Disney did not invent the playbook of cutting queer content to protect global box office. But it has perfected it. The same calculus that removed a lesbian kiss from “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” in Singapore, that shelved Marvel’s trans-focused “Moon Girl” episode, that truncated “The Owl House” after its first same-sex kiss—that playbook is now playing out at Pixar with “Elio.” Each cut makes the next one easier. The pattern is the story.
Disney’s Queer Content Cuts Follow a Predictable Script
In 2019, Disney cut a brief lesbian kiss from “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” for Singapore screenings to avoid an NC-16 rating. Reuters reported that Singapore’s media regulator stated the applicant had “omitted a brief scene which under the film classification guidelines would require a higher rating.” The New York Times noted the kiss was also removed from screenings in Dubai. Disney did not publicly comment. The message was clear: when a market objects, representation is negotiable.
That same logic has since been applied across the portfolio. As IndieWire documented, Marvel has repeatedly promised LGBTQ representation while delivering minimal screen time—a brief queer nod in “Avengers: Endgame,” lesbian characters in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” confined to two scenes with a kiss on the head. Disney shelved an episode of “Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur” featuring a transgender character’s sports eligibility storyline; crew members suggested the decision followed the Republican election victory, as Disney Dining reported. The pattern is consistent: announce inclusion, then cut or minimize when markets or politics shift.
Pixar’s “Elio” is the latest iteration. According to Gizmodo, the studio removed queer-coded elements—a pink bicycle, a scene of Elio imagining a future raising a child with a male crush—after poor test screenings. Original director Adrian Molina, an openly gay filmmaker, departed. Pete Docter told the Wall Street Journal the studio is “making a movie, not hundreds of millions of dollars of therapy.” The language changes. The playbook does not.
Each Cut Normalizes the Next
The Guardian reported in 2022 that Pixar employees claimed “nearly every moment of overtly gay affection is cut at Disney’s behest.” That was before “Elio,” before “Win or Lose” had its transgender character reimagined as cisgender—a decision Collider reported drew criticism from a former Pixar assistant editor who said “Disney has decided to spend money to not save lives.” CNN reported that Disney cut the transgender storyline from “Win or Lose” before its 2025 release. Each removal establishes precedent. The next cut requires less justification.
“The Owl House” offers a stark example. As Abigail’s Army documented, Disney celebrated the show’s first same-sex kiss between Amity and Luz in May 2022—then immediately truncated the third season to three episodes instead of twenty, effectively canceling it. The studio had allowed creator Dana Terrace to include the first non-binary character in a Disney program. Then it pulled the rug. The pattern: permit representation when it is small enough to ignore, then scale back when it becomes visible.
Star Wars’ diverse storytelling suffered the same fate. Screen Rant noted that “Tales of the Jedi” was criticized for potentially erasing one of the Disney era’s early LGBTQ characters from canon. The kiss in “Rise of Skywalker” was tokenism—two minor characters, a blink-and-you-miss-it moment—and it was still too much for Singapore and Dubai. When even that is cut, the ceiling for what “counts” as acceptable representation drops.
What This Actually Means
Disney’s pattern is not accidental. It is structural. The company depends on China, on Gulf states, on conservative domestic markets. The Wall Street Journal reported that Zootopia 2 became Disney’s surprise box-office champion largely thanks to China. When hundreds of millions of dollars hang on a single market’s approval, queer content becomes a line item. Star Wars, Marvel, Pixar—each division learns from the last. The playbook is now so entrenched that Pete Docter can defend cutting a gay director’s vision by calling it “therapy” and the studio will stand behind him. The next cut will be easier still.
Background
What is Pixar? Pixar Animation Studios is an American animation studio and subsidiary of Walt Disney Studios. Known for films such as “Toy Story,” “Finding Nemo,” and “Inside Out,” it has a history of queer-coded subtext and occasional explicit representation, often following employee advocacy. Recent LGBTQ cuts to “Elio” and “Win or Lose” have drawn internal and external criticism.
Who is Pete Docter? Pete Docter is Pixar’s chief creative officer and the director of “Up,” “Inside Out,” and “Soul.” His March 2026 comment to the Wall Street Journal—that Pixar is “making a movie, not hundreds of millions of dollars of therapy”—defended the removal of LGBTQ storylines from “Elio” and drew widespread criticism.
Sources
Reuters, The New York Times, IndieWire, Gizmodo, The Guardian, Collider, CNN, Abigail’s Army