There's also a French film called "You'll Get Over It" ("A Cause D'un Garçon" in French), which I think is very good. The acting is very convincing too.
This post has been edited by fruitylicious: Sep 28 2007, 22:00
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Here we go again! How do you stop this from being a list? I would recommend Relax...It's Just Sex (which has quite a powerful story to it), The Fluffer (for the gorgeous Scott Gurney), Finding North ( a very sweet touching film) and Bad Education (Almodovar inspired by Hitchcock with Gael Garcia Bernal, and his bare ass, what more could you want?).
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Beautiful Thing is a fantastic film, it's a touching portrayal of a realistic and honest relationship. It shows how the characters' feelings for each other progress and how they come to terms with them in the context of their own hard lives. The acting is really top notch, the actors really get into their roles and the supporting cast works really well. Oh, it has a superb soundtrack too! It's a really heart-warming, inspirational film, and I'd say it's a must for any film collection.
(o_O OK, I'm aware that that sounded like it had come off the back of the box )
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I highly recommend Wong Kar Wai's Happy Together (Chun Gwong Cha Sit). A gay Chinese couple holiday to Argentina in a lame attempt to kick-start their troubled relationship. It's heartbreaking, and it's monumentally beautiful. It displays the fantastical nuances of being in love (the film is very subtle) as well as depicting the utterly painful, hurtful times so sharply. I love this film so much (can you tell? ).
I also love Gods and Monsters. I adore Ian McKellen and Brendan Fraser is so cute and gives a surprisingly deep performance. The film is a bio-pic about the film director James Whale (McKellen), who directed the Frankenstein film. Fraser plays Whale's new gardener and the two form an interesting bond. I don't want to say too much more, but needless to say I find their performances excellent and the story riveting.
For a documentary, I really enjoyed The Celluloid Closet. It's essentially the history of depictions of gays and lesbians in American film. It's informative, entertaining and sometimes shocking.
Also a big fan of Gregg Araki. My two faves from him would be The Living End and Totally F***ed Up. These are low-budget, independent films with a youthful nihilistic "f**k the world" attitude. You gotta love The Living End's tagline: An Irresponsible Movie by Gregg Araki.
I second Get Real, we studied that in Media class when I was at school.
And yeah, The Broken Hearts Club is fun. John Mahoney (Frasier's dad on the sitcom) is great, and Dean Cain is hoooot.
And while I think of it, I'll add the German film Männer Wie Wir (Guys & Balls). It's a cute comedy about a guy who realises he is gay and because of this is kicked out of his football (soccer) team. He then traipses around Dortmund to find gay guys who like football, because he's challenged his old team to a game against his gay team
This post has been edited by DaveSAS: Sep 29 2007, 02:34
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I knew people would start raving about Beautiful Thing. It's a crap movie, far too preachy and issue led, while the script is stilted and better suited to a play (on which it was based). But it's got two teen boys kissing each other - woo. Shame they're both ugly - boo.
You might want to google search for the term "queer cinema" because that's the name of the genre "gay" movies fit into. You've also got New Queer Cinema from the 90s but that will probably also be covered.
