ashley_borden's profile

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90 Points

Tuesday, August 25th, 2020 10:37 AM

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Please add lesbian, gay, and LGBTQ+ to genres

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4 years ago

  
Ashley Borden
Joined community on August 25, 2020 - new today
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Related Conversations
  
IMDb can you please set up a genre for "Gay/LGBT" movies?
https://getsatisfaction.com/imdb/topics/imdb_can_you_please_set_up_a_genre_for_gay_movies_thank_you
Ryan Major
Posted 7 years ago
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Please add into Parents' Control section, the ranking of LGBTQ Activities - None, Mild, Moderate, Heavy
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Posted 12 months ago
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Please can you differeniate the sex scenes between Straight, Gay or lesbian?
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Pablo
Posted 3 years ago
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IMDb Message Boards Announcement:
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February 13 2017
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a-17

IMDb member since July 1999

https://www.imdb.com/user/ur0390118/

 

The 1st List Of: Gay/Lesbian/Bi Industry People, Both In Front and Behind The Camera

by a-17 | created - 31 May 2013 | updated - 05 Mar 2019 | Public

2,023 names

https://www.imdb.com/list/ls053772895/

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4 years ago

I don't agree, these are meant to be in the keyword section.

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If you agree that LGBTQ+ means Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and others. Those are sexual orientations just as Heterosexuality/Straight

 

IMDb's definition of "Genre" is:

 Genre should relate to the main driving force behind the story arc, any sub-plots may be better represented via keywords.

I'm practically certain that everyone can conceive that if the sexual orientation of the protagonist isn't relevant to the main story arc then it shouldn't be considered as a genre. 

 

So logically, we are debating to decide whether or not the sexual orientation protagonist is relevant in a love story. As I interpret IMDb's definition, LGBTQ+ doesn't define the story arc, the mood, the conflict of a love story as well as "Romance" does.

 

Replace Juliet by Julius in Shakespeare's play, Romeo and Juliet, and you won't get a much more different film.

 

 

 

 

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242 Points

Even if exactly the same language were used, the play would have a very different narrative twist, not least because two men were unable to marry in that particular period, and because it would be unbelievable for nobody to mention or have issue with a same sex couple.  To use your own descriptors, the mood and conflicts would have additional layers, and if being realistic additional conflicts and story arcs would emerge.

For many LGBT+ films, the sexuality/gender status of the characters IS the plot, and this is so common that these films have because a genre in themselves, or a co-genre i.e Transamerica is a 'LGBTQ+ drama'.  Without the Trans issue, it is just a plain old road trip movie.

(edited)

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162 Points

4 years ago


I'm straight, not narrow. There should be equality, and these genres should be an option. It can only improve our movie search situation. Thank you Ashley. I'm glad someone asked this question.

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4 years ago

Just for the record, adding new genres to IMDb is, apparently, an extremely difficult process. The IMDb staff approved five new genres to be added to the database (Awards-Show, Erotica, Experimental, Lifestyle, and Soap-Opera) on July 25, 2010 -- ten years ago -- and we're still waiting for them to be implemented. See the discussion at https://getsatisfaction.com/imdb/topics/implementation_of_new_genres for more information.

So if you are hoping to add any other new genres to IMDb, you should be prepared to wait for several years, at a minimum.

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100 Points

4 years ago

10+ years?!! Seems like IMDB is more like MDB as it is really losing the I(nternet) agility and becoming blue chip given the process bound operation which appears to have ground to a halt.

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282 Points

4 years ago

If LGBTQ+ is a valid genre, shouldn't Blacksploitation also be a valid genre?

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Maybe, or maybe not.

 

Regardless, the general idea invariably is predicated upon defining "genre" in such a way as to account for movies tailored to human group identities. With that in mind, advocates of this stuff could throw in, for lack of a better word, all the dimensions: sex, age, color, ancestry, heritage, culture, religion, faith, profession, diet, military service, medical condition, criminal tendency, personality type, socioeconomic class and political wing, in addition to sexual orientation and gender identity, or wherever upon the sexuality spectrum a human being can possibly fall.

 

And just to note, "LGBTQ" as a phrase does so proceed to group several ideas together that do not always belong together in all contexts. That is because the acronym represents a grouping that is of a sociopolitical strategic nature. In other words, some people who "belong" to any one of the letters want nothing to do with people who "belong" to another of the letters, or any of the other letters.

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242 Points

4 years ago

Definitely a complex issue.

