Gay detective movie

Joaquin Phoenix refuses to show why he quit gay adoration film: &#;Not sure how that would be helpful&#;

Joaquin Phoenix isn’t speaking on his sudden departure from Todd Haynes’ NC gay detective relationship movie — just five days before the film was set to originate filming.

The year-old was asked about his controversial exit during a press conference for his upcoming movie, &#;Joker: Folie à Deux,&#; at the Venice Film Festival on Wednesday.

&#;I think if I do [speak about the reasoning], I&#;d just be sharing my opinion from my perspective, and the other creatives aren&#;t here to say their piece, and it just doesn&#;t touch like that would be right,&#; Phoenix explained.

&#;I&#;m not sure how that would be helpful. So I don&#;t think I will,&#; the Oscar winner added.

The clip from Haynes, 63, was put to begin shooting in Guadalajara, Mexico, but Phoenix pulled the plug while still in Los Angeles, IndieWire reported Aug. 9. The untitled project — about a bloke fleeing south of the US border with his male girlfriend — was developed by Haynes, Phoenix and author Jon

Decades Don Strachey Mysteries: An Actual Queer Detective

Based on a series of books written by Richard Stevenson starting in the early s and continuing to the present, with the latest novel being released in , four movies for Here TV were produced between and   The films starred Chad Allen as Don Strachey, a homosexual detective in Albany, New York.  Chad is a former child star having main cast credits in s Our House, s My Two Dads, and to s Dr. Quinn, Medicine Lady. As well as guest starring roles on several television series throughout the s, 90s and s.  In , Chad was outed as gay by the U.S. tabloid “The Globe”, which published photos of him kissing another man.  Forced into the limelight, Allen became an activist for the LGBT community.

Gay detective fiction isn’t new, but it isn’t exactly mainstream.  George Baxt is credited with being the first writer to publish a series of books with a gay sleuth as the lead in Joseph Hansen is probably the top known author having created the Dave Brandstetter mysteries in , which continued through the s. There are many more, but scant ha

Margaret Qualley Plays Lesbian Detective in Next Queer Production from Tricia Cook and Ethan Coen

Good gay news: Margaret Qualley will luminary in upcoming Tricia Cooke and Ethan Coen motion picture Honey Don&#;t!. She will play the titular Honey, a lesbian detective out to investigate a questionable &#;church&#; that happens to be led by Chris Evans. Aubrey Plaza will star alongside her, though the specifics of her role are currently a mystery. Maybe she&#;ll be the true mystery Honey has to solve. In bed. Eh hem, sorry. All I know is that Margeret Qualley is amazing (I&#;m still recovering from The Substance) and Aubrey Plaza is astonishing (and VERY good at flirting with women on screen) so I perceive whatever they cook up will be fun as hell.

Tricia Cooke and Ethan Coen have planned a trilogy of queer B-movies. The first installment was Drive-Away Dolls, starring Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan, and the second will be Honey Don&#;t! Qualley, now having been in the first two films, has joked that if she&#;s not invited assist for the third, she will be offended. (Side note/warning, tha

GunnShots: Top 10 Gay Crime Films

When friends, including mystery writers, learned that I was compiling my list of the ten leading gay film mysteries, several expressed surprise that I could find that many. Actually, my problem was narrowing down the gigantic number of possibilities. The new edition of my book The Gay Male Sleuth in Print and Film (Scarecrow Press, November ) lists some titles for me to choose from, , this number including only films with some kind of a homosexual investigator. In addition to these, I could also consider, though I decided not to, any number of television and video serials, such as episodes from Dalziel and Pascoe, , and the powerful miniseries The State Within, Plus, there are over pornographic films that I also eliminated, though some are of surprising interest, from Greek Lightning, , and The American Adventures of Surelick Holmes, , through The Roommate, , to Focus/Refocus,

The Gay Male Sleuth in Print and Film

Then there are crime films in which gays contain roles other than as investigators, but I decided to abide by the parameters I