A Pop Quiz on Queer Cinema Matters
Several years ago, I attended the screening of a short film called Making Arrangements. It’s a funny movie that I enjoyed watching at one of the film festivals in town. The plot of this film also involves lesbian movie characters – something I’d rarely seen on the big screen.
Actually, Johnathan Demme’s drama film Philadelphia -- about a lawyer dying from AIDS who sues his employer for wrongful termination – is among my earliest recollections of seeing a same-sex couple in a movie. Although Dee Rees' teenage drama Pariah is currently the last film I watched that has a diverse portrayal of modern-day relationship dynamics, I find it troubling that this isn’t as common an occurrence at the multiplex as there are films solely featuring straight characters.
If given $1 to name as many movie couples as you could in 15 minutes, do you think you’d be able to clear $100 with no sweat? Chances are the average person who owns a television, or has been to a motion picture theater, has a Netflix subscription and/or possesses a sizeable DVD collection, could complete this task easily. The same, however, cannot be said if we narrowed it down to films with same-sex couples. Just out of curiosity, I tried to recall any movies I’ve seen that have a clear queer presence.
The exercise brought forth an unfortunate realization that of all the films I’ve ever watched, to date, those that I remember featuring same-sex couples clock in only somewhere around no more than ten or so; including the aforementioned Making Arrangements, Philadelphia and Pariah.
The List
- F. Gary Gray’s action drama Set It Off starring Queen Latifah, Vivica A. Fox, Jada Pinkett-Smith and Kimberly Elise, about a group of friends who start moonlighting as bank robbers.
- Dennis Dugan’s comedy Big Daddy starring Adam Sandler, the Sprouse brothers, and Joey Lauren Adams, about a law school grad who adopts a child to impress his girlfriend.
- John Cameron Mitchell’s romantic comedy drama Shortbus starring Sook-Yin Lee and Justin Bond about a therapist whose clients introduce her to an underground mixer where attendees partake in swinging, erotic fetishism and other activities. (*Sidebar: My review on this movie can be read at Writercize)
- Neil Drumming’s hip-hop music drama Big Words starring Dorian Missick, Gbenga Akinnagbe and Zachary Booth, about a disillusioned IT worker who reunites with his friends on the night of the 2008 Presidential election.
Other movies with a queer element to them such as Boys Don’t Cry are worth a mention but I’m not exactly sure if this particular film would count, given that it appears the main character was in a transitional period. Same goes for The Crying Game. Although the dark ballerina flick Black Swan starring Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis has some lesbian action in it, I doubt that this movie qualifies either in terms of adequate representation for same-sex couples; because its main female characters do not appear to consider themselves to be romantically attracted to women.
Seems like films in the mainstream culture and even indie films that get buzz on the festival circuit are deliberately gay, and understandably so, in cases where it lends to the overall story. However, it would be nice if more movie characters were normalized like in Big Daddy, Set It Off and Big Words. The characters in these movies just happen to have a significant other who is of the same gender.
Who they are dating or married to has no significant bearing on the turn of events in these particular flicks. To include these character types seems like no big deal, which is an important factor to recognize because that’s a better -- and ideal -- representation of how things should be, rather than portraying the LGBT community as some kind of anomaly from outer space or a type of thing that must be the central focus of the entire narrative.
POP QUIZ: Which of the following actors was threatened to be fired from their off-screen day job, for playing a controversial role in one of these queer-friendly films?
A) Queen Latifah
B) Sook-Yin Lee
C) Gbenga Akinnagbe
D) Hilary Swank
Also, how many movies have YOU seen featuring same-sex couples?
Reader Comments (6)
Not many, now that I think about it. Of course, I also don't see a lot of movies with women like me (post-50), either. The Kids are Alright with Annette Bening and Julianne Moore comes to mind, though Moore's character was more bisexual.
We know a number of same-sex couples, and they are incredibly normal in their everyday lives. It would be nice to show more of that on screen.
I admit I don't have an answer for the quiz, but I'll acknowledge that the smaller TV screen has been making a few strides in showing LGBT in a bit more of the norm. Modern Family highlights the differences in various aspects of the branches of a particular family. Scandal, Grey's Anatomy, and Empire have shown same sex couples though these shows are centered on either political craziness, medical drama and music shenanigans lol!
The Birdcage was the first film to come to mind, though the same-sex issue was a big issue for the movie and not just allowed to be a norm.
I've seen Big Daddy a number of times. I think we'll see more same sex couples in movies just as we're starting to see more on TV.
Offhand I can't think of any, but on the other hand I probably wouldn't win that $100 in 15 minutes either.
I just saw the Michael Douglas/Matt Damon film Behind the Candelabra, but I was unimpressed. Not sure if it was the explicit scenes between two men or that the film wasn't that good.
Lots of great films in this post!