45 Best LGBTQ Movies Everyone Should Watch

Updated: Feb. 01, 2024

Some are inspiring and thought-provoking, others are romantic, funny and just plain fun. But they all have one thing in common: You shouldn’t miss them.

The LGBTQ community has come a long way in the dark. For decades, when the lights went out in cinemas, movie screens were populated almost exclusively with heterosexual characters. When gay and lesbian characters showed up, it was usually in the form of broad stereotypes providing brief comic relief. There was no on-screen representation of those in the community as ordinary people or as people fighting desperately for equality, though that slowly started to change after the Stonewall Riots of 1969. But as the roles of LGBTQ characters expanded and they graduated from the sidelines into the mainframes, they often ended up being tortured or tragic, a trend that was heightened during the AIDS crisis of the ’80s and ’90s, when for many, to be a gay man meant being doomed to life in the shadows or under a cloud of death.

When Moonlight won the Best Picture Oscar in 2017, it signaled a new age for LGBTQ movies. In the aftermath of the surprise Oscar win, LGBTQ stories became more complex, and representation more diverse. Now, gay characters pop up as leads in movies where their sexual orientation is a matter of fact, not plot, and Hollywood is adding to the conversation around LGBTQ’s meaning, with all its nuances. As refreshing as the advances of the past few years have been, some LGBTQ movies actually have been delivering the goods for at least a half-century. If you’re looking for a good movie binge during Pride Month or any time of year, these 45 flicks are a great place to start.

For more entertainment and inspiration, check out these LGBTQ shows, podcasts, books and quotes that will stay with you. And don’t forget to check out LGBTQ-owned businesses and LGBTQ charities to support year-round.

The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert movievia amazon.com

The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert

Released: 1994

Rated: R

This mid-’90s Australian road trip brought drag-queen culture into the mainstream 15 years before RuPaul’s Drag Race. The year after Priscilla became a sleeper hit, To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar offered an American twist and a more diverse trio of drag queens (Wesley Snipes, Patrick Swayze and John Leguizamo), but it was Priscilla that set the drag bar for years to come.

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Beautiful Thing movievia amazon.com

Beautiful Thing

Released: 1996

Rated: R

Beautiful Thing is about working-class gay youths coming together in South East London amid a backdrop of boozy, toxic masculinity. This sweet story about two high school boys falling in love for the first time gets extra credit for introducing a younger generation to the musical genius of Cass Elliott from The Mamas & The Papas, whose songs dominate the film’s soundtrack. Here are more movies with the best soundtracks.

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Before Night Falls Movie via amazon.com

Before Night Falls

Released: 2000

Rated: R

This biopic about the late iconoclastic gay Cuban writer Reinaldo Arenas made Spanish actor Javier Bardem a first-time Oscar nominee five years before Brokeback Mountain made LGBTQ movies safer for straight actors playing openly gay characters with sex lives. It may have contributed to what would become a controversial continuing trend (playing gay for pay and Oscar attention), but at the turn of the 21st century, it also amplified the struggles of a worthy, obscure literary talent. Don’t forget to read up on how the rainbow became the symbol for LGBTQ pride.

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Beginners movievia amazon.com

Beginners

Released: 2011

Rated: R

The Sound of Music star Christopher Plummer won an Oscar for his performance in this moving drama about a widowed father who finds love again after coming out in his 70s. Beginners shows it’s never too late to live authentically and happily.

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The Birdcage Movie Via Amazonvia amazon.com

The Birdcage

Released: 1996

Rated: R

Gay is played for big laughs in this American remake of the 1978 French-Italian romp La Cage aux Folles that attracted massive stars (including Robin Williams and Gene Hackman) and made a comedy movie killing at the box office. On the surface, it might appear to be loaded with gay stereotypes, but beneath the broad exterior beats a tender heart. It was directed by Mike Nichols (The Graduate, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), so you know it delivers high quality.

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Blue Is the Warmest Color movievia amazon.com

Blue Is the Warmest Color

Released: 2013

Rated: NC-17

Blue Is the Warmest Color is a critically beloved French-language romance/drama film about young love blossoming between two lesbians that received an unprecedented stamp of approval at the Cannes Film Festival the year it was released; It was the first entry to be awarded the Palm d’Or for both its director (Abdellatif Kechiche) and its lead actresses (Léa Seydoux and Adèle Exarchopoulos). The New York Observer called the three-hour romance “a major work of sexual awakening.”

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Boys In The band Movievia amazon.com

The Boys in the Band

Released: 1970

Rated: R

Skip Ryan Murphy’s 2020 remake for Netflix and go straight to the original from 50 years earlier. The first film adaptation of Mart Crowley’s 1968 Off-Broadway play is notable for being one of the first American movies to revolve entirely around gay characters. It premiered in 1970 and was directed by William Friedkin, whose next two films would be The French Connection and The Exorcist (often considered one of the scariest movies ever made) and who would later direct 1980’s Cruising, a crime drama starring Al Pacino as an undercover cop hunting down a serial killer targeting gay men.

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Boys Don't Cry movievia amazon.com

Boys Don’t Cry

Released: 1999

Rated: R

The trauma of transgender abuse finally received suitable big-screen attention in this biographical film about Brandon Teena, a trans man living in Nebraska. Former Beverly Hills 90210 star Hillary Swank won an Oscar for her portrayal of Teena in this harrowing character study and social critique that the late film critic Roger Ebert called “Romeo and Juliet set in a Nebraska trailer park.”

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Brokeback Mountain movievia amazon.com

Brokeback Mountain

Released: 2006

Rated: R

Based on a 1997 short story by Annie Proulx, this Oscar-winning romance between two cowboys brought gay romantic love into the mainstream in a huge way. Among LGBTQ movies, it broke Hollywood barriers by casting two straight heartthrobs—Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal—as star-crossed gay lovers. Its iconic line, “I wish I knew how to quit you,” has since become one of the most famous movie quotes of all time.

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Carol movievia amazon.com

Carol

Released: 2016

Rated: R

Carol was praised by critics and received Oscar nominations for its leading ladies Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara, so it’s not exactly underappreciated. Still, for all the plaudits, this lush, lovely period lesbian romance doesn’t get the credit it deserves for presenting such a dead-accurate depiction of the power balance in a queer relationship between two women at wildly different stages in life, a theme revisited by Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan in 2020’s Ammonite. 

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The Childrens Hour Movievia amazon.com

The Children’s Hour

Released: 1961

Rated: Not Rated

Navigating lesbian themes was a tricky undertaking in the repressed environment of the early 1960s. But this revenge drama had the benefit of two of cinema’s all-time powerhouses, Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine, in the leading roles, as well as three-time Best Director Oscar winner William Wyler at the helm.

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Call Me by Your Name movievia amazon.com

Call Me by Your Name

Released: 2017

Rated: R

It doesn’t get more romantic than first love in picturesque Lombardo, Italy. Throw in an Oscar-nominated Timothée Chalamet as a gay teenager falling hard for Armie Hammer’s doctoral student, a dalliance with forbidden fruit and in a major supporting role, a peach, and you’ve got amore for the ages with Call Me by Your Name.

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The Danish Girl movievia amazon.com

The Danish Girl

Released: 2015

Rated: R

The year Caitlyn Jenner came out as a trans woman, this Oscar-winning biopic about Einar Wegener, one of the first people to undergo gender-reassignment surgery, helped to further increase trans awareness and heighten visibility of the community. Despite criticism for its fictionalized account of Wegener’s story and the casting of cisgender actor Eddie Redmayne in the title role, the film was a crowd-pleaser that performed well at the box office.

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Desert Hearts movievia amazon.com

Desert Hearts

Released: 1985

Rated: R

In a 30th-anniversary reevaluation of this lesbian drama, Curve magazine perfectly summed up its significance: “Desert Hearts is possibly the first feature film with fully rounded female characters who are attracted to each other without that attraction being contested by a male.” According to Curve, it also “did for lesbians what Thelma & Louise did for feminists—without the car going off the cliff.” In other words, put the Kleenex away and just enjoy love as it blooms onscreen.

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The Color Purple Movie Via Amazonvia amazon.com

The Color Purple

Released: 1985

Rated: PG-13

The Color Purple, one of the most beloved films of the ’80s and a Steven Spielberg drama, has a lot going for it: a stellar cast, including Oscar nominees Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey, Pulitzer Prize-winning source material and a timeless theme of love (in this case, between two women) as a haven from trauma. It was a huge box-office hit that earned 11 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. Check out these other movies that were books first.

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Dog Day Afternoon movievia amazon.com

Dog Day Afternoon

Released: 1975

Rated: R

Al Pacino portrays a neophyte crook who robs a bank in order to raise money for his lover’s gender-reassignment surgery. Based on a true story and nominated for six Oscars (including Best Actor for Pacino), Dog Day Afternoon was one of the first major movies to feature a straight marquee star as an LGBTQ lead, back when it was still considered the kiss of career death.

