The Producers (1967) Queer Film B+
Not nearly as shocking today as it was in 1967, The Producers remains wildly entertaining. A huge part of its staying power comes from Roger De Bris and his exquisitely mannered assistant Carmen Ghia
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Feb 3, 2026 | 60s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Not nearly as shocking today as it was in 1967, The Producers remains wildly entertaining. A huge part of its staying power comes from Roger De Bris and his exquisitely mannered assistant Carmen Ghia
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Feb 9, 2026 | 60s, A-, Film Reviews, Ratings: Movies and Television, YouTube
Chabrol’s direction is icy, geometric, and controlled. The villa becomes a psychological maze; the color palette (especially the whites and blues) reinforces the emotional chill. Stéphane Audran’s performance is a masterclass in elegant menace.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Feb 9, 2026 | 60s, C, Film Reviews, Streaming, YouTube
Teorem was Pasolini’s only movie to address homosexuality directly. Even then, it’s all pretty clinical.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Feb 3, 2026 | 50s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Streaming, YouTube
Bogart is superb playing a queer-coded male lead. He’s emotionally volatile, unable to be in a stable heterosexual relationship, deeply suspicious of intimacy and terrified of being “found out”.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Feb 3, 2026 | 40s, A, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Stanwyck gives one of her most controlled, lethal performances, and Douglas’s debut is astonishing – he plays Walter as a man who has been dying for years, a man whose entire identity is built around Martha.
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