Arguably no major gay-themed film has ever been as polarizing within the queer community as 1980’s Cruising, the gritty William Friedkin crime thriller set against the backdrop of New York’s leather-bar scene. Documentarian Jeffrey Schwarz takes a three-pronged approach to the subject in Mineshaft: The Cruising Murders, examining the real-life homicide that inspired the story, the development and filming on New York locations, and the controversies that dogged the shoot, with massive protest crowds of LGBTQ rights activists disrupting production and rattling the star, Al Pacino.

Schwarz has an excellent track record as a chronicler of queer pop culture — the Hollywood hunk both pre- and post-coming out in Tab Hunter Confidential; John Waters’ muse in I Am Divine; gay activist and scholar Vito Russo, author of The Celluloid Closet, the definitive study of queer representation in movies, in Vito; and Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon, a portrait of gay porn hall-of-famer Jack Wrangler. That’s just to name a few.

Mineshaft: The Cruising Murders

The Bottom Line

Still a lightning rod almost half a century later.