Breaking
February 5, 2025

38 of the Best Queer Movies of the Past 100 Years Ross Johnson | usagoldmines.com

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

Sure, you could spend the next four years dissociating as we prepare for a rapid erosion of hard-won LGBTQ+ rights. It’s not like media has been the best ally throughout the struggle for basic acceptance anyway, and given that one of the incoming administration’s first executive orders involves pretending that trans people aren’t real (an assertion that defies biology, human history, and the lived experiences of millions of people, the future isn’t boding well.

Yet while movies and the media can’t save us, they can represent us. Movies can move the needle on mainstream acceptance (even if only in small ways), and spunky independent films can make us feel seen, offer encouragement, or get us mad enough to fight back. So maybe squeeze in a movie when you’re not throwing bricks or glowering at the wall. Below, I’ve highlighted 30 standouts from the past century, not so much to prove that every one of them broke new ground upon release (though many did), but to illustrate that queer talent has been on display in front of and behind the camera since the medium’s earliest days.

(Rather than list every great movie with LGBTQ+ themes and characters, I’ve tried to throw in some lesser-appreciated movies that are every bit as good—or better—than more well-known favorites.)


Michael (1926)

Carl Theodor Dreyer, best known for his 1928 masterpiece The Passion of Joan of Arc, brought a similar visual inventiveness to his earlier Michael, the story of a love triangle between a sculptor, his model (the title’s Michael), and the sculptor’s long-suffering friend. It’s a doomed romance, but not because of any moralizing about the M4M love. It’s a story of not being able to see what’s right in front of you. And, yes, I realize that Michael just misses the centenary mark based on its German release in late 1924, but its American release wasn’t until two years later, so I’m allowing it. You can stream Michael on Kanopy.

Michael (1924)
Michael (1924)


Wings (1927)

The very first Best Picture Oscar-winner is the WWI-set story of a pair of rivals who become good friends. Very good friends, if you catch my meaning, though it’s just ambiguous enough that it didn’t raise suspicions at the time. Throughout the film, the two pilots are competitors for the affections of an ambulance driver played by Clara Bow, typically decked out in her intentionally masc uniform, complete with cropped hair and lace-up leather boots. The famous tracking shot across a number of tables in a bar includes a lesbian couple just on the verge of a kiss as the camera sweeps by, but it’s the death scene (sorry about the 98-year-old spoiler) between our two pilots that really seals the deal: If their tender caresses and kiss can’t quite be described as overtly gay, the scene is certainly queer in its portrayal of male affection. You can stream Wings on Tubi or rent it from Prime Video.

Wings (1927)

Leave a Reply