Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Promotional Material For 'Brokeback Mountain' Sparks Conversation About 'Straightbaiting'

Promotional Material For 'Brokeback Mountain' Sparks Conversation About 'Straightbaiting'
Twitter

Films about queer people are fine, as long as they're not too queer...


That most often seems to be the tack Hollywood takes. They'll make a glowing biopic about a queer icon, or a moving queer love story, but when it comes to actual queerness or *gasp* queer sex... well, Hollywood tends to tiptoe around things, because we mustn't turn off the straights!

Most recently, this issue has been brought to the forefront with the release of the Freddy Mercury biopic Bohemian Rhapsody. The film had a backlash before it was ever released for its plans to tread lightly when it came to Mercury's sexual identity, and especially his battle with AIDS during its early years as an epidemic among queer people (along with other marginalized groups). The marketing of the film seems to strain to obscure Mercury's identity and the film's queer content, and now that the film has finally dropped, many reviewers are finding that those early suspicions of "straightwashing" were dead on.

Perhaps with Bohemian Rhapsody on the brain, a Twitter user recently unearthed promotional materials for another queer film that was "straightbaited" within an inch of its life: Ang Lee's 2006's Oscar-nominated film Brokeback Mountain, a story of a love affair between two cowboys that was widely marketed as a story about just plain ol' love at best, and explicitly straight love at worst.

And this trip down memory had people kind of shocked!


But they perhaps shouldn't have been. As others pointed out, it wasn't just Brokeback Mountain that got this "straightbaiting" treatment:

Nor was this just a mid-2000s phenomenon. Call Me By Your Name suffered a similarly derivative marketing push just last year:

But the tweet that really struck a nerve was this story, from professor and "queer Twitter" icon Anthony Oliveira:

Which triggered all kinds of memories of the film for queer and non-queer folks alike:




But these weak-spined marketing efforts were no match for the power of the film itself, which endures as a watershed for many queer men to this day, as one of Oliveira's followers made clear.


No verdict just yet on whether Bohemian Rhapsody will have the same iconic place in the queer art pantheon, but given that the film itself barely goes there when it comes to Mercury's queerness--in contrast to films like Brokeback Mountain, which definitely does (hashtag tent scene)--it seems that'll be a tough sell.

H/T Gay Star News, Twitter

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

three sets of feet on a red carpet
Matt Benson on Unsplash

People Share The Most Wholesome Celebrity Facts They Know

Tabloids love to share stories of celebrity scandals and bad behavior.

But for every problematic person in the spotlight, there are celebrities who are universally adored.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billie Eilish and Finneas
Celebrity Substitute/YouTube

Billie Eilish Teaches First Grade Class How To Write A Hit Song—And We're Singing Along

Anyone who's ever followed celebrity news might have asked themselves at some point what it's really like to be a celebrity, and if celebrity life is easier or harder than the average, everyday life.

Julian Shapiro-Barnum has been actively asking this question on Celebrity Substitute, through which he questions if various celebrities can handle the pressure of one uniquely demanding and underpaid job: teaching.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kim Kardashian
@KimKardashian/X

Kim Kardashian Sings 'Santa Baby' In Truly Bizarre Christmas Video—And Nobody Knows What To Think

The singer Eartha Kitt made the song "Santa Baby" popular in the 1950s.

In 2024, Kim Kardashian adapted the song, produced by Travis Barker of all people, into a tinsel fever dream of a music video that she posted on X.

Keep ReadingShow less
Justin Timberlake
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Live Nation

Justin Timberlake Adjusts His Outfit On Tour After Awkward Wardrobe Malfunction Goes Viral

Sleigh bells weren't the only things jangling this holiday season.

Pop star Justin Timberlake course-corrected his viral wardrobe malfunction that happened at the December 12 show of The Forget Tomorrow World Tour at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee.

Keep ReadingShow less
Biden's Sweet Christmas Video Sparks Ire From Conservatives For Most Ridiculous Reason
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images, @POTUS/X

Biden's Sweet Christmas Video Sparks Ire From Conservatives For Most Ridiculous Reason

The festive winter season should be full of happiness and the opportunity for people to come together in the spirit of giving, love, and heart-filled joy.

To mark the heartwarming occasion, Democratic President Joe Biden sent love to the American people with a video greeting card of the White House decked out in a wintery wonderland scene with illuminated Christmas trees, paper white doves hanging from the ceiling and a giant toy truck present with a teddy bear behind the wheel.

Keep ReadingShow less