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The Favourite movievia amazon.com

The Favourite

Released: 2018

Rated: R

Sexual politics propel this tale of two women vying for the attention of Queen Anne in 18th-century Britain. Aside from its critical acclaim and a surprise Oscar win for Olivia Colman as the temperamental royal, The Favourite is perhaps most significant for its matter-of-fact treatment of the sexual triangle at its center.

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God's Own Country movievia amazon.com

God’s Own Country

Released: 2017

Rated: Not Rated

Before starring as Prince Charles in The Crown, future Golden Globe winner Josh O’Connor floored critics with his performance as a young gay sheep farmer in Yorkshire, England, who’s struggling with his sexuality and budding feelings for a new Romanian migrant laborer. The movie is a quiet meditation on the loneliness of being gay in a repressed, rural society that, though not as high-profile as Brokeback Mountain, is equally essential viewing.

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Handsome Devil Movievia amazon.com

Handsome Devil

Released: 2016

Rated: 13+

Over the last several years, an ever-increasing number of high-profile LGBTQ movies, including Love, Simon and The Prom, have focused on the struggles of LGBTQ teens. Handsome Devil, an Irish drama exploring friendship, repression, homophobia, acceptance and team spirit among rugby players at an all-boys boarding school, might be the best of the bunch.

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Hedwig and the Angry Inchvia amazon.com

Hedwig and the Angry Inch

Released: 2001

Rated: R

Written and directed by John Cameron Mitchell, who starred in it and based it on his own 1998 Off-Broadway musical, Hedwig brought a genderqueer main character to the big screen years before “genderqueer” became an LGBTQ buzzword. Despite its then-still-underground themes, the movie won a number of prestigious mainstream awards for Mitchell, including Best Directorial Debut from the National Board of Review and the New Generation Award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. In 2014, the work finally graduated to the status of Broadway musical, eventually winning four Tonys, including Best Revival of a Musical.

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Holding the Man movievia amazon.com

Holding the Man

Released: 2015

Rated: Not Rated

Unlike Philadelphia, the 1994 film that was primarily a showcase for Tom Hanks as a man dying of AIDS, this Australian drama isn’t about just one man’s burden. It focuses on the physical and psychological havoc AIDS wreaks on a couple in different stages of the illness. It’s based on the 1995 memoir by Timothy Conigrave, who died in 1994, two years after his partner and the year before his book was published.

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The Kids Are All Right movievia amazon.com

The Kids Are All Right

Released: 2010

Rated: R

Annette Bening and Julianne Moore play the moms of two teenagers whose happy home life is thrown off-balance when their long-ago anonymous sperm donor crashes the party. The Kids Are All Right is a brutally honest look at the fluid and nontraditional families LGBTQ couples cultivate.

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The Hours movievia amazon.com

The Hours

Released: 2002

Rated: PG-13

This drama explores the inner and outer lives of various LGBTQ characters dealing with repression, depression and hopelessness across centuries. Most of the buzz focused on the prosthetic nose Oscar winner Nicole Kidman wore to play legendary author Virginia Woolf, but the film deserves extra credit for handling LGBTQ themes in such a poetic and mostly understated way.

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Longtime Companion Movie via amazon.com

Longtime Companion

Released: 1989

Rated: R

Four years before Tom Hanks delivered an Oscar-winning performance as a gay man dying of AIDS in Philadelphia, this relatively unsung drama laid bare the devastation the previous pandemic wreaked on the gay community. It was the first film dealing with the subject of AIDS to receive a wide theatrical release.

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Making Love Movie via amazon.com

Making Love

Released: 1982

Rated: R

A married man falling in love with another man was considered scandalous and potentially career-decimating movie fare in the early ’80s. This unconventional (at the time) love triangle featuring Charlie’s Angels star Kate Jackson as the cheated-on spouse in Making Love effectively derailed the big-screen careers of rising stars Michael Ontkean (Twin Peaks) and Harry Hamlin (L.A. Law), who played the secret lovers, but it still made history as the first studio movie to feature a passionate kiss between two men.

