SUMMARY
Considering the quality, quantity, and diversity of films distributed under the Sony Pictures Entertainment banner, GLAAD has given Sony Pictures Entertainment a INSUFFICIENT grade.
There were some standouts in Sony Pictures’ slate this year; including interracial lesbian couples in blockbuster romantic comedy Anyone But You and the based on a true story dramedy Dumb Money, which both painted their worlds as casually inclusive. However, Sony profoundly missed the mark with the deeply offensive ¡Que viva México!, which was overtly transphobic, in both the casting and the story of its trans character.
Sony Pictures Classics included queer women of color in leading roles in Shortcomings and The Persian Version, which was exciting to see as API and MENA women often don’t have the opportunity to shine in queer narratives. There were once again no LGBTQ characters in Cruchyroll releases.
It is exciting to see the indie tentpoles of Sony Picture Classics and the broad comedies of Sony Pictures including LGBTQ stories–specifically those of LGBTQ women. GLAAD hopes to see this same respect and inclusion in Sony’s portrayal of trans women.
HISTORY
The film studio, founded in 1918 as Cohn-Brandt-Cohn Film Sales, was renamed Columbia Pictures in 1924. By the 1920’s, the studio began to build prestige by association with director Frank Capra, producing some of the biggest films and stars of the classic Hollywood era. For a brief period in the ‘80s, the studio was acquired by Coca-Cola and launched TriStar pictures, which was its own entity until Sony purchased it in 1989. In 1992, Sony Pictures Classics was formed and has acquired, produced, and distributed independent, documentary and arthouse films since then. In 2021, Sony entered into multi-year deals with Netflix and The Walt Disney Company to host films on their streaming platforms, Disney+ and Hulu, after their theatrical runs. The following year, Legendary Entertainment reached a distribution deal with Sony to distribute its future slate of films, excluding Warner Bros.’ Dune and MonsterVerse movies. Sony currently distributes films from its many imprints including Columbia, TriStar, Sony Pictures Classics, Sony Pictures Animation, Screen Gems, and Affirm.
Columbia’s political thriller Advise and Consent (1962) and TriStar’s neo-noir Basic Instinct (1993) were denounced by LGBTQ groups, including GLAAD, for their vilified portrayals of lesbian women and bisexual men. Sony Pictures Classics has released numerous high-profile LGBTQ-inclusive films, notably including the documentary The Celluloid Closet (1995), based on GLAAD co-founder Vito Russo’s book of the same name, which explores the rich history of LGBTQ representation in cinema. Additional inclusive films from Sony Pictures Classics consist of GLAAD Media Award winners Call Me By Your Name (2017), A Fantastic Woman (2017) and Parallel Mothers (2021); GLAAD Media Award nominees Pain and Glory (2019), and I Carry You With Me (2021); as well as My Life in Pink (1997); Kill Your Darlings (2013); Pedro Almodóvar’s I’m So Excited! (2013); Love Is Strange (2014); Grandma (2015); The Meddler (2016); Greed (2020), Hytti Nro 6 (2022), The Return of Tanya Tucker: Featuring Brandi Carlile (2022), and Return to Seoul (2022). Sony has also released Our Ladies (2021), GLAAD Media Award nominee A Man Called Otto (2022), and Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody (2022).