Cult gay movies
The 30 Best LGBTQIA+ Films of All Time
In this first major critical survey of LGBTQIA+ films, over 100 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 skillfully as films that showed at BFI Flare such as Orlando (1992), Stunning Thing (1996), Weekend (2011) and Blue Is the Warmest Colour (2013).
The winner is Todd Haynes’ award-winning Carol, closely followed by Andrew Haigh’s Weekend, and Hong Kong passionate drama Happy Together, directed by Wong Kar-wai, in third place. While Carol is a surprisingly recent clip to top the poll, it’s a feature that has moved, delighted and enthralled audiences, and looks set to be a modern classic.
“The festival has drawn-out supported my work,” said Haynes, “from Poison and Dottie Gets Spanked in the early 1990s through to Carol which is screening on 35mm later this week in BFI Flare’s Best of Year programme. I’m so pr
The Cult Of Queer (Gay Themes, Camp, Trash, Melodrama, etc)
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A list of movies with a certain amount of cult appeal for those with a gay/queer perspective. Not necessarily movies that are made by, star, or are about queer people or contain LGBTQ+ themes, although plenty do, but rather ones that aid define a certain benign of sensibility that runs towards the underground, the transgressive, the campy and the absurd. Included are cult queer directors, camp classics, unrepentant trash, melodramas, tawdry thrillers, drag queens, underground sensations, over the top rock operas, exploitative biopics, old Hollywood starlets, indulgent 90's teen films, female-centric dark comedies, trans punk films, sexually charged art films, and so on. What's generally not included (but always with exceptions!) are mainstream male lover dramas and comedies, regardless of quality,…
A list of movies with a certain amount of cult appeal for those with a gay/queer perspective. Not necessarily movies that are made by, star, or are about queer people or contain LGBTQ+ themes, although plenty do, but rather ones that help specify a certain kind of sensibility that runs towards the und
It's Twin Cities Pride this weekend, and I conceive watching movies is the last thing on the minds of many within the Cities' GLBT collective. But, hey, that's no reason not to insert a few titles to your Netflix queue in anticipation of the comedown. I've whittled down the list of my favorite gay cult classics to just these ten, which I intended to cover a wide range of bases. Some movies didn't make the cut because their appeal is arguably too limited (Kenneth Anger's legendary short film Fireworks), and others because their appeal extends well beyond the parameters of lgbtq+ cultdom (David Lynch's Mulholland Drive). Not every show in the list is explicitly GLBT in that it showcases a sentimental, same-sex relationship, but certainty me, every movie on this list (which is presented in alphabetical order) is totally gay. In the best way.
Beautiful Thing (1996)
(Dir: Hettie Macdonald)
[File Under: The First Time]
Coming out stories may be a dime a dozen, but you truly never forget your first. For some, it may contain been the controversial '80s melodrama Making Love. For others, it may hold been the groundbreaking Oscar-nominated cultural juggernaut Brokeback Mountain. For me, i
10 cult LGBTQ+ films to watch this weekend
Zodiac Clip Club host London based movie nights with a focus on good looking films and complex female characters in rarely screened cult, contemporary, and classic cinema. For info on their latest screenings, follow @zodiacfilmclub
As Pride month comes to a close we, Zodiac Clip Club, have picked our top 10 cult LGBTQA+ movies to keep the essence alive long after the parade has passed. As is our custom, we’ve skirted past the award-winning, prestige examples – Dial Me By Your Call, Blue is the Warmest Colour – because let’s encounter it, you don’t desire anyone else telling you to watch them. Instead, here are our recommendations for trashy lesbian vampire horror, international erotica and camp, brightly saturated teen movies. You’re welcome. Xoxo Zodiac.
DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS (1971)
The Lesbian Vampire film trope dates endorse to 1936’s Dracula's Daughter – which used vampirism as a foil to get the narrative of a woman struggling with her sexuality past the prohibitive censorship of the Hays Code – and generally exists to air society's anxieties about women having things without men; wealth, power, status, property, and (dear
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