A concise synopsis of gay-themed movies and gay interest films. Click on the photos to enlarge.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
P.S. Your Cat is Dead (2002)
On New Year's Eve, unemployed LA actor and writer Jimmy Zoole (Steve Guttenberg) is having a terrible night. His girlfriend Kate (Cynthia Watros) has just left him, his latest play has been cancelled after only one performance, and he has just learned that his cat has died in an animal clinic. Then Zoole discovers burglar Eddie Tesoro (Lombardo Boyar) hiding under his bed and decides to teach him a lesson. Zoole ties him to the kitchen counter, and drunk on power tortures and torments the gay Mexican burglar for the next 24 hours. He learns Tesoro had broken in a few times before, stealing his manuscripts and other things. Tesoro fights back with clever words and the two argue during a claustrophobic evening. Trapped together in a standoff, what initially begins as a game of cat-and-mouse becomes a strange experience, as the two different men bond over their situation and their shared struggles. Their relationship takes on a homosexual dimension when Tesoro tells him he is gay and Zoole interviews him about his love life, supposedly "to get material for a novel". Zoole, who was earlier shown as being in mourning for a male friend, begins to question his own sexuality. He gets revenge on his girlfriend when she shows up at his apartment with her date, only to find him chatting with a young bare-butted male tied to his sink. Eventually, Zoole and Tesoro come to terms with each other and the last scene hints at a deep friendship.
This witty, bizarrely twisted black comedy is based on the novel and play by James Kirkwood, Jr., who also helped write the screenplay. Eddie is named Vito in some earlier versions. Director Steve Guttenberg combined the play and the novel into a movie, which he co-wrote with comedian Jeff Korn, starring himself as Jimