En armé av älskande: A Film by Ingrid Ryberg - MAI: Feminism & Visual Culture
Ingrid Ryberg's film En armé av älskande is a documentary about queer filmmaking as a crucial part of the gay liberation movement in Sweden in the 1970s.
Michael Fassbender, however, has no qualms about showing what God gave him. In Steve McQueen's new drama "Shame," Fassbender plays a sex addict who's in the buff so often his body is naked nearly as often as its clothed. In honor of Fassbender's courage to reveal everything, we're celebrating the movies -- and actors -- who've dared to go full frontal.
Let's all be adults; this is not a puerile discussion of the male member. We're merely noting that throughout history, while paintings and sculptures have depicted the nude male body with regularity, film has a limited number of offerings (not counting the XXX variety, of course), whereas leading ladies (even Oscar-winning ones) drop cover again and again.
This is a list of live action gay characters in television . The orientation can be portrayed on-screen, described in the dialogue or mentioned. Roles include lead, main, recurring, supporting, and guest. The names are organized in alphabetical order by the surname , or by a single name if the character does not have a surname. Some naming customs write the family name first followed by the given name; in these cases, the names in the list appear under the family name .
This is a list of live action gay characters in television (includes TV movies and web series). The orientation can be portrayed on-screen, described in the dialogue or mentioned. Roles include lead, main, recurring, supporting, and guest.
Wikiwand - List of made-for-television films with LGBT characters
This is a list of live action made-for-television films that feature lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender characters. The orientation can be portrayed on-screen, described in the dialogue or mentioned. , see lists for asexual, intersex, non-binary, and pansexual characters.)
This is a list of live action made-for-television films that feature lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender characters. The orientation can be portrayed on-screen, described in the dialogue or mentioned.
.mw-parser-output .hatnote{font-style:italic}.mw-parser-output div.hatnote{padding-left:1.6em;margin-bottom:0.5em}.mw-parser-output .hatnote i{font-style:normal}.mw-parser-output .hatnote+link+.hatnote{margin-top:-0.5em}
Opinion | "The Mitchells vs. the Machines" just quietly gave us a kids' movie with a queer lead
The new animated feature from Netflix treats its protagonist's identity matter-of-factly but with care — which is exactly how it ought to be.
“Are you and Jade official?" mom Linda Mitchell (voiced by Maya Rudolph) says to her daughter, Katie (Abbi Jacobson). "And will you bring her home for Thanksgiving?”
When kids can’t see people like themselves in books or on the screen, it is easy for them to feel invisible.
Accurate representation helps people feel less alone, especially people from marginalized communities.
Steven Ryder explores François Ozon’s reverence for the prolific New German Cinema director Rainer Werner Fassbinder by delving into his latest film Peter von Kant
Now, 22 years later, with his new film Peter von Kant, Ozon has not only returned to the wellspring of Fassbinder adaptations, but to perhaps his masterpiece; the claustrophobic yet scrupulous chamber drama The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972). However, whereas Fassbinder’s film was laced with the powerplays between a group of women caught in each other’s toxic orbit, Ozon seems determined to bend Fassbinder’s 1970’s-set narrative in a different direction, not least through the gender-swapping of the titular character and his new romantic obsession.
The Internet Is Rediscovering This Amazing Gay Role Pedro Pascal Played in the '90s
“The point is, we’re gay.”
The clips of Pascal are absolutely everything we could have ever wanted. In them, Pascal’s character Greg gives us a dozen perfectly quotable quips, including: “Maybe he’s still adjusting to being out, not everyone can be ‘Mr. Gay Pride,’” “Please, either you’re gay or you're not, period,” “I’ll make cookies,” “Gay, with a weird fetish,” “And find a better place to hide your porn, buddy.” And perhaps best of all: “The point is, we’re gay.”
"New Queer Cinema" is a term first coined by the academic B. Ruby Rich in Sight & Sound magazine in 1992 to define and describe a movement in queer-themed independent filmmaking in the early 1990s. It is also referred to as the "Queer New Wave".
The Whale nabbed Brendan Fraser his first Oscar nomination, but the movie has proven divisive
Director Darren Aronofsky spent years searching for someone to play the English teacher with severe obesity at the centre of his film. But the film has been accused of fatphobia.
“Dropping the Soap,” and 9 awesome short films & web series you may not know but should
Breaking into showbiz ain’t easy. Fortunately, aspiring filmmakers and actors have more opportunity than ever to get a project off the ground thanks to streaming services like YouTube and inexpensive yet high quality film tech. Yet the creative freedom of the digital age has also created an onslaught of content, especially LGBTQ themed content...
Queeries: presence vs. representation - The Tufts Daily
Hello to all our queers, peers, queer peers, etc. Queeries is coming right back at you again for the spring 2023 semester. Similarly to last fall, we’ll be discussing anything and everything queer. We’re here, we’re queer and we’re here to spread all the love and joy. Please enjoy our iterations this semester. In the […]
From The Day After Tomorrow to Moonlight, Letterboxd member and sometime-cultural writer Bintang Lestada writes from Indonesia about ten films that helped them see a better world.
The late, great, gay filmmaker Patrice Chéreau’s breakout 1983 film, “The Wounded Man” (aka “L’Homme Blessé”), is not soon forgotten by anyone who sees it.
Fire in the Sky: the queer newness of Neptune Frost • Journal • A Letterboxd Magazine
A deep dive with Neptune Frost filmmakers Saul Williams and Anisia Uzeyman into star systems, upcycled aesthetics and the craft behind their Afrofuturist musical.
The Year in Queer Cinema 2022 may be defined by the box office flop of “Bros,” Hollywood’s first studio-backed queer rom-com, as well as the acting highlights
9 Queer Films and Shows to Stream this Holiday Season
From a Dolly Parton Christmas musical to the internet's most divisive lesbian film "Happiest Season," 2020's holiday streaming bounty has something for you.
The twenty-city “John Waters Christmas Show” tour began November 29 in San Francisco.1PETER VON KANT (François Ozon)By far the best movie of the year. Fassbinder’s classic lesbian melodrama is appropriated and remade as a gay Frenchman’s love letter to the original version. Hilariously stilted, often overwrought, but always highly entertaining, this cock-eyed tribute will make you swoon when Hanna Schygulla finally makes an appearance and Isabelle Adjani soon follows. My God, it’s just plain Douglas Sirk perfect.2 EO (Jerzy Skolimowski)Another tribute film, this time Bresson’s Au Hasard Balthazar
On Solitary Companionship: 'A Wild Stream' ('Una corriente salvaje') by Nuria Ibáñez Castañeda at Cinéma du Réel - Another Gaze: A Feminist Film Journal
Nuria Ibánez Castañeda’s Una corriente salvaje (A Wild Stream, 2018) opens on Omar, wading waist-deep off a remote beach in...
Exclusive Interview: creators of HBO’s Emmy-winning We’re Here Stephen Warren & Johnnie Ingram “drag can save lives”
With the first two episodes of season three of the Emmy & GLAAD Award-winning unscripted series We’re Here now streaming on HBO Max—and new episodes airing on Fridays at 10pm ET/PT on…
Queer African Cinemas: A Conversation with Lindsey B. Green-Simms
The first romantic sequence in Rafiki, by the Kenyan director Wanuri Kahiu, opens with a close-up of a pair of sneaker-clad feet on a skateboard, its wheels thumping along the asphalt. The feet bel…