Why ‘Yellowjackets’ & ‘Evil Dead Rise’s Trans Inclusion Is The Future We Want

Nicole Maines in Yellowjackets and Morgan Davies in Evil Dead Rise
Nicole Maines in Yellowjackets and Morgan Davies in Evil Dead Rise
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This weekend, two trans characters graced our screens, both big and small. Whether you were heading to the cinema, pulse recing, to catch the premiere of Evil Dead Rise, or cozying up at home with your favorite queer cannibals on the latest episode of Yellowjackets, you weren't just being entertained, you were also being treated to trans representation.

Chances are you didn't hear anything in the lead-up. No big marketing pushes, no big reveal on screen. No hand wringing, no raised eyebrows, or even a well-intentioned primer about trans identity. That they arrived with little fanfare is exactly what made it so notable. That quiet, casual approach to transgender inclusion in mainstream entertainment, specifically marketed to a mainstream audience, is what is radical and sets a blueprint for the future of non-cis representation in media.

Yellowjackets has made its innate queerness no secret; there are out characters with compelling queer love stories — and frankly, everything about it is unapologetically LGBTQ-coded — so it should come as no surprise that its inclusion and treatment of a trans actor would be forward-thinking and nonchalant.

Trans actor Nicole Maines made her appearance in recent episodes as Lisa, a follower of Lottie’s Camp Green Pine, (not a) cult as (not a) jailer to Natalie (Juliette Lewis). In subsequent episodes, we’ve learned more about her struggles including in her home life. She's compelling and complex, and her gender identity beyond knowing that she is portrayed by a trans actor is not the totality of what defines her as a full human being. You know, like real trans people.

Maines is aware of the importance of her role and what it means for trans representation. “My existence, my visibility on screen, the representation will always be advocacy because existing in spaces where people don’t want you is radical and rebellious in nature,” Maines told Salon.

Nicole Maines in Yellowjackets
Nicole Maines in Yellowjackets

Courtesy of Showtime

“We will march, we will vote, we will be out there and protest and continue to radically and rebelliously exist,” she added.And it seems, they will also appear in hit TV series and be treated like any other character. What a breath of fresh air.

It was with similar delight that audiences greeted Danny in Evil Dead Rise, played by Australian, trans actor Morgan Davies. When we meet him, he’s an aspiring DJ and the eldest sibling to Bridget (Gabrielle Echols) and Kassie (Nell Fisher). He also accidentally fumbles into to summoning a Kandarian demon who possesses his mother (This is an Evil Dead movie, after all) and kicks off the gruesome and terrifying action that follows.

Again, what makes Danny so exciting and so radical is that never once is his gender identity explicitly addressed textually or subtextually. He just is.

Queer and trans folks on Twitter are taking a ton of joy in the unexpectedly delightful representation of what they are dubbing a “trans moron.” This admittedly does not sound flattering, but stay with me. When the vast majority of trans representation skews to tragic figures or paragons of virtue, this flawed-in-the-most-mundane-way teenager feels like a cinematic revelation to behold.

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“One point I'll give EVIL DEAD RISE: we, the trans community, were long overdue for Trans Moron representation. Just the biggest transgender dumb dumb who fucks shit up for everyone. It was a blessing. I am not being nearly as sarcastic as this probably reads.”

Granted, it’s a read, but a loving one and speaks to a larger cry for greater, more complex, and yes even sometimes moronic representation of a community that is not a monolith.

Trans representation is the future, and horror entertainment like Yellowjackets, Evil Dead Rise, and the upcoming Talk To Me are leading the way.