2024 Studio Responsibility Index

The Vito Russo Test

Taking inspiration from the Bechdel Test, which examines the way women characters are portrayed and situated within a narrative, GLAAD developed its own set of criteria to analyze how LGBTQ characters are included in a film. The Vito Russo Test gets its name from celebrated film historian and GLAAD co-founder Vito Russo, whose book The Celluloid Closet remains the bedrock for analysis of early LGBTQ portrayals in Hollywood film. These criteria can help filmmakers create more multidimensional characters while providing a barometer for LGBTQ film representation.

However, as several past tracked films prove, simply including significant LGBTQ characters does not guarantee that a film is free of problems or tropes and inoffensive in its portrayals. Some examples of films that have passed the Vito Russo Test in prior years but still contain offensive content include Zoolander 2, Hazlo Como Hombre, CHiPS, and The Gentlemen. All of these films included significant LGBTQ characters intrinsically tied to the film’s plot, but whose stories were objectionable.

In 2022, GLAAD added a fourth point and expanded the Vito Russo Test to more accurately discuss and analyze those characters.

This test remains an evaluation of the minimal representation expected, and also provides a roadmap for a greater number of mainstream Hollywood films to reach and ultimately exceed. Passing the Vito Russo Test is a first step, rather than the finish line.

For a film to pass the Vito Russo Test, the following must be true:

  • The film contains a character that is identifiably lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and/or queer.
  • That character must not be solely or predominantly defined by their sexual orientation or gender identity (i.e. they are comprised of the same sort of unique character traits commonly used to differentiate straight/cisgender characters from one another).
  • The LGBTQ character must be tied to the plot in such a way that the character’s removal would have a significant effect, meaning the character is not there to simply provide colorful commentary, paint urban authenticity, or set up a punchline. The character must matter.
  • The LGBTQ character’s story must not be outwardly offensive (avoids defaulting to well-known tropes or stereotypes with no further development). In films with multiple LGBTQ characters, at least one character must pass this point for the film to pass the test.

% of LGBTQ-Inclusive Films that Passed the Vito Russo Test, by Year

2023

71%

71% (50 OF 70) OR 20% OF 256 TOTAL FILMS

2022

77%

77% (77 OF 100) OR 22% OF 350 TOTAL FILMS

2021

56%
56% (9 OF 16) OR 12% OF 77 TOTAL FILMS

2020

90%
90% (9 OF 10) OR 20% OF 44 TOTAL FILMS

2019

73%
73% (16 OF 22) OR 14% OF 118 TOTAL FILMS

2018

65%
65% (13 OF 20) OR 12% OF 110 TOTAL FILMS

2017

64%
64% (9 OF 14) OR 8% OF 109 TOTAL FILMS

2016

39%
39% (9 OF 23) OR 7% OF 125 TOTAL FILMS

2015

36%

36% (8 OF 22) OR 6% OF 126 TOTAL FILMS

2014

55%
55% (11 OF 20) OR 10% OF 114 TOTAL FILMS

2013

41%
41% (7 OF 17) OR 7% OF 102 TOTAL FILMS

2012

43%
43% (6 OF 14) OR 6% OF 101 TOTAL FILMS

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The GLAAD Studio Responsibility Index (SRI) maps the quantity, quality and diversity of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) characters in films released by eight major motion picture studios during the 2019 calendar year. GLAAD researched films released by Lionsgate, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, STX Films, United Artists Releasing, Universal Pictures, Walt Disney Studios and Warner Bros., as well as films released by four subsidiaries of these major studios. The report is intended to serve as a road map toward increasing fair, accurate and inclusive LGBTQ representation in film.

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