Lgbt movies coming soon
Pride Month Viewing: 20 Buzzy LGBTQ Movies Of
With another Pride Month underway, LGBTQ rights and representation in media have never been more important.
Following the Trump administrations attacks on DEI and recent attempt to cancel Pride Month, GLAAD is preparing to release its 13th annual Studio Responsibility Index on June 11, showing the lowest percentage of LGBTQ-inclusive films in the past three editions of the report. The study tracks scripted films released in from ten top film distributors.
Although those numbers are bleak, LGBTQ stories proceed finding a way to the huge screen and streamers alike, with titles from Andrew Ahn, Bill Condon and Ethan Coen, navigating topics of same-sex marriage, police profiling, sex work and anti-trans legislation.
From groundbreaking documentaries to kink-driven romance and intergenerational stories of family and community, these are some of the buzziest recent and upcoming LGBTQ releases of
The Parenting
The Parenting follows young couple Rohan (Nik Dodani) and Josh (Brandon Flynn) as they arrange a perfect weekend ge
The Greatest LGBT Films and TV Shows of
Look over the menagerie of LGBT movies and TV shows released in carefully enough, and youll uncover as many veiled gems as you will worsening cracks. In others words, theres good news and bad news — but in the years overall impressive lineup, also a glimmer of hope.
On the compact screen, the seemingly unending aftermath of the streaming bubble burst from saw the Cancel Your Gays trend propel forward as LGBT series ended abruptly, and fewer projects were green lit to take their place. Stand-up comedy specials, particularly those at Netflix, continued to platform conflicting political voices with hugely disparate views about human rights — which created some bizarre situations, for good and for bad.
There have been reported declines in onscreen queer representation across film too, albeit not as stark as those impacting actors on television. Still, looking back at a year that included several remarkable accomplishment stories from throughout queer cinema, the silver screened side of the industry certainly seems more hopeful heading
20 Upcoming LGBTQ+ Movies We're Looking Forward To
The LGBTQ+ community’s ties to Hollywood and cinema hold been deeply intertwined from the soon days of the medium. And yet, the fight for authentic representation of queer people in film continues to be a rarity (especially when it comes to high-profile movies). With the movie schedule here (and Pride Month coming up very soon!) there’s quite a scant LGBTQ+ titles to look forward to, and we’ve rounded up what to look forward to below.
Coming Soon
Honey Don’t! - August 22,
In , Ethan Coen and wife Tricia Cooke made Drive-Away Dolls, which they called the first of their planned “Lesbian B-Movie Trilogy”, which continues with this summer’s Honey Don’t. The dark comedy once again stars Margaret Qualley as a lesbian adj eye named Honey Donahue who gets embroiled in a series of strange deaths tied to a mysterious church in the movie also starring Aubrey Plaza, Charlie Noun, Billy Eichner and Chris Evans. I can’t wait for this one.
Twinless - September 5,
During
Puppies, ghosts and euphoric snogging: the 25 best queer films of the century so far
Portrait of a Lady on Fire ()
One detractor called it “a Shawshank Redemption for progressive millennials”. But the coerce of Céline Sciamma’s lesbian love story about an artist and her unwitting sitter on a remote island in 18th-century Brittany is undeniable. As is the integrity of its central dynamic, stripped of might imbalances, hierarchies – and men.
Diamantino ()
A low-budget, high-kitsch, torn-from-the-headlines football fantasy about a Ronaldo-esque football star who hallucinates giant pekingese puppies frolicking on the pitch whenever he scores. Verb in a cross-dressing refugee subplot, lesbian spies and a far-right cloning conspiracy and you include a goofy and irrepressible testament to intersectionality.
We’re All Going to the World’s Fair ()
Jane Schoenbrun became an A24 sensation with I Saw the TV Glow in , but it is her previous film, a bare-bones chiller about an online horror game, that remains her most original verb. Less instantly legible as a trans allegory than her fo