The folks at Mr. Man have rounded up the 100 most iconic gay kisses ever seen in movies and television, and you can catch 10+ of our favorite picks right here!
The full video of the 100 most iconic gay kisses takes us through groundbreaking historical firsts such as Pedro Zamora and Sean Sasser in The Real World and Sean Hayes and Eric McCormack in Will & Grace. In addition, there’s also lots of just plain super HOT gay celebrity kisses like Armie Hammer and Timothée Chalamet in Call Me By Your Name and Alexander Skarsgård and Ryan Kwanten in True Blood.
It’s all enough to make us work up a sweat and a pair of blue balls! Check out our favs below and make sure to hit up the entire video for all of the 100 iconic gay kisses.
Alexander Skarsgård & Ryan Kwanten, True Blood
Armie Hammer & Timothée Chalamet, Call Me by Your Name
Ashton Sanders & Jharrel Jerome, Moonlight
Nick Jonas & Jared North, Kingdom
Aidan Gillen & Charlie Hunnam, Queer as Folk
Anthony Mackie & Yahya Abdul-Mateen, Black Mirror
Josh O’Connor & Alec Secareanu, God’s Own Country
Miguel Ángel Silvestre & Alfonso Herrera, Sense8
Jack Falahee & Niko Pepaj, How to Get Away With Murder
K.J. Apa, Rob Raco, Casey Cott, & Cody Kearsley, Riverdale
Ewan McGregor & Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Velvet Goldmine
Heath Ledger & Jake Gyllenhaal, Brokeback Mountain
When I saw Brokeback Mountain, and then “that” kiss, I thought I would lose my mind…and, of course, by the end of the film, I was just a complete emotional mess. You too?
Oh, yes, Richard. I was a wreck. That this film lost the Best Picture Oscar to CRASH is still one of the biggest f**k-ups in Academy history.
Uh-huh!!! I could NOT believe BB lost the award. The sheer intensity and power of love in that film was overwhelming. I wound up seeing it several times…it NEVER lost its power over my heart, soul, mind, even when I knew what was going to happen. The final scene, when Ennis is going through Jack’s clothing still hanging in his closet following his tragic death…and Ennis finding his own jacket wrapped carefully together with Jack’s shirt…the utterly profound “embrace” of the two men, as signified in the clothing which Jack left behind was something so profound that it crossed from life to death, to life. Oh, how I wept!
Absolutely… the shirt scene destroys me every time. Magnificent work by everyone.