9 Winners Of The Queer Palm & Where To Watch Them
| 05/25/23
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Private Policy and Terms of Use.
With Pedro Pascal and Ethan Hawke’s gay western movie Strange Way of Life making waves at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, this is the perfect time to look back at the incredible LGBTQ+ movies that have won the Queer Palm since its inception in 2010.
The Queer Palm is an independently sponsored prize for LGBTQ+ films that are part of the Cannes Film Festival’s official selection. It is one of the most prestigious LGBTQ+ movie awards alongside Berlin’s Teddy Award and Venice’s Queer Lion.
So if you’ve ever scrolled through streaming services searching in vain for an amazing queer movie, PRIDE has got you covered – because nine of the last 12 winners of the Queer Palm are available to rent or stream right now.
All film descriptions are courtesy of their respective studios.
Synopsis: Portrait of a closeted gay husband/father living a life of quiet middle-aged desperation who becomes fixated on a friend's handsome collegiate son, leading to an incident.
Where to watch: Rent on Apple TV+
Synopsis: The film follows Laurence Alia, a thirty-year-old high school English teacher and poet, who, after much deliberation, comes out to her long-term girlfriend Fred as a trans woman in the late 1980s.
Where to watch:Netflix
Synopsis: Based on a true story, it depicts a group of lesbian and gay activists who raised money to help families affected by the British miners' strike in 1984, at the outset of what would become the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners campaign.
Where to watch:Showtime & Paramount + with Showtime
Synopsis: Set in New York City during the early 1950s, Carol tells the story of a forbidden affair between an aspiring female photographer and an older woman going through a difficult divorce.
Where to watch:Netflix
Synopsis: A promising teenage dancer enrolls at a prestigious ballet school while grappling with her gender dysphoria.
Where to watch:Netflix
Synopsis: On an isolated island in Brittany at the end of the eighteenth century, a female painter is obliged to paint a wedding portrait of a young woman.
Where to watch:Hulu
Ariel Messman-Rucker is an Oakland-born journalist who now calls the Pacific Northwest her home. When she’s not writing about politics and queer pop culture, she can be found reading, hiking, or talking about horror movies with the Zombie Grrlz Horror Podcast Network.
Ariel Messman-Rucker is an Oakland-born journalist who now calls the Pacific Northwest her home. When she’s not writing about politics and queer pop culture, she can be found reading, hiking, or talking about horror movies with the Zombie Grrlz Horror Podcast Network.