I would disagree with the proposal if only one genre was permitted.  Like calling a film a 'Black Movie' it would reduce the film down to one component, when there are LGBT/Black films in all sorts of genres.  

So whilst it is still possible to list a few genres for a film, i DEFINITELY agree that LGBT+ should be a category.  For someone looking for LGBT films it is really difficult, and one has to rely on guessing keywords, which may have only a very minor significance to the film.

Please.  (see i asked nicely)


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242 Points

4 years ago

Looking at another question, i have just realised another benefit of having LGBTQ+ as a genre. 

The poster wanted IMDb to differentiate in the parental guidance/viewer guidance between the sexuality of the characters engaging in any sexual activity.  This is not possible due to the Wiki nature of that part of the guidance, and it relies on the person writing to mention this.

However, if there were and LGBTQ+ genre, and it were listed then anybody reading the parent/viewers guidance would be able to assume that the scenes were LGBTQ+ by default.

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@LovelyLabrys It's an interesting point. On one hand there will be less complaints from such people here, but on another... Validity of such complaints is questionable to begin with. Having less of that here won't fix the problem of people not being tolerant.  

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4 years ago

Romance is already a genre listed on IMDb. Whether it is romance between a man and a woman, a man and a man, a man, another man and a woman, it's all romance. It's actually rather discriminatory to single out LGBTQ+ people like this, as if their romance is different from the ones cis gender people have. (and yes, I know a lot of LGBTQ+ people like to be singled out like this, but to me, that doesn't make it any less offending).

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4 years ago

I am very sorry but I don't understand.

 

Why do you confuse film genres with sexual identity or gender ideology?

 

Then heterosexual would be a film genre? Woman?

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I don't know. The way these high-profile streaming services categorize things may be stirring confusion in moviegoers (rather people who interact with the world through their smartphones).

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3 years ago

I was about to post this very suggestions but researched these forums first.

SO yes please add a new genre entry of LGBTQ+

OK - so I have read jeorj_euler reply post from a year ago and I tend to agree with him.

These Keywords which are, imo, really sub-genre's, and are quite descriptive, so will amend my suggestion to that the Tag/s entries be moved from just below the Storyline entry to just below the Genre entries thereby giving a more instant informative description on the movie. Because at the moment you have to scroll half way down the page to get to them.

This, I feel, would then tie in nicely with the Genre and movie Summary entries right at the top of the site.

(edited)

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@TastyFineWine "SO yes please add a new genre entry of LGBTQ+"

Are you saying that a film with the genre Romance would need a second genre if it was a romance between two women instead of a romance between a man and a woman? Are you saying that Die Hard should have another genre attached to it if John McClane happened to be a gay man? Why do you want to single out the LGBTQ+ community?

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Read my post in its entirety. I went from Genre change to just moving the Tag listing.

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@TastyFineWine Ok, fair enough.

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I did at some point effectively express openness to the idea of implementing a genre designation for works in which not all the characters are the same sexual orientation and in which that very condition or situation is somehow instrumental to the plot.

Hopefully, we can at some point, spend some time evaluating the definition of "genre", because one thing that has always somewhat stood out how the large body of "Western" flicks (the stories set in North American frontier, from the years 1840 to 1920, with certain styles or themes) are considered to belong to a genre. Seems like Western is the only genre like that, as far as IMDb-recognized genres go.

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Having thought about this and discussed this even more, why not add the Tag 'Straight' because tagging a show as LBGT+ is the same as saying 'straight is normal and LBGT+ is not. This could even apply to 'Caucasian' as opposed to 'Asian'.

So we Tag a show; Germanic with LBGT+ Asian characters OR Japanese with Caucasian Straight characters.

Labels in and of themselves can be hurtful and damaging!

Note: These thoughts are, in their entirety, are not all mine.

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3 years ago

I'm always genuinely surprised how differently people see something like ”film genres”. When ”comedy”, ”action”, ”sci-fi”, ”horror”, ”western” etc have been around for ages

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I've suspected that the way some popular streaming services conjure up new "genres" (be the monikers for them new or old words), or categorize the contents of their catalogs, has obfuscated the matter. On the other hand, analyzing the situation, we do have to wonder why Western is a genre when apparently no such thing exists for Period pieces taking place in other era, locations or cultures. For instance there is no moniker/designation for films focused on battles between marines and high sea pirates, be it in/around the Mediterranean or the Caribbean. Seemingly cultural "zeitgeist" governs the way society chooses to categorize entertainment (and education) in one medium or another.

