The spookit, and gayt, time of year is here!
Contents:
A look at how queer horror films have evolved over time, asssg more than 50 films that span the gay ghosts of the early 20th century to The Babadook. * queer horror movie *
Before homosexualy was formally legislated out of existence Hollywood by the Productn Co — monly referred to as the Hays Co, which tablished mandat for “moral standards” motn pictur and banned pictns of “sexual perversy” — the legendary filmmaker Jam Whale was buildg the foundatn for Amerin genre cema wh films like Frankenste, The Old Dark Hoe, and The Invisible Man.
It also doubl as a timele of the evolutn of queer horror: How LGBTQA them and characters went om hidg between the l movi wh “gay sensibili” the 1930s to breakg out as Pri mem almost a century later — gog om visible (lbian ghosts! Benshoff explas his book Monsters the Closet: Homosexualy the Horror Film, “Immediately before and durg the years of World War II, Universal Stud’s horror films began to employ a more humanistic pictn of their monsters, ” and the films of Val Lewton, like Cat People, reflected “a growg awarens of homosexualy, homosexual muni, and the dynamics of homosexual opprsn as was played out society and the ary. Whale imbued his movi, often about the ultimate outsirs, wh a gay sensibily: In Dark Hoe, five people are brought together when they’re forced off the road by a storm and end up takg shelter the same isolated home.
She battl “horrible impuls” that she tri and fails to reprs, and even starts seeg a psychiatrist to analyze the “vampire” out of her (a treatment that was thought to cure homosexualy, as well).
* queer horror movie *
As Benshoff wr Monsters the Closet, the postwar era was a terrible time to live outsi the prefab fn of what meant to be a te Amerin: “In many ways, the 1950s might be thought of as the darkt of the twentieth century both for monsters and for homosexuals, as well as for anyone else who might have nsired him/herself somehow outsi the hegemonic nstctn of normaly.