Great gay movies


The 50 Best LGBTQ Movies Ever Made

50

Love, Simon ()

AmazonApple

If it feels a bit like a CW version of an after-school distinct, that's no mistake: Teen-tv super-producer Greg Berlanti makes his feature-film directorial debut here. It's as chaste a love story as you're likely to see in the 21st century—the hunky gardener who makes the title teen question his sexuality is wearing a long-sleeved shirt, for God’s sake—but you know what? The queer kids of the future need their wholesome entertainment, too.

49

Rocketman ()

AmazonHulu

A gay fantasia on Elton themes. An Elton John biopic was never going to be understated, but this glittering jukebox musical goes way over the top and then keeps going. It might be an overcorrection from the straight-washing of the previous year's Bohemian Rhapsody, but when it's this much fun, it's best not to overthink it.

Advertisement - Persist Reading Below

48

Handsome Devil ()

NetflixAmazon

A charming Irish movie that answers the question: "What if John Hughes were Irish and gay?" Misfit Ned struggles at

The 30 Best LGBTQ+ Movies of All Time, Ranked

Cinema lovers should always strive to celebrate diversity in film. It might've taken long - too long, in fact - but cinema is becoming more inclusive, celebrating stories about every identity in the wide and colorful sexual spectrum. Going back to the Modern Hollywood Age, stories about LGBTQ+ people have been around, often standing as groundbreaking and pioneering efforts, especially at a occasion when such films remained controversial and scarce.

Nowadays, representation is much healthier and standardized, with writers, directors, and producers making actual and tangible efforts to verb LGBTQ+ presence in mainstream cinema. Fortunately, their efforts have paid off. From certified classics about the seemingly never-ending struggles facing the community to lighthearted comedies about the nuances of gay life, these efforts represent landmark achievements in representation and rise as the best LGBTQ+ films of all time.

30 'Bottoms' ()

Directed by Emma Seligman

Taking an LGBTQ+ approach to the classic style of raunchy, over-

I'm tired of seeing the equal 10 films on every website's LGBTQ+ movie roundup (hey, I still love Call Me by Your Name and Moonlight just as much as the next person, so don't come for me!), so, as a queer person myself, I wanted to shine a light on some underrated movies that simply don't get the attention or credit they deserve. Below are 40 that I genuinely think you'll love, and if you long even more suggestions, you can check out my running list on Letterboxd with nearly films. Enjoy!

1.Young Hearts () is a modern coming-of-age story about two year-old boys who fall in love for the first age. This Belgian movie is awkward and sweet and painfully genuine. I can't rave enough about it, and the only downside is that it wasn't released 20 years ago when I was their age and needed it most.

2.National Anthem () is one of my favorite movies from the last few years, so I'm sort of hoping (well, demanding) that you survey it. It's a tender, refreshing look at queerness and chosen family and what it means to actually belong. Too many people are sleeping on Charlie Plummer,

The best LGBTQ+ movies of all time

Photograph: Kate Wootton/TimeOut

With the aid 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 lengthy 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 colorless, cisgendered men. But as more opportunities have opened up for queer performers and filmmakers to tell their own stories, the scope of the LGBTQ+ experiences that have made their way onto the screen has gradually widened to more frequently verb the trans community and queer people of colour.

It’s still not perfect, of course. In Hollywood, as in society at massive, there are many barriers left to breach and ceilings to shatter. But those recent strides deserve to be celebrated – as do the bold films made long before the mainstream was willing to accept them. To that end, we enlisted some LGBTQ+ cultural pioneers, as well as Time O