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Wikipedia defines "genre" as "any form or type of communication in any mode (written, spoken, digital, artistic, etc.) with socially-agreed-upon conventions developed over time." If you only pay attention to movies released since the 1990s, you might be forgiven for thinking the Western genre is an oddly specific category, because in recent years, Westerns have become increasingly rare. However, from about the 1920s-1960s, Westerns were enormously popular in America. Like many film genres, Westerns had their roots in literature. Pulp novels from the late 1800s told sensationalized stories about life on the frontier, and they became so popular and numerous that they established a whole set of tropes and expectations that people came to characterize as "western". The advent of film further expanded on these tropes, developing the 'agreed-upon conventions' more and more until eventually they became cliche and the genre more or less died out. Virtually every western made since the mid-1960s has been in some way a "deconstruction" of the genre, and since the 1980s they've appeared only sporadically, despite occasional bursts of interest. But for a long time, it was a really thriving, full-fledged genre.

So, to answer the question, "Why don't they have a moniker/designation for battles between marines and high sea pirates", well, as a matter of fact, they do. "Swashbuckler" films, as they were called, enjoyed some popularity from the 1930s-1950s, with such stars as Errol Flynn typifying the genre. However, the "swashbuckler" is usually considered a subgenre of "adventure" movies, rather than its own separate genre. The difference between a genre and a subgenre can be somewhat subjective, but the key difference is that a true "genre" must have sustained popularity/prevalence in the media for a long stretch of time, whereas a "subgenre" tends to be more infrequent, rare or "niche", and almost always fits under a broader genre.

Some other subgenres that revolve around specific time periods and settings include:

Samurai films (set in Japan during the 1700-1800s or earlier)

Sword-and-Sandal films (epic films set in Ancient Roman times and earlier)

Medieval fantasy/adventure (set in Europe in the Middle Ages)

Etc.

During the 1950s, the sheer amount of individual western TV shows airing at the same time was staggering, especially considering how few channels there were on TV at the time. There's never been a point in history where swashbuckler, samurai, sword-and-sandal or medieval films came close to matching that level of popularity, prevalence and sustained development. That's why, as of now, they haven't been granted "genre" status.

This is not to say that a subgenre can never be elevated to genre status. Throughout the 20th century and up until very recently, "superhero" would have been considered a subgenre of "action", because they weren't really that common. In the past decade, "superhero" films have become ubiquitous. Already, people are starting to see this as a full-fledged genre instead of a subgenre, but that definitely wasn't the case in the 1970s-1990s, when Superman and Batman were basically the only two franchises representing it. Still, personally, I think it would be premature for IMDb to add "superhero" as a genre at this point. A true genre needs to show that it has staying power, and a single decade or so isn't as long as people think it is.

Basically, zeitgeist has a huge effect on what's considered a genre. Western fiction just happened to be part of that zeitgeist at the time that film was first being developed as an art form, and as a genre it thrived for over half a century.

(edited)

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2 years ago

One of the posts I made to this thread quite some time ago disappeared at some point, probably because it was, as a reply, nested under somebody else's post which was itself deleted or hidden (the latter if that forum participant has merely temporarily suspended his or her account). So, I hereby quote the content of my missing post (5f5edaaec17a0657cbaa05d4):

And let us reiterate that keywords are best suited to such purposes. We could or already do legitimately have all of the following well-definable keywords and beyond:

