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LGBTQ* In the Movies

Daniel Radcliffe responds to questions about filming sexual scenes for his role as Allen Ginsberg in Kill Your Darlings.

(following from Queerty)

“It’s interesting that it’s deemed shocking. For me, there’s something very strange about that because we see straight sex scenes all the time. We’ve seen gay sex scenes before. I don’t know why a gay sex scene should be any more shocking than a straight sex scene. Or both of them are equally un-shocking…What weirded me out the most last night was people were asking me all these questions about the gay sex scenes. I was like, ‘You know I did Equus?’ Some people are asking me questions like this is a more shocking subject, which is so strange.”

During an interview with MTV NewsDaniel Radcliffe put his oft-discussed sex scenes from Kill Your Darlings in perspective by bringing up that time he horsed around naked on Broadway.

LGBTQ* Films to Keep(!) On Your Radar

Any Day Now

saving-sergius:

Winner of 10 Audience Awards at film festivals around the country and starring the amazing Alan Cumming, ANY DAY NOW is a powerful tale of love, acceptance and family. When a teenager with Down syndrome (Isaac Leyva) is abandoned by his mother, a gay couple (Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt) takes him in and becomes the loving family he’s never had. But when their unconventional living arrangement is discovered by authorities, the men are forced to fight a biased legal system to save the life of the child they have come to love as their own. Inspired by a true story from the late 1970s, ANY DAY NOW touches on legal and social issues that are as relevant today as they were 35 years ago.

Dec 5

Your Favorite (for me to discover)

What’s your favorite queer*/LGBTQ* book/novel/graphic novel/comic/film?

What would you recommend that I check out/read/watch this Holiday break?

Nov 5

LGBTQ* Scenes in Mainstream Films

“Valerie’s Letter” from V for Vendetta

It seems strange that my life should end in such a terrible place.

But for three years I had roses – and apologised to no-one.

I shall die here. Every inch of me shall perish. Every inch.

But one.

An inch.

It is small and it is fragile, and it is the only thing in the world worth having. We must never lose it or give it away. We must never let them take it from us.

I hope that - whoever you are - you escape this place. I hope that the world turns, and that things get better.

But what I hope most of all is that you understand what I mean when I tell you that even though I do not know you, and even though I may not meet you, laugh with you, cry with you, or kiss you: I love you.

With all my heart.

I love you.

-Valerie


Remember Remember the Fifth of November

LGBTQ* Hollywood and the Rest of the Story

László Ede Almásy’s Love Affair That Wasn’t


1996’s The English Patient:

(based on the novel by Sri Lankan-Canadian writer Michael Ondaatje) 

A French-Canadian nurse cares for Count László Ede Almásy, a burn victim, while he recounts his illicit love affair with his friend’s wife, their torrid affair and her death before dying himself (thinking fondly of here).

The Real László Ede Almásy:

Well, first off, László Ede Almásy was gay.

He was in love with a German Army officer during the war. He wasn’t burned, nor did he die at the end of WWII. Almásy went on to become a Soviet spy. 

KNOWhomo


LGBTQ* Film/Movie History
THE HAYS CODE
(also known as the Motion Picture Production Code)
* The Motion Picture Production Code — a series of decency and censorship codes produced by the motion picture board — were used from 1934-1968
— Also know as the Hays Code (named after Hollywood’s chief censor, Will H. Hays)
* The code was established before movies were given ratings by the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America)
* Fines would be given to film producers, directors and theaters showcasing films which contained anything with violations to the Code.
* Smart directors/actors moved around these codes, placing subtle hints and insider lingo throughout the films
* The Code Restricted:
—> Open-Mouth Kissing
—> Lustful Embrace
—> Rape
—> Abortion
—> Prostitution 
—> Depictions of “white slavery”
—> Profanity
—> Seduction
—> Sexual “Perversion” (namely, homosexuality on screen)
What’s so Queer about it?
— Guess which “code” violation was the LAST to be dropped? You guess it: Sexual Perversion. Homosexual representation is film was still punishable/worth of a fine until the bitter end of the code.
(Personal Note:  I highly recommend reading Vito Russo’s The Celluloid Closet or watching the 1995 documentary The Celluloid Closet *which is also on YouTube in multiple parts*)

