The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942) Queer Film A-
Monty Wooley delights as the impossibly pompous Sheridan Whiteside in William Keighley’s wonderful adaptation of the Kaufman/Hart play.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A-, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Streaming, YouTube
Monty Wooley delights as the impossibly pompous Sheridan Whiteside in William Keighley’s wonderful adaptation of the Kaufman/Hart play.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Written on the fly by the fabulous Epstein twins and Howard Koch and directed by Michael Curtiz, this is one of the most romantic of all Hollywood movies.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 24, 2026 | 40s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
The finest achievement of producer Val Lewton’s legendary RKO horror cycle, Cat People (1942) occupies a foundational place in queer film history because it mobilizes horror not as spectacle but as a grammar of deviance, repression, and embodied otherness.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, Amazon, Apple TV+, C-, Cinematographers, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming
Gay writer DeWitt Bodeen skillfully creates a queer subtext that is both subtle and present, reflecting themes of isolation and existential despair.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Music, Film Music | LA Music Scene, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, YouTube
A favorite of gay men since its opening in the Christmas of 1944, it stars Judy Garland in her first adult role, singing three of her best songs.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, B-, Film Music, Film Music | LA Music Scene, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television
The 1944 movie is still entertaining. Victor Young’s haunting theme was transformed into the song “Stella by Starlight,” with lyrics by Ned Washington.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Music, Film Music | LA Music Scene, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
“Laura” is one of the classic film noirs. Gene Tierney is born and Clifton Webb becomes a star in his fifties. Haunting Raksin score.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Music, Film Music | LA Music Scene, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
“Double Indemnity” is the best of the three great film noirs of 1944, the others being “Laura” and “The Woman in the Window”. The three leads are superb as is Wilder’s direction.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, B+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, YouTube
Powell is in excellent company, and he acquits himself admirably. He also gets props for being the first to play Marlowe.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, YouTube
Brilliantly filmed in high Germanic style by a wondrously talented bunch of ex-pat Viennese uber talents: Curtiz, Anton Grot and Max Steiner.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Albert Lewin directed his masterpiece, a superb adaptation of Oscar Wild’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray” with the beautiful Hurd Hatfield.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
“Gilda”: Rita Hayworth’s star-making performance, directed by Charles Vidor, with cinematography by Rudolph Mate and Jack Cole’s choreography.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 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.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
“Brute Force”: Our homosexual is interested in art and music. Hume Cronyn, a consummate actor, plays him to the hilt.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, YouTube
1948 was the year of Montgomery Clift. In addition to Hawkes “Red River” there was Fred Zinnemann’s “The Search” and William Wyler’s “The Heiress”.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
The story, which is based on the Leopold and Loeb case is irresistible. Granger and Dall are perfection and Jimmy Stewart is also amazing.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 23, 2026 | 40s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
The Red Shoes is also one of the richest queer‑coded films of the 1940s, and a queer‑theory framing doesn’t just “fit”; it clarifies the film’s emotional architecture. Anton Walbrook is magnificent as the queer impresario, and his performance is the major reason to see this movie. Along with George Sanders’ Addison DeWitt in All About Eve Walbrook’s Lermontov is one of the perfect queer-coded villains.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A+, BFI Classics, Cinematographers, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, TUBI, YouTube
In “Kind Hearts and Coronets”: Alec Guinness has fun playing all eight (or nine) of the unfortunate D’Ascoynes, including Lady Agatha D’Ascoyne. The photograph shows Dennis Price with Joan Greenwood who plays that little minx Sibella.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 40s, A, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
“Adam’s Rib” boasts marvelous acting by Tracy & Hepburn, Judy Holliday, Jean Hagen, Hope Emerson, Tom Ewell and, as Amanda’s “gay best friend”, David Wayne.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Bette Davis in her greatest role with some of the best lines ever written. Both Addison and Eve are gay and he blackmails her.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, Amazon, Apple TV+, C-, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
“Hype the New Fish”. Innocent Eleanor Parker spends time in a women’s prison. With Hope Emerson and Agnes Moorehead.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming
Lauren Bacall is Kirk Douglas’ young man with a horn’s society wife who is also a closeted lesbian. Bacall is very good in a risque role.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Noir, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Streaming, YouTube
Bogart is superb, but it is Gloria Grahame who is the revelation – this is widely considered to be the finest performance of her career and she is sensational. As Laurel, she brings a weary, deeply nuanced vulnerability that perfectly balances Bogart’s aggressive volatility.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Music, Film Music | LA Music Scene, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
The best play to film adaptation of all-time, with two of the greatest performances: Vivien Leigh as Blanche DuBois and Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Hitchcock reverses himself here, having gay actor Farley Granger play the straight character and straight actor Robert Walker play the gay character.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B+, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
It’s Howard Hawks again, this time adapting the Jule Stein/Leo Robin Broadway smash “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes”. With Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
The Best Queer Song in the History of Cinema: Day’s spectacular delivery of the Sammy Fain-Paul Francis Webster masterpiece “Secret Love.”
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, A-, Amazon, Apple TV+, Criterion Collection, Film Reviews, HBOMAX, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming
The film blends neorealist observation with a nostalgic tone, supported by a lush Nino Rota score. Like Fellini’s later autobiographical work, it captures a vivid sense of time and place.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, Amazon, Apple TV+, B, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
A Western with two female leads is that rarest of cinematic jewels and, under Nicholas Ray’s direction, both Crawford and McCambridge play to the gallery.
Read MorePosted by Patrick Browne | Apr 1, 2026 | 50s, A+, Amazon, Apple TV+, Film Music, Film Music | LA Music Scene, Film Reviews, Queer Film, Queer Film/TV, Ratings: Movies and Television, Streaming, YouTube
Wood, Dean and Mineo form a nuclear family under the shadow of Griffith Park Observatory in Nicholas Ray’s masterpiece “Rebel Without a Cause.
Read More