A concise synopsis of gay-themed movies and gay interest films. Click on the photos to enlarge.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Before Night Falls (2000)



















In Cuba after the revolution in 1959, gay poet and novelist Reinaldo Arenas (Javier Bardem) moves to Havana where he is swept up in the revolutionary spirit and joins a circle of writers and artists. His first novel, "Singing from the Well," is published in Cuba, but as Castro's oppressive regime gathers force, Arenas' homosexuality and political writing make him a target. He is arrested after two boys who have stolen from him falsely accuse him of sexual assault. Later he gets into trouble for having his books smuggled out of the country and published abroad. For a decade he goes in and out of prisons, escapes from prison and tries to leave Cuba on a tire inner tube. The attempt fails and he is rearrested. In prison he helps other inmates to write letters to wives and lovers. When he is forced to renounce his books, he is released. In 1980 he is told that, as part of the Mariel Harbor Boatlift, he is allowed to emigrate because of being gay. After first suspecting this might be a trick, he successfully claims homosexuality, and moves to Miami. Then he relocates to NYC with his friend Lazaro Gomez Carilles (Olivier Martinez). Arenas' hopes for a new life are destroyed by AIDS, and without health insurance, he kills himself in 1990 at the age of 45. A friend is present who promises not to alert medical services. Moreover, he speeds up death by suffocation with a plastic bag.

This was the second film of director Julian Schnabel, after "Basquiat" (1996). It took 4 years to produce the film, and it had its world premiere at the 2000 Venice International Film Festival. The most confusing thing in this movie is that Johnny Depp plays two separate characters: the first is a drag queen in jail, and the second is as a Lieutenant who interrogates Arenas. It's not clear if this second character is the first one out of drag, or if Depp is playing someone else entirely. Carter Burwell composed the music. The screenplay was written by Julian Schnabel, Cunningham O'Keefe, and Lázaro Gómez Carriles, based on the autobiography by Reinaldo Arenas. The Spanish title is "Antes Que Anochezca". Available in Spanish and English languages.

Almost Normal (2005)



















Gay college professor Brad Jenkins ( Andrew Keitch) has a mid-life crisis at age 40 and is tired of being different because he is gay. Brad's best friend Julie (Joan Lauckner) urges him to end his self-pity and attend the upcoming family reunion that he has been dreading for months. The thought of the family gathering causes Brad to drink too much alcohol before getting behind-the-wheel. A violent crash yanks Brad back in time to his high school days, and the transported teenager soon discovers that in this parallel universe all of his former classmates are gay. The world is gay and to be straight is considered deviant behavior. Brad has to decide whether to remain in the past and be "normal" or attempt to return to his old life. Local jock Roland (Tim Hammer), who had ignored him before, now dates him. However, he grows attracted to a girl--his sister-in-law in the real world. Eventually, everyone dances with people of the opposite sex at the school ball, although they are in the gay fantasy world. Brad decides to return to his life as a professor, and is alarmed by a homophobic discourse on TV.

The film describes itself as "Back to the Future meets Peggy Sue Got Married", and that's a good description of this gay-themed comedy. It's good-natured, amusing, and conventional in its storytelling--except that it's a low-budget contemporary fantasy intended for a gay audience. Jonathan Joyner composed the music, and Marc Moody wrote the screenplay and directed.

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