LGBTQ* Film/Movie History

THE HAYS CODE

(also known as the Motion Picture Production Code)

* The Motion Picture Production Code — a series of decency and censorship codes produced by the motion picture board — were used from 1934-1968

— Also know as the Hays Code (named after Hollywood’s chief censor, Will H. Hays)

* The code was established before movies were given ratings by the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America)

* Fines would be given to film producers, directors and theaters showcasing films which contained anything with violations to the Code.

* Smart directors/actors moved around these codes, placing subtle hints and insider lingo throughout the films

The Code Restricted:

—> Open-Mouth Kissing

—> Lustful Embrace

—> Rape

—> Abortion

—> Prostitution 

—> Depictions of “white slavery”

—> Profanity

—> Seduction

—> Sexual “Perversion” (namely, homosexuality on screen)

What’s so Queer about it?

— Guess which “code” violation was the LAST to be dropped? You guess it: Sexual Perversion. Homosexual representation is film was still punishable/worth of a fine until the bitter end of the code.

(Personal Note:  I highly recommend reading Vito Russo’s The Celluloid Closet or watching the 1995 documentary The Celluloid Closet *which is also on YouTube in multiple parts*)

LGBTQ* Film History You Should Know

WINGS (1927, Academy Award Winning Film)

What is it about?

Two young men, one rich, one middle class, who are in love with the same woman become fighter pilots in World War I.

Why is it important?

This film is the oldest surviving footage of a same-sex onscreen kiss and often believed to be the FIRST same-sex kiss on film. WINGS is an important addition to film and queer history with its honest portrayal of the bond and interaction between two men as watched by an audience via celluloid prior to the “macho - men are men” attitude which would go on to flood mentality and film a decade later.

LGBTQ* Video Links/Streams You May Have Missed

LOGO TV Hosts Links to Full Length LGBTQ* Films and Documentaires
CLICK HERE or check out videos below
*Note: Due to sexual dialogue, situations, discussions of violence, anger, rape, dysphoria, homophobia and other trigger dialogue/images, videos should be viewed with caution. 

Documentaries:

Date Posted


—
Videos:What!? Logo Documentaries - Previews
9/04/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The World’s Worst Place To Be Gay?
7/24/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The Antics Roadshow
6/04/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Worst in Show
5/28/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Youth Knows No Pain
5/14/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Legalize Gay
5/07/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Outrage
11/14/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Illegal Love
10/31/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Pretty Boys
4/18/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The Adonis Factor
4/04/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The Butch Factor
8/15/10


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Hair World
1/01/10


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Paris Hilton, Inc.
8/15/09


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Synchronized Swimming
3/15/09


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Trinidad
11/15/08


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon
8/15/08






Movies:


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The Skinny (Uncut)
7/09/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Leave It On The Floor
7/02/12


—
FULL EPISODEVideos:Mysteries of Pittsburgh
2/13/12


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Spork
11/01/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Violet Tendencies
10/25/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Eating Out: Drama Camp
7/25/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Eating Out: Sloppy Seconds
7/14/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Eating Out
7/08/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:You Belong to Me
4/08/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The People I’ve Slept With
4/05/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:The New Twenty
4/04/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Save Me
4/01/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Ready? O.K.!
3/31/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Puccini For Beginners
3/30/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Out at the Wedding
3/27/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Nonsense Revolution
3/25/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Newcastle
3/22/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Mulligans
3/21/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Mr. Right
3/20/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Loving Annabelle
3/18/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Latter Days
3/17/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Gray Matters
3/15/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Eating Out: All You Can Eat
3/12/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Drool
3/10/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Boy Culture
3/06/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:An Englishman in New York
3/04/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Adam & Steve
3/02/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:2 Minutes Later
3/01/11


—
ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Dare
11/29/10

LGBTQ* Video Links/Streams You May Have Missed


LOGO TV Hosts Links to Full Length LGBTQ* Films and Documentaires

CLICK HERE or check out videos below

*Note: Due to sexual dialogue, situations, discussions of violence, anger, rape, dysphoria, homophobia and other trigger dialogue/images, videos should be viewed with caution. 

