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Color psychology during pride month Rebel without a cause: America’s queer classic
Kai Kyzar Columnist
In the time where strict rules prohibited film from showing a married couple sharing a bed or facing the risk of insinuating sexual activities, finding queer representation sounds impossible.
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American film director Nicholas Ray crafted the emotional love story “Rebel Without A Cause” and gave us the character John “Plato” Crawford who is debated to be the first gay teenager in film.
The film begins with James Dean’s character Jim Stark being arrested for public intoxication and brought into the police station to wait for his parents. Here is where we meet the two other teens of the iconic trio Judy (Natalie Wood) and Plato (Sal Mineo).
Before being called in to talk to officer Ray Fremick, Jim tries to give his jacket to a shivering Plato who refuses the offer, waving Jim away and curling tighter into himself. This scene is directly referenced at the very end of the film where Jim gives his jacket to Plato in a comforting gesture while he is attempting to persuade Plato to give up his gun and surrender to the police.
CWU professor Jason Tucholke calls the scene a “telling moment,” and goes on to say, “I think that moment in particular, really strikes me as the moment where you wonder if, if it’s a little more than just looking up to a mentor or, you know, role model.”
“That moment in particular, I think really strikes me at least as something.” said Tucholke.
After accepting Jim’s jacket, Plato not only tenderly cradles it, but even holds it up to his face and sniffs it. At the end of the film after Plato is wrongfully murdered by the police, Dean’s character Jim is hysterical and inconsolable, sobbing and crawling on the ground. While Woods’ character Judy is upset but silent, Jim is wailing.
But no homo, right? Wrong!
According to Esquire magazine, Dean and Mineo purposefully played into the attraction between Jim and Plato. Anyone who has seen the movie would have to jump through hoops to attribute the deep and longing looks shared between the costars as anything other than homoerotic.
Looking further into the personal lives of both Dean and Mineo gives ample evidence to their real-life queer identities. In an interview with Boze Hadleigh, Mineo says he does not resent the rumors of his bisexuality–which he later confirms–and says, “what’s wrong with being bi? Maybe most people are, deep down.”
A famous quote from Dean, one I’ve found nearly everywhere I’ve looked for more information on Dean’s short life including in Esquire magazine, reads: “I’m not a homosexual, but I’m not going through life with one hand tied behind my back.”
These quotes—along with the obvious romantic and sexual tension between the characters Jim and Plato—point to a not so subtle queer-coding in the film “Rebel Without A Cause.” If you haven’t already, I cannot recommend the film enough and I implore you to watch it yourself. As a not only queer classic, but one of films in general, “Rebel Without A Cause” (and James Dean’s pretty face) is not something to
“Rebel Without A Cause” can be streamed through HBO Max.
Madison VanRavenhorst Columnist
Thumping music from all directions, smiles everywhere and the hot sun beaming down from blue skies as the people around me cheer. The feeling of being surrounded by love, support, and representation is all I can notice if I spin around. Pride. Or at least what I imagined it to be. Being a young girl raised religious had its ups and downs. The biggest downfall was the feeling of being broken or wrong because I was different. When I looked at other girls and felt not just friendship, but a connection deeper than that. The same thing I felt when I would talk to a cute boy. All I knew was that it wasn’t right to feel that way.
It’s taken me nearly a decade to come to terms with what it meant to feel the way I did. Now that I’ve figured out how to be all the things I want to be at once, I can enjoy this year’s pride month in a way I was never quite able to.
I think we all know the traditional rainbow pride flag. Outside of the meaning the flag carries for LGBTQIA+ communities, each color has its own connotations within color psychology. According to Philosophy Communication, there’s a difference between their association and the mood they inspire.

Colors have a deep history of influencing people in different ways. Clara Vetter at Neurofied explains that colors are not only associated with what we see. Colors can guide attention, evoke emotion, influence motor function and performance, and can even be associated with certain tastes, sounds and scents.
These associations evoke mostly positive emotions. For me, knowing this creates a feeling of security. Even if groups or individuals have tried to create a negative association with flags that I identify with, it makes a world of difference to know what the subconscious feelings that the colors on the flags inspire are.
Whether you identify with any aspect of the LGBTQIA+ community or not, I hope you look at the flag and see more than just a political cause you may or may not agree with. The colors mean something, and they showcase the unique lives of every single person who identifies with the flag you’re looking at.
The science of color theory expands beyond just the rainbow pride flag. Whatever identity flag you choose to represent yourself with has the same potential to mean more than meets the eye.

As a bisexual woman who grew up in a less than accepting community, it means the world to me to look at a flag that represents my true community and feel pride.
Red: Passion, love, power
Orange: Enthusiasm, success, creativity
Yellow: Energy, happiness, joy
Green: Health, harmony, safety
Blue: Stability, trust, confidence
Purple: Wisdom, luxury, strength