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Maurice movievia amazon.com

Maurice

Released: 1987

Rated: R

Before he made his mark as a floppy-haired rom-com superstar in the 1990s, newcomer and future Love Actually star Hugh Grant made his mark as a floppy-haired closeted gay man in this Merchant Ivory adaptation of the E.M. Forster novel. Maurice‘s success proved that a literary gay romance set in repressed early-20th-century England was as worthy of a big-screen period piece as the entanglements of straight star-crossed aristocratic lovers.

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Monsoon movievia amazon.com

Monsoon

Released: 2019

Rated: Not Rated

It’s taken decades, but LGBTQ movies can finally feature gay leads whose sexual orientation isn’t central to the story. When an Anglo-Asian man (Crazy Rich Asian‘s Henry Golding) returns to Vietnam for the first time in decades and gets involved with a handsome American ex-pat, this 2019 film treats the romance as casually as if he’d fallen for the girl next door. That’s cinematic progress.

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Mulholland Drive Movievia amazon.com

Mulholland Drive

Released: 2001

Rated: R

Like 2021’s Golden Globe-winning I Care a Lot, this 2001 neo-noir features a steamy lesbian relationship at its center, yet it’s about something else entirely. It made Naomi Watts a star, earned David Lynch his third Best Director Oscar nomination and featured Jennifer Aniston’s future husband/ex-husband Justin Theroux in a main role. Oh, and blink and you won’t miss legendary dancer and actress Ann Miller in her final big-screen performance.

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Watch Milk Movievia amazon.com

Milk

Released: 2008

Rated: R

Sean Penn won his second Oscar for his portrayal of legendary gay San Francisco city supervisor Harvey Milk in this biopic directed by Gus Van Sant (My Own Private Idaho). The flirtatious scene where he picks up his future boyfriend, played by James Franco, in a subway staircase perfectly captures the weak-in-the-knees blush of lust at first sight between two gay men. Milk is just one of the LGBTQ activists you’ll want to learn more about.

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Moonlight movievia amazon.com

Moonlight

Released: 2016

Rated: R

This critically beloved drama was groundbreaking not only for its depiction of gay Black love but for presenting complex, layered Black characters whose struggles don’t revolve around White people and racism. Against all conceivable odds, it triumphed over the conventional Hollywood romance La La Land to win the Best Picture Oscar in 2017.

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My Beautiful Laundrette Movie Via Amazonvia amazon.com

My Beautiful Laundrette

Released: 1985

Rated: R

In his third credited film, future three-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis played one half of a cross-cultural romantic pair hoping to become London entrepreneurs. With its Pakistani-British co-lead character (Omar, played by Gordon Warnecke, a British actor of Indo-Guyanese and German descent), Laundrette helped moved gay cinema away from being a strictly all-white affair. The British Film Institute ranked it at number 50 in its list of the Top 100 British films of the 20th century.

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Mysterious Skinvia amazon.com

Mysterious Skin

Released: 2004

Rated: Not Rated

In one of his first major adult movie roles, former Third Rock from the Sun star Joseph Gordon-Levitt played a gay prostitute harboring a childhood secret. Directed by queer filmmaker Gregg Araki, whose gay-themed film The Living End was a 1992 Sundance hit, Mysterious Skin received an 85% rating on the film review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes.

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My Own Private Idaho movievia amazon.com

My Own Private Idaho

Released: 1991

Rated: R

What happens when two hustlers hit the road and one of them suffers from narcolepsy, a sleep disorder that causes him to suddenly and randomly fall asleep? In this 1991 indie film, director Gus Van Sant and his stars River Phoenix and Keanu Reeves brilliantly negotiate the trials of wayward youth and a boy’s unrequited love for his straight soul mate.

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Palmer movievia tv.apple.com

Palmer

Released: 2021

Rated: R

This sweet tale of an unlikely bond between an ex-con and a gender-fluid young boy celebrates unconventional LGBTQ families and the ties that bind them. In his best movie performance since The Social Network, Justin Timberlake beautifully negotiates the bumpy terrain from disapproval to acceptance to love.

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Paris Is Burning Movievia tv.apple.com

Paris Is Burning

Released: 1990

Rated: R

Before there was Ryan Murphy’s Emmy-winning drama Pose, we had Paris. In addition to giving many viewers a first glimpse into urban queer culture, this landmark documentary about New York City’s underground ball scene pushed the Black and Latino gay communities to the forefront for the first time.

