Imagine if you could give the perfect gift, every time, with zero effort wasted on logistics. The result? Your most scalable, sustainable, and impactful gifting experience ever.

.png)


No more generic gifts that are sent today and forgotten tomorrow. Unwrapit’s unique blend of personalization, curation, choice, and experience lets you show appreciation and make a lasting impression through corporate gifting.
Experience Unwrapit
Reduce time, effort, and waste with a digital gift experience people will actually love. Spend less time and money on logistics and more time building real connections.
Learn How
We’ve built Unwrapit to take care of gifting logistics so you don’t have to. You’ll wonder how you ever did corporate gifting without us.
Reach recipients with gift options curated just
for them, wherever they are, instantly.
Better yet, let them choose.
Show appreciation to recipients with gift options curated just for them, all wrapped up in a fun, personalized experience.
See Gift IdeasREAD MORE
READ MORE
READ MORE
READ MORE
READ MORE
READ MORE
This sub-genre arguably peaked with the 1982 film The Beaches of Agnes and, more notably, the adaptation of The Boys in the Band writer Mart Crowley’s later works. However, the definitive example of this trope is often cited as or, more recently, "Xanadu" styled indie hits.
In contrast, modern iterations like Fire Island or the Brazilian film The Way He Looks suggest that true paradise is found in "chosen family." The location (a beach house, a vacation rental) is merely the container; the paradise is the community. As gay cinema has matured, the depiction of paradise has become more cynical and complex. Filmmakers have begun to ask: What is the cost of utopia?
A prime example of this is the 2017 Yorgos Lanthimos film (which features significant queer coding) or, more explicitly, the 2018 film "The Miseducation of Cameron Post." In the latter, the setting looks like paradise—a beautiful, rural boarding school—but it is actually a conversion therapy center. Here, the visual language of paradise is weaponized. The beautiful surroundings stand in stark contrast to the psychological torture occurring within them.
This sub-genre arguably peaked with the 1982 film The Beaches of Agnes and, more notably, the adaptation of The Boys in the Band writer Mart Crowley’s later works. However, the definitive example of this trope is often cited as or, more recently, "Xanadu" styled indie hits.
In contrast, modern iterations like Fire Island or the Brazilian film The Way He Looks suggest that true paradise is found in "chosen family." The location (a beach house, a vacation rental) is merely the container; the paradise is the community. As gay cinema has matured, the depiction of paradise has become more cynical and complex. Filmmakers have begun to ask: What is the cost of utopia? paradise gay movies
A prime example of this is the 2017 Yorgos Lanthimos film (which features significant queer coding) or, more explicitly, the 2018 film "The Miseducation of Cameron Post." In the latter, the setting looks like paradise—a beautiful, rural boarding school—but it is actually a conversion therapy center. Here, the visual language of paradise is weaponized. The beautiful surroundings stand in stark contrast to the psychological torture occurring within them. This sub-genre arguably peaked with the 1982 film
Want to learn more? Speak with our gifting experts to see how Unwrapit can enable your most impactful gifting campaign yet.
They’ll show how you can:

Design branded, meaningful gift experiences

Curate the perfect list of gift options for your recipients

Monitor and analyze your gifting campaigns