Everyone is gay as hell and the world is a beautiful place.
And in another post, he wrote 'f-ck Dallas'. Paige walks down the hall and voiceovers to us about all the gay girls in school: the Wiccan gay, the horse gay, the gateway gay, et al. In one post, the 21-year-old called his music producer father a 'clown'. So, ranging from a historic biopic about a gay rights activist to a cheesy 2000s rom-com that’ll turn even your worst mood around, here are 25 of the best LGBTQ movies you need to see - or see again. Dallas Austins son Tron Austin unloaded on his father in social media posts over the weekend.
Adam Sandler, who played the titular Happy Gilmore in the fan-favorite golf movie from 1996, tweeted a photo compilation that got social media laughing just before Zalatoris 2:20 tee time. And a famous (movie) golfer wished him luck on Twitter.
Luckily, hope is on the horizon: Although LGBTQ people used to be less visible than Sia’s face in a music video, more LGBTQ-identifying filmmakers, actors, producers, and directors than ever are being given the opportunity to tell their stories. Will Zalatoris teed off Sunday tied for second in the final round of the Masters. Tim Burton on His Life and Movies Coming Full Circle with ‘Frankenweenie’ (Video) The 54-year-old was fired by Disney 28 years ago after he made the live-action short, but the studio is now. For marginalized groups, truthful representation in film is imperative, even lifesaving, and in today’s stormy political climate there’s an urgency for straight cisgender people to see LGBTQ characters portrayed accurately and unapologetically - and by people who actually know what LGBTQ life is like because they live it. Still, from Sacha Baron Cohen’s fashion-obsessed Brüno to a Scream Queens character nicknamed Predatory Lez, we unfortunately continue to see it all. This documentary by artist Rachel Mason is a riveting look at the popular and long-running bookstore and gay pornography shop, Circus of Books, in West.
LGBTQ people have long been buried under tropes and unsubtle stereotypes in film and television.