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The 127 Year History of LGBTQ+ Representation in Film

The 127 Year History of LGBTQ+ Representation in Film By Abby Monteil, Stacker News On 6/15/21 at 8:00 PM EDT Depictions of queer and trans people have been present in the film medium since its inception more than 100 years ago. But due to censorship and varying degrees of prejudice against the LGBTQ+ community at different points in time, representation onscreen has a long, complicated, and often coded history. While gay characters were frequently used for laughs or not explicitly stated to be queer in most early mainstream Hollywood films, a brief relaxation in Germany s film production code in the early 20th century allowed for LGBTQ+ classics like

Pride offers snapshots in the battle for LGBTQ rights across the decades

‘Pride’ offers snapshots in the battle for LGBTQ rights across the decades “Pride” offers an off-the-beaten-track history of LGBTQ experiences and activism in the US from the 1950s to the present, with different filmmakers undertaking each decade/episode. Even diced up that way it’s a lot to cover, most effective when it comes to highlighting key individuals and moments than connecting those dots. Indeed, the format of this FX project which precedes Pride Month and coincides with the final season of the network’s Emmy-nominated drama “Pose” ensures that the result will provide snapshots of the gay-rights movement, eliding over certain events while emphasizing less-heralded ones.

Pride review: FX s docuseries offers snapshots in the battle for LGBTQ rights across the decades

Pride review: FX s docuseries offers snapshots in the battle for LGBTQ rights across the decades CNN 2 hrs ago © FX Transgender activist Felicia Flames Elizondo is interviewed in the FX docuseries Pride (FX). Pride offers an off-the-beaten-track history of LGBTQ experiences and activism in the US from the 1950s to the present, with different filmmakers undertaking each decade/episode. Even diced up that way it s a lot to cover, most effective when it comes to highlighting key individuals and moments than connecting those dots. Indeed, the format of this FX project which precedes Pride Month and coincides with the final season of the network s Emmy-nominated drama Pose ensures that the result will provide snapshots of the gay-rights movement, eliding over certain events while emphasizing less-heralded ones.

The Criterion Channel s May 2021 Lineup | The Current | The Criterion Collection

Satyajit Ray “Not to have seen the cinema of Satyajit Ray means existing in the world without seeing the sun or the moon,” observed Akira Kurosawa with regards to the Indian master who would have turned one hundred this May. Influenced by the poetic humanism of Jean Renoir and the Italian neorealist movement, Ray self-financed his landmark debut Pather Panchali the first installment of his internationally celebrated Apu Trilogy, a cycle of richly humane masterworks that traces its title character’s journey from boyhood to maturity. Over the course of a long, remarkably varied career that encompassed forays into a wide array of genres including period pieces, comedies, detective mysteries, and documentaries Ray applied his compassionate, lyrical vision to explorations of female liberation (

Remembering Patient Zero and the Wreckage of Antigay HIV Fear

Remembering Patient Zero and the Wreckage of Antigay HIV Fear April 26 2021 7:56 PM EDT It was a beautiful, sunny spring morning in 2019. I awoke to a message from my friend, Richard Vaughan, who was in Toronto and had caught the opening of a new film at the Hot Docs Film Festival the previous night. Hey, did you hear? he wrote. We just won the queer lottery: you and I are in a documentary with Fran Lebowitz! It was a typical jovial message from Richard, my friend who maintained a prolific output, writing novels, nonfiction books, reviews, poetry and plays. The film he was messaging about was 

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