  • lesbian-protagonist
  • lesbian-superhero
  • lesbian-interest
  • lesbian-theme
  • gay-protagonist
  • gay-superhero
  • gay-interest
  • gay-theme
  • bisexual-protagonist
  • bisexual-superhero
  • bisexual-interest
  • bisexual-theme
  • sexually-ambivalent-protagonist
  • sexually-ambivalent-superhero
  • sexual-ambivalence-interest
  • sexual-ambivalence-theme
  • transgender-female-protagonist
  • transgender-female-superhero
  • transgender-female-interest
  • transgender-female-theme
  • mtf-transsexual-protagonist
  • mtf-transsexual-superhero
  • mtf-transsexual-interest
  • mtf-transsexual-theme
  • mtf-gender-dysphoria-theme
  • transgender-male-protagonist
  • transgender-male-superhero
  • transgender-male-interest
  • transgender-male-theme
  • ftm-transsexual-protagonist
  • ftm-transsexual-superhero
  • ftm-transsexual-interest
  • ftm-transsexual-theme
  • ftm-gender-dysphoria-theme
  • protagonist-questioning-own-sexual-orientation
  • superhero-questioning-own-sexual-orientation
  • questioning-sexual-orientation-interest
  • questioning-sexual-orientation-theme
  • sexually-confused-protagonist
  • sexually-confused-superhero
  • sexual-confusion-interest
  • sexual-confusion-theme
  • transgender-female-attracted-to-females
  • transgender-male-attracted-to-males
  • mtf-transsexual-attracted-to-females
  • ftm-transsexual-attracted-to-males
  • transgender-female-partnered-with-transgender-male
  • ftm-transsexual-partnered-with-mtf-transexual
  • transgender-wife-and-transgender-husband
  • transsexual-wife-and-transsexual-husband
  • non-binary-gender-protagonist
  • non-binary-gender-superhero
  • non-binary-gender-interest
  • non-binary-gender-theme
  • intersex-protagonist
  • intersex-superhero
  • intersex-interest
  • intersex-theme
  • hermaphrodite-protagonist
  • hermaphrodite-superhero
  • hermaphrodite-interest
  • hermaphrodite-theme
  • androgynous-protagonist
  • sexually-ambiguous-protagonist
  • androgynous-superhero
  • sexually-ambiguous-superhero
  • androgyny-interest
  • sexual-ambiguity-interest
  • androgyny-theme
  • sexual-ambiguity-theme
  • eunuch-protagonist
  • eunuch-superhero
  • eunuch-interest
  • eunuch-theme
  • pansexual-protagonist
  • pansexual-superhero
  • pansexual-interest
  • pansexual-theme
  • chronophilic-protagonist*
  • chronophilic-superhero*
  • chronophilic-interest*
  • chronophilic-theme*
  • zoophilic-protagonist
  • zoophilic-superhero
  • zoophilic-interest
  • zoophilic-theme
  • necrophilic-protagonist
  • necrophilic-superhero
  • necrophilic-interest
  • necrophilic-theme

Which does not even begin to account for permutations and combinations. The matters of intersexuality, human hermaphroditism, chromosomal disorders, hormonal disorders and ambiguous genitalia involve variations with astute scientific intricacies.

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@jeorj_euler​ 

Now that IMDb has opened the door widely to subgenre keywords, it may make sense to designate one or more of these types of keywords as subgenres. 

There are many potential "subgenre" keywords of this nature, some of which could and should be merged at some point. Here is just a sample of these types of keywords currently in existence.

queer-cinema (502 titles)

new-queer-cinema (22 titles)

experimental-queer-cinema (5 titles)

transgender-cinema (2 titles)

lgbt-interest (265 titles)

lgbt-cinema (391 titles)

lgbtq-movie (7 titles)

lgbtq-series (30 titles)

lgbt-film (51 titles)

lgbtq-film (29 titles)

lgbtq-short-film (3 titles)

lgbt (2166 titles)

lgbtq (1641 titles)

lgbtqi (80 titles)

lgbt-plus (325 titles)

lgbtq-plus (15 titles)

lgbtqiaplus (2 titles)

lgbtqia-theme (2 titles)

lgbtqia (76 titles)

lgtb (11 titles)

lgtbi (7 titles)

lgtbiq (2 titles)

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@keyword_expert​ I was under a strong impression that New Queer Cinema is a way larger wave, hm. Something to think about.

I also really need to see more Gregg Araki

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Of Araki's work, I've only seen Mysterious Skin and Kaboom, and so far apart in timing that I didn't even pay attention to the fact the two involved the same storyteller, but that happens a lot, unless a filmmaker's body of work is always done in a consistently niche style so as feel familiar if any one of the materials had been seen before.

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@jeorj_euler​ I am infinitely intrigued by the fact that like his first three pictures are no budget, because it means he persisted despite no one offered jobs or budget after a first feature. 

And it's not like he's so underground he's opposed to this kind of stuff, since he directs television in between movies, most recently an episode of "Dahmer"

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70 Points

2 years ago

I am shocked they don’t have this category 

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The comment by keyword expert reveals a way to find movies and shows that may be within lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, questioning, experimenting, queerish, androgenous or gender-non-binary interest in some way. A lot of us have bore in mind that none of these adjectives or descriptions reflect an actual type/style of story. Are all of the movies that feature these people, ideas, experiences, themes or motifs, front and center, enough alike to actually constitute belonging to the same genre? That's the question.

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2 years ago

I came here to say the same. How is it 2023 and they don’t have this?

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Well, the fact that IMDb is unable to actually expand the domain of assignable values to the genre data type would be shocking to anybody who hasn't been really monitoring the technical progress of the website over the decades.