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Personal Best movievia amazon.com

Personal Best

Released: 1982

Rated: R

Mariel Hemingway followed her Oscar-nominated turn in Woody Allen’s 1979 classic Manhattan by playing a track star in love with another woman in this drama directed by Robert Towne, the legendary screenwriter of landmark ’70s films like Chinatown and Shampoo. It wasn’t a huge hit, but it was one of the first major LGBTQ movies to dive into the intricacies of lesbian romance. It was also a precursor to 2017’s Battle of the Sexes, a drama starring Emma Stone as gay tennis legend Billie Jean King that, like Personal Best, goes all-in when portraying lesbian sexuality.

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Rocketman movievia amazon.com

Rocketman

Released: 2019

Rated: R

Unlike the previous year’s Oscar-winning Queen/Freddie Mercury biopic Bohemian Rhapsody, this fantastical take on Elton John’s story doesn’t straight-wash its subject’s sex life. Pair it with 1998’s Velvet Goldmine for a double-dip into the colorful history of queer rock and roll.

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A Single Man movievia amazon.com

A Single Man

Released: 2009

Rated: R

This gorgeous meditation on love and loss was directed by fashion designer Tom Ford and earned star Colin Firth a Best Actor Oscar nomination. The 1960s set design gives Mad Men a run for its detailed retro accuracy, and as the title character’s best friend, Julianne Moore (the star of three movies on the list: The Hours, The Kids Are All Right and this) has never looked lovelier. Prepare for a good cry.

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Tangerine Movievia amazon.com

Tangerine

Released: 2015

Rated: R

A movie with transgender leads played by transgender actresses, this film set a new gold standard for casting LGBTQ movies with LGBTQ performers. According to Variety, Tangerine was the first time a studio and the producers behind a movie (Magnolia Pictures and Jay and Mark Duplass, respectively) launched an Oscar campaign for trans actresses—in this case, Kitana Kiki Rodriguez and Mya Taylor, who played sex workers in this 2015 iPhone-shot comedy-drama.

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Wilde Movievia amazon.com

Wilde

Released: 1997

Rated: R

The ever-quotable godfather of modern gays gets the big-screen treatment in this 1998 film, with Stephen Fry as iconic writer Oscar Wilde and Jude Law as the younger lover whose romance with Wilde ultimately brings about Wilde’s downfall. For a Wilde double bill, follow it with The Happy Prince, a 2018 biopic starring My Best Friend’s Wedding‘s Rupert Everett as Wilde that is something of an epilogue to the action in the older film. For some romantic musings from Wilde and many others, check out these love quotes that will make you weak in the knees.

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But Im A Cheerleader Movie Via Amazonvia amazon.com

But I’m a Cheerleader 

Released: 1999

Rated: R

This underground cult classic tells the story of a high school cheerleader who’s sent to conversion therapy camp after her family suspects she’s a lesbian. Admittedly, the plot sounds heavy, but the film is rich with satire and features a truly talented cast, including Natasha Lyonne, Clea DuVall and RuPaul Charles.

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Parting Glances Movievia amazon.com

Parting Glances

Released: 1986

Rated: Not Rated

Tender yet powerful, Parting Glances centers around a gay Manhattan couple coping with big life changes. One of them prepares to leave for a long-term work assignment abroad, and the other tries to navigate his feelings for a former lover who is living with AIDS. Critics praise the movie’s raw and honest depiction of the AIDS crisis, citing it as one of the first films to give a candid take on the issue.

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Im Half Of It Movie Via Netflixvia netflix.com

The Half of It 

Released: 2020

Rated: PG-13

This Netflix coming-of-age gem follows a shy teenager as she agrees to help a jock win over his crush. Things get complicated, though, when she develops feelings for the same girl. Charming and genuine, it will end up on your list of favorite Netflix romantic movies in no time.

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Pride Movie Via Amazonvia amazon.com

Pride

Released: 2014

Rated: R

This is one of those LGBTQ movies that’s based on an inspirational true story. Pride tells the tale of gay activists in the United Kingdom supporting a 1984 coal miners strike. It’s a movie filled with heart-warming solidarity that’s sure to get you laughing—and thinking.

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Portrait Of A Lady On Fire Movie via amazon.com

Portrait of a Lady on Fire

Released: 2019

Rated: R

Boasting an impressive 97% on the Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer, Portrait of a Lady on Fire earned critical and audience praise for a reason. It’s about a late-18th-century affair between a betrothed French aristocrat and the woman commissioned to paint her portrait. It’s a beautiful yet heartbreaking LGBTQ movie that’s sure to become a streaming staple for movie nights.

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Additional reporting by Kelly Kuehn.