Earlier this week, director Bill Condon revealed that Disney’s live-action Beauty and the Beast would feature an “exclusively gay moment” between Gaston’s bumbling sidekick Lefou (played by Josh Gad) and another character in the movie. The news blew up, unsurprisingly, as many were excited about the prospect of Disney’s first-ever overtly gay scene in a movie as big as this one. Some, though, were not as excited, an Alabama theater announcing Friday that it will refuse to screen the movie at all because of the scene.

Allure Magazine published an excerpt on Wednesday, which featured some quotes from Condon about Lefou and his relationship to Gaston (Luke Evans). “LeFou is somebody who on one day wants to be Gaston and on another day wants to kiss Gaston,” he said, and revealed that there’s a “pay-off” at the end which he called “a nice, exclusively gay moment in a Disney movie.”

As Time reported, on Friday, the Henagar Drive-In Theatre wrote in a post on its Facebook page (which has since been taken down) “If we can not take our 11 year old grand daughter and 8 year old grandson to see a movie we have no business watching it. If I can’t sit through a movie with God or Jesus sitting by me then we have no business showing it.”

Condon, for his part, says the whole thing has been “overblown.” While talking with ScreenCrush, he said that “It’s part of just what we had fun with… I feel like the kind of thing has been, I wish it were – I love the way it plays pure when people don’t know and it comes as a nice surprise.”

Without giving anything away, the “moment,” when it comes, is a tiny, blink-and-you-miss-it shot featuring Lefou and another minor character who’s just had an awakening of his own. While small, it’s a nice effort from a big studio in a film chock full of themes about inclusivity, open-mindedness, and not judging books by their covers.