Documentaries:

    1. Date Posted
    • ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Outrage
    • 11/14/11
    • ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Trinidad
    • 11/15/08

Movies:

    • ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Spork
    • 11/01/11
    • ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Save Me
    • 4/01/11
    • ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Drool
    • 3/10/11
    • ENTIRE MOVIEVideos:Dare
    • 11/29/10
LGBTQ* Queer Theory and Media Theory
“Does It Matter If the Heroine of ‘Brave’ Is Gay?”
following text from: CHRIS HELLER’s article in The Atlantic 
Merida, the heroine of Pixar’s Brave, doesn’t want to marry. Not now, she repeatedly tells her mother, Queen Elinor, and perhaps not ever. Faced with the prospect of being forced to wed one of a trio of loutish suitors, she runs away from home in search of some way to change the “fate” she was born into. That’s the radical thing about Brave: Merida is a Disney princess who doesn’t want a prince.
She also happens to be a tomboy, a tough and sporty archer who would rather be riding her horse than wearing a dress. On Sunday, Entertainment Weekly’s Adam Markovitz used these details to draw a connection between Brave—which racked up $66 million over the weekend—and another event in the news:
Today, crowds will line the streets of cities like New York and San Francisco for parades that mark the high point of LGBT Pride Month. At the same time, legions of kids will swarm into theaters to watch Pixar’s Brave, the animated story of a young Scottish princess named Merida who goes to extreme lengths to avoid having to marry one of the three noblemen that her parents have chosen for her. The two events don’t seem to have much in common at first glance. But it’s quite possible that while watching Brave’s tomboyish heroine shoot arrows, fight like one of the boys, and squirm when her mother puts her in girly clothes, a thought might pop into the head of some viewers: Is Merida gay?
While Markovitz’s appeal to lesbian stereotypes is outrageous, his underlying question isn’t. Merida really could be gay. She could be straight. She could be asexual. We just don’t know. Over the course of the film, she shows romantic interest in neither boys nor girls; it’s only by assumption that her parents—and, presumably, most viewers—think she’s heterosexual.
Is this ambiguity intentional? Almost definitely.
Read the entire Atlantic Article Here *contains spoilers*
Thank you Cael for sharing this with me. 

LGBTQ* Queer Theory and Media Theory

“Does It Matter If the Heroine of ‘Brave’ Is Gay?”


following text from: CHRIS HELLER’s article in The Atlantic 

Merida, the heroine of Pixar’s Brave, doesn’t want to marry. Not now, she repeatedly tells her mother, Queen Elinor, and perhaps not ever. Faced with the prospect of being forced to wed one of a trio of loutish suitors, she runs away from home in search of some way to change the “fate” she was born into. That’s the radical thing about Brave: Merida is a Disney princess who doesn’t want a prince.

She also happens to be a tomboy, a tough and sporty archer who would rather be riding her horse than wearing a dress. On Sunday, Entertainment Weekly’s Adam Markovitz used these details to draw a connection between Brave—which racked up $66 million over the weekend—and another event in the news:

Today, crowds will line the streets of cities like New York and San Francisco for parades that mark the high point of LGBT Pride Month. At the same time, legions of kids will swarm into theaters to watch Pixar’s Brave, the animated story of a young Scottish princess named Merida who goes to extreme lengths to avoid having to marry one of the three noblemen that her parents have chosen for her. The two events don’t seem to have much in common at first glance. But it’s quite possible that while watching Brave’s tomboyish heroine shoot arrows, fight like one of the boys, and squirm when her mother puts her in girly clothes, a thought might pop into the head of some viewers: Is Merida gay?

While Markovitz’s appeal to lesbian stereotypes is outrageous, his underlying question isn’t. Merida really could be gay. She could be straight. She could be asexual. We just don’t know. Over the course of the film, she shows romantic interest in neither boys nor girls; it’s only by assumption that her parents—and, presumably, most viewers—think she’s heterosexual.

Is this ambiguity intentional? Almost definitely.

Read the entire Atlantic Article Here *contains spoilers*

Thank you Cael for sharing this with me. 

LGBTQ* 2011 Movies You May Have Missed

  1. Tomboy (French Film) — following a move, a 10-year introduces himself to his classmates and friends with pronouns he feels more comfortable with. Things become tense when adults and other children learn that his biological sex doesn’t reflect his presentation
  2. Beginners — a series of flashbacks carries the audience through a young man’s current life and his father’s coming out promise (which begins in  his golden years)
  3. Pariah — story of 17-year old African American teenager Alike and her experiences as she embraces her identity as a lesbian 
  4. Albert Nobbs — Glenn Close stars in this period drama about gender expression, sexual orientation, gender roles and class structure
  5. Every Day — the story of a family under strain after years of marriage and a son’s coming out process and desire to find love
  6. Weekend (British) — film about a one-night stand that turns into something neither party expected and everything that can change someone’s outlook
Jun 7

Quintessential Movies from the Gay (male) Film Canon You Should Know


  1. The Broken Hearts Club — West Hollywood gay softball team learns how to love, the power of friendship and coping with loss (actors include Zach Braff, Andrew Keegan and Dean Cain)
  2. Get Real — gay teen comes out (and being a gay teen means drama will follow)
  3. A Single Man — based on the Isherwood novel, this film follows what it means to be gay in the 1960s and what we do to keep on after tragedy
  4. Latter Days — A promiscuous gay man from California meets a private Mormon and their encounters rearrange both of their lives
  5. Looking for Langston — split film crossing back and forth between 1920s Harlem and 1980s England, this film invites you to explore the ways people express themselves and the places they find comfort
  6. Brokeback Mountain — the life story of two men who meet while sheep ranching 
  7. Milk — biopic about the life of Harvey Milk, S.F. first openly gay elected city official
  8. Shelter — a young man returns home to care for his family, finding companionship in a place least expected
  9. Brother to Brother — taking place during days of the Harlem Renaissance, this film follows a young artist and aging poet 
  10.  Walk on Water —  following the suicide of his wife, an Israeli intelligence agent is assigned to befriend the grandchildren of a Nazi war criminal

LGBTQ* Intersex Documentaries You Should Keep On Your Radar

INTERSEXION

(Following text from the documentary’s website:)

The first question any new parent asks… “Is it a boy or a girl?”

What if it’s neither?

1 in 2,000 babies is born with genitalia so ambiguous that the doctors cannot easily answer this question.

In this groundbreaking documentary, intersex individuals reveal the secrets of their unconventional lives – and how they have navigated their way through this strictly male/female world, when they fit somewhere in between.

(Quicktime/Video Link HERE, supplied by Tiger Howard Devore, PhD.)

LGBTQ* Documentary You Should Know

FABULOUS ! The Story of Queer Cinema 

LGBTQ* Films You (May Have) Never Heard Of

Therese and Isabelle (1968)

**Please Note: Trailer may be NSFW for some**

Two young girls experience awakening sexuality in the heated atmosphere of a Swiss girls’ boarding school…(from IMDB)

Most impressive thing about the film?: It was produced and released in 1968 in the US even with the restrictions with the Hayes Code and the backlash that followed The Children’s Hour.