And so onto some names. These are by no means the best of the genre, but they're the only ones I can think of off the top of my head and some of them certainly are the most iconic of the genre - Another Gay Movie, I think not
Another Country - Rupert Everett getting spanked at boarding school Maurice - James Wilby playing EM Forster, snogs Hugh Grant before being dumped for a sexless marriage with a woman, and ends up shagging the gardener. Cruising - Al Pacino goes undercover in leather bars in 70s New York trying to catch a serial killer. This was hugely controversial at the time, was boycotted by gay activists and lost a lot of money, which is a shame because it's really good. You can look at it as really homophobic, but I think people who look at things like that live in a world of buttercups and daisies where nothing really bad happens, at the very least perhaps we should be grateful a film about gays was even made by a Hollywood studio at the time and just look at it as a good gritty thriller. Note to self: stop whittering Torch Song Trilogy - Semi-autobigraphical account of Harvey Fierstein's life. Matthew Broderick pops up as his murdered boyfriend. Very funny, although often dramatic. Sebastiane - Derek Jarman worshipping the cock. Notable only because it contained the only erect penis passed by the BBFC for about a millenium. Les Cage Aux Folles - French comedy about a butch gay and his camp boyfriendrunning a cabaret club. The in-laws come to stay and everyone plays straight. There's about a hundred sequels so you really only want to see the first one. The Birdcage - American remake of Les Cage Aux Folles. Cabaret - That mad alki Liza Minelli warbling through Nazi Berlin with I think Michael Fox as her gay friend. Death in Venice - I really hate this because it's so boring, but it's considered a bit of a classic, so I've included it on the list. Dirk Bogarde plays an old bloke chasing a chicken around Venice, then dies of the plague. That really is all that happens. Good cinematography though The Everlasting Secret Family - Possibly the worst gay movie ever made, so bad it's unintentionally hilarious all the way through. It's an Aussie movie in which a private school student is seduced by a politician and becomes a rent boy who services an underground network of boy loving establishment people called The Family before arising as the undisputed queen of all he surveys. Or something. There's loads of nudity. Labyrinth of Passion - Early Almodovar, with Antonio Banderas doing the gay thang. Last Exit to Brooklyn - Riots in 1950s New York, the characters are an eclectic selection of hookers, pimps, homos and trannies. The book was banned in several countries I think, although apparently the film is not as good (I haven't read the book so can't comment). The Living End - I don't like this, but I'm including it as an example of New Queer Cinema as opposed to ordinary Queer Cinema. It's about two HIV+ gay men who go on a crime spree across America, it's not really that violent but it's really miserable and quite depressing. My Beautiful Laundrette - I know everyone loves this, but I found it trite. Frankly, I just don't like films about "Thatcher's Britain" 'cos they always dwell on the crapness rather than the good stuff, and if we're honest the 80s did a lot more for people than took away from them even if it might have seemed the opposite at the time (not that I can remember ). Anyway, Daniel Day Lewis falls in love with an Indian bloke in the romantic setting of a London Laundrette Prick Up Your Ears - Gary Oldman playing Joe Orton. Very British is all I will say. Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence - David Bowie in a Japanese concentration camp falling in love with one of the guards. It's not a very good film and I'm only including it because the music was remixed as Heart of Asia in 2000 and is one of my all time favourite songs. Victim - Early 60s movie about a gay man being blackmailed by an ex lover, made of course while bumsex was still illegal. I really liked it, I thought it was quite brave to have made a film with that subject matter in the climate of the time. Longtime Companion - Charting the life of a group of gays from hedonistic 70s parties to the demise of most of them from AIDS by the 90s. Objectively, it really isn't that good as a film - the characterisation is pretty wafer thin and the story structure is allover the place - but the last scene where they are walking on the beach always affects me Zero Patience - AIDS musical. No really. It's a Canadian movie about the route AIDS took to get to North America (via Patient Zero, allegedly), with many musical numbers thrown in. It's a lot better than it sounds.
And now a couple of movies that aren't explicity gay movies but if you watched them with a straight friend, would be told afterwards "that was a fucking gay movie".
Top Gun - the gayest non-gay movie ever produced by Hollywood. Tom Cruise and many generic shirtless men flicking each other with towels in army changing rooms while poor Kelly McGillis' closeted lesbian tits don't get a look in. Spartacus - Snails of course you stupid twat, he's already got in the bath with you Interview With The Vampire - Tom Cruise again, in a film based on a book about two gay vampires by that gobby old slash fiction hag Anne Rice. They leave the gay sex out, of course. Nightmare On Elm Street Part 2 - If you don't believe me, I swear to God just watch the film. You've got this squeaky girlie male teen (played by a gay actor) possessed by Freddy (ie. something inside he can't control), whose bedroom is adorned with pictures of Tina Turner, who enjoys singing into his hairbrush to 80s power ballads, who practically vomits over his beautiful girlfriend the minute she gets her tits out and then runs away from scary tits to see his hunky best friend, where Freddy finally takes him over - by "coming out" of him, and then killing hunky friend (male killer/male victim, knives=penetration). And if that wasn't enough gay content, we have an actual gay PE teacher, who keeps picking on the main characters and making them do various sadistic punishments like hundreds of shirtless press ups , who eventually meets his maker when he bumps into main character out sleepwalking in a gay S&M bar, takes him back to the school gym to bully him a bit more, before Freddy "comes out" (for the first time), ties up teacher, strips him naked, whips him with towels and then stabs him (there we are with the penetration again). Honestly, just watch it as a horror metaphor of coming out and you'll see it. Really.
This post has been edited by xenix: Sep 29 2007, 03:38
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Beautiful Thing 10 out of 10, the one all others have to measure up to A tender love story set during a hot summer on a South-East London housing estate. Jamie, a relatively unpopular lad who bunks off school to avoid football, lives next door to Ste, a more popular athletic lad but who is frequently beaten up by his father and older brother. Such an episode of violence brings Jamie and Ste together: Sandra (Jamie's mum) offers refugee to Ste, who has to 'top-and-tail' with Jamie. Hence, the story tells of their growing attraction for one another, from initial lingering glances to their irrefutable love, which so magnificently illustrated at the end of the film. In deals with the tribulations of coming to terms with their sexuality and of others finding out, in light of Sandra's unwavering loyalty and defence of Jamie and the fear of repercussion should Ste's family find out. The plot is set against sub-texts of Sandra's desire to manage her own pub, and thus escape the estate, and of her new relationship with her hippy boyfriend Tony; and of Leah, the brassy girl next door who has been expelled from school and spends her time listening to Mama Cass records and tripping on a variety of drugs.
Summer Storm 9 out of 10 a close second Tobi and Achim have been best mates for years. As cox and oarsman, they have lead their rowing club to win several rowing cups in the past and are now looking forward to win a big regatta in the countryside of Germany. But this trip isn't your usual summer camp experience and problems soon arise. As Achim's relationship with his girlfriend Sandra, who's also on the team, grows more and more serious, Tobi starts to realize that his feelings for Achim run much deeper than he's willing to admit to himself. He feels confused, unsure of himself and increasingly left out by his friend Alex and the team. When Sandra's best friend Anke shows her interest in him, his anxiety starts to grow. When it turns out that the much-anticipated Berlin girls' team has been replaced by a team of athletic, cliché-bursting young gay men, Tobi and his teammates are suddenly forced to grapple with their prejudices, their fears, and, perhaps, their hidden longings. As the tension grows, Tobi, Achim and the others head towards a confrontation as fierce and liberating as the summer storm that's gathering over the lake. And Tobi realizes he has to start facing some facts about himself he didn't dare to face before.
Get Real 8 out of 10 sweet and uplifting story This tenderly romantic film tells the story of Steve, a young man in a British prep school, as he struggles with coming out and falling in love with the class jock, John... who, amazingly, falls in love with him as well.
Latter Days excellent, sweet, funny and Steve Sandvoss Aaron Davis (Steve Sandvoss) and Christian Markelli (Wes Ramsey) are the two most opposite people in the world. Aaron is a young Elder (or a Mormon missionary) who wants to do his family proud and is quite passionate about his religion and film. Christian is a shallow WeHo waiter/party boy who only looks forward to bedding a new guy every night. After Aaron and three other missionaries move into the apartment across from Christian, his friends bet him $50 that he can't get one of them to jump into the sack, so he instantly latches onto Aaron. There are two problems, though - Christian is falling in love with Aaron and the Mormons are not the biggest fans of the homosexual community. Once Aaron is discovered, the two have to go through trials of regret, loss, perseverance, and forgiveness if they both want to get to the thing that matters to them most: each other.
In and out 8 out of 10 Hilarious Howard Brackett (Kevin Kline) is a high school teacher in a small town in Indiana with everything going for him; a nice job, an attractive fiancé named Emily (Joan Cusack) and respect from everyone. Everything changes in one night when a former high school student of his, named Cameron Drake (Matt Dillon), now a famous actor living in Hollywood, makes an acceptance speech after receiving an Academy Award for his portrayal of a homosexual army soldier and 'outs' Howard Brackett as his inspiration for his role. The media circus immediately begins as Howard desperately tries keep his life from falling apart by protesting that he is not gay and that the whole thing with Cameron's speech is a simple misunderstanding. While most of the townspeople want to believe Howard, Peter Malloy (Tom Selleck), an openly gay TV reporter who arrives in town to cover the story, suspects that the teacher is in denial.
Third Man Out and Shock to the System 7.5 out of 10 Something different, these are not love stories but detective stories with a gay detective (with a boyfriend) as the main character. In this first movie, the detective, Donald Strachey (played by openly gay actor Chad Allen) is hired to find who has been been threatening a notorious member of the gay community noted for outing people. The second one focuses less on the crime solving (though there is still a lot of this) but seems to want to make a statement. The story revolves around finding a missing person who was involved in a Gay-to-Straight conversion programme.
Trick 7 out of 10 with Tory Spelling (who's excellent in it :blimey ) Gabriel, an aspiring writer of Broadway musicals, meets Mark, a muscled stripper, who picks him up on the subway. They spend the night trying to find somewhere to be alone... forced to contend with Gabriel's selfish roommate, his irritating best friend, and a vicious, jealous drag queen in a gay dance club. The sun rises on a promising new relationship.
Broken Hearts Club 7 out of 10 (Dean Cain, Timothy Olyphant and Andrew Keegan) In the palm-shaded oasis of West Hollywood, we meet Dennis, a promising photographer. As he prepares to celebrate his twenty-eighth birthday, he laments, ' I can't decide if my friends are the best or worse thing that ever happened to me.' The gang includes Benji, the punkish innocent with a penchant for gym bodies; Howie, the psychology grad student who thinks too much and lives too little; Cole, the charismatic actor who accidentally keeps stealing everybody's guy; Patrick, the cynical quipster, and Taylor, resident drama queen, who, until recently, prided himself on his long-term relationship. Providing sage advice and steady work is Jack, the beloved patriarch whose restaurant is a haven for them all. When tragedy strikes the group, the friendships are put to the test.
Object of my Affection 8 out of 10 featuring the gay Nigel Hawthorne George and Nina seem like the perfect couple. They share a cozy Brooklyn apartment, a taste for tuna casserole dinners, and a devotion to ballroom dancing. They love each other. There's only one hitch: George is gay. And when Nina announces she's pregnant, things get especially complicated. Vince - Nina's overbearing boyfriend and the baby's father-wants marriage. Nina wants independence. George will do anything for a little unqualified affection, but is he ready to become an unwed surrogate dad?
Defying Gravity 6 out of 10 Griff, a popular fraternity brother, is the only witness to a brutal gay-bashing incident. In the wake of this violent event, Griff must struggle with a life-defining decision: is he willing to come out in order to come forward in the name of justice?
Relax, it's just sex 6 out of 10 A mixed group of individuals - lesbian, gays, and heterosexuals who all frequent a local bar struggle to accept each others lifestyles. However when the two gays (Mitchell Anderson, Eddie Garcia) are attacked and fight back and ultimately rape one of their attackers, the group becomes strongly divided on their actions. Jennifer Tilly is the mother hen of the group who tries to hold everyone together. The lesbian lovers (Serena Scott Thomas, Cynda Williams) break up when one admits to having an affair with a man (Billy Wirth).
Hedwig and the angry Inch 7 out of 10 definitely the most artsy movie of the lot Hedwig, born a boy named Hansel in East Berlin, fell in love with an American G.I. and underwent a sex-change operation in order to marry him and flee to the West. Unfortunately, nothing worked out quite as it was supposed to - years later, Hedwig is leading her rock band on a tour of the U.S., telling her life story through a series of concerts at Bilgewater Inn seafood restaurants. Her tour dates coincide with those of arena-rock star Tommy Gnosis, a wide-eyed boy who once loved Hedwig... but then left with all her songs
I think I do 6 out of 10 Screwball comedy with a modern twist; instead of Kate Hepburn and Cary Grant, it's Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart. Two college roommates (victims of a mutually unrequited love) meet up again five years after school at their housemate's wedding. With the introduction of a Bellamy-esque soap star, the sparks, sexual and verbal, start to fly, as the ex-roommates try to navigate their new romance.
The Trip 6 out of 10 When 19 year old Tommy, a gay rights activist and 24 year old Alan first meet in 1973, they find themselves on the opposite sides of the political coin. Despite their many differences, they form a loving, long term relationship. In 1977, during Anita Bryant's crusade, an anti-gay book Alan wrote years before gets published without his consent. Tommy, who is now a well known activist, has his credibility destroyed by the book which causes their breakup. Seven years later, Alan is given a second chance, a reunion with Tommy and the opportunity to set things right.
This post has been edited by Tiuri: Mar 2 2008, 06:06
Already reviewed above: Gods and Monsters Death in Venice Prick up your ears Sebastiane Cabaret Victim Maurice My Beautiful Laundrette Top Gun Spartacus
plus
Ed Wood. Johnny Depp playing Ed Wood, camping it up as the fabric-fetished B flick director. Great fun. My Private Idaho. River Phoenix plays a gay with narcolepsy. Complex, psychologically mysterious. The Boys in the Band. Not really a very good film but the play was groundbreaking for its time, early '70s, claiming to portray the New York gay life as it was. Probably wasn't but an interesting take on it, nevertheless. Myra Breckenridge. Very probably the worst film ever made ever in the history of film-making based on the superb Gore Vidal novel: Raquel Welch plays a fella who's had a sex change and returns to Hollywood to take revenge. That might be the plot - or it might not - but has to be seen to be believed. Copies are difficult to come by; my video copy is very old. Loot. A cleaned-up version of the Joe Orton play. But still worth seeing. Entertaining Mr Sloane A sanitised version of the Joe Orton play. Read the script and then see the film. Victor/Victoria. There are 3 versions of this film, the original German, a 1930s British version (starring Jessie Matthews!) and then this. Julie Andrews (no, don't laugh, she's at her best here, elegant, suave, urbane), Robert Preston, James Garner. Julie Andrews plays an out-of-work actress who pretends to be a male drag artist (ie, dresses up as a woman). Robert Preston plays her gay manager. James Garner falls in love with the female drag act, not realising it's really a man ('cept it isn't of course). One of the funniest films: great songs, great character actors, funny story, irony: everything. And not a musical in the conventional sense. De-Lovely. The private life of one of the great songwriters, Cole Porter, with his homosexual life not skimped over. Well made but easier to follow if you're already intimately acquainted with Porter's life. Fight Club. Homoerotica: Brad Pitt with his shirt off for most of the time. Football Factory. Latent homoerotica. Danny Dyer and all boys together with sub-cultural violence. Also, very very funny. Ben Hur The love of two men divided by politics. Charlton Heston and most of the male cast spend a lot of their time proclaiming their love for each other and taking off their shirts.
Anything with Marilyn Monroe, especially: Some Like It Hot. Marilyn Monroe, Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis. Probably the greatest film comedy of all time. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Gay, so gay it transcends gay into its own gay classification into which no other gay film enters. And with the great Jane Russell and all those beefcakes in the gym scene - worth the price of the DVD alone.
This post has been edited by Rustythedog: Sep 29 2007, 11:29
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Presque Rien Mathieu (Jérémie Elkaïm) - young, shy and introverted - returns to the place where he fell in love. Eighteen months ago, a family summer holiday catapulted him headfirst into a passionate teenage romance with the sensual, confident Cedric (Stéphane Rideau). It all seems a lifetime away now. That chance meeting brought about a year of pleasure and passion, mixed with the torture and torment of first love. The pain and desire still burning within Mathieu can only embrace the future by reconciling with the past.
Ma Vie (My Life on Ice) On his sixteenth birthday, Etienne is given a video camera so he can record his figure skating sessions as he prepares for the French Cup. Obsessed with his new toy, he begins recording every detail of his daily life and of those close to him. But does Etienne know what it means when he tells his best friend that this will be "the year of love" - and will he be able to unearth the answer to his question...
Like It Is Craig, a cute, closeted bare-knuckle fighter lives in a violent world, where winning is everything - but losing can mean death. When Craig meets Matt, attraction is instant, but Craig can't handle intimacy. Though their first night is a disaster, Craig follows Matt back to London, but his friends are suspicious and try to ward him off Craig. For Craig, 'sophisticated' Soho is a revelation, but how can he stay when those closest to the man he loves want him gone? And if he leaves, will Matt throw aside his success and ambition to be with the first guy he has ever truly loved?
Leo (Kevin McKidd) is an endearing pup of a blue-eyed lad looking for old-fashioned romance with a happily ever after. Convinced to join a friend's drum-thumping New Men's Group ("Let these strong loving men heal you!" begs leader Simon Callow, who all but steals the film as a man in touch with his inner guru), Leo confesses an attraction to another member of the circle in the spirit of sharing. He's the only gay man in the group but his confession starts a cascade of sexual reassessment, all encouraged by Callow's hilarious new age Iron John. Meanwhile Leo's gadfly of a roommate is having sex in other people's bedrooms all over town with his new real estate agent lover (a sly, haughtily confident Hugo Weaving) and Leo reconnects with his childhood girlfriend Sally (Jennifer Ehle), who brightens the film with her sunny smile and wounded yet spirited tenderness. Rose Troche, whose guerrilla American indie Go Fish transformed a lesbian love story into a classic romantic comedy, here straddles screwball farce and sophisticated sitcom with a clumsy style that skews more toward the latter, but she invests it with genuine affection. As the funny but flippant comedy winds up to almost painfully trite pairings between the ricocheting couples-to-be, Troche's loving direction allows everyone their dignity and their charm, even through the most contrived and kooky complications.
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I agree with everyone who has already mentioned Beautiful Thing - probably my favourite 'gay movie'.
One I watched recently and found really moving was Emmy winning The Matthew Shepard Story which somewhat unsuprisingly tells the true story of a young American man who was beaten and left to die on a hillside for the crime of being gay. A brief synopsis:
The movie seeks to illuminate the decisions Judy and Dennis Shepard had to make as to whether the death penalty should be sought for their son's killer. Throughout the movie there are several flashbacks of Matthew's life. It also shows the experiences and hardships Matthew endured throughout his life from junior high through college, including his first kiss, his first boyfriend and a rape scene.
The film's cast also included Kristen Thomson, Joseph Ziegler, Makyla Smith, Damien Atkins and Wendy Crewson. The ending featured Elton John's "American Triangle" from his album Songs from the West Coast. The song had been written about Shepard.
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QUOTE(xenix @ Sep 29 2007, 05:23)
I knew people would start raving about Beautiful Thing. It's a crap movie, far too preachy and issue led, while the script is stilted and better suited to a play (on which it was based). But it's got two teen boys kissing each other - woo. Shame they're both ugly - boo.
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QUOTE(xenix @ Sep 29 2007, 05:23)
I knew people would start raving about Beautiful Thing. It's a crap movie, far too preachy and issue led, while the script is stilted and better suited to a play (on which it was based). But it's got two teen boys kissing each other - woo. Shame they're both ugly - boo.
Neither of the boys were ugly, you just like old men.
The film has the classic quote
"Leah, come peel some tatters for tea !"
The Fruit Machine is one of my favourites. Robbie Coltrane as a drag queen for starters and 2 runaway boys down at the seaside.
Also "The Naked Civil Servant" , the story of Quentin Crisp is hilarious
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