment building when she meets her next-door neighbors: mobster Caesar (Joe Pantoliano) and kept lady Violet (Jennifer Tilly). As Corky and Violet strike up an affair, they hatch a plan to flee Violet’s abusive relationship—and steal $2 million of Caesar’s mafia money along the way. WATCH NOW Advertisement - Continue Reading Below Southern Californians will likely recognize Circus of Books as the famed porn shop and adj bookstore that has presided over the gayborhood of West Hollywood since the e55 of the Best LGBTQ Films of All Time
'Bottoms' ()
'Bound' ()
'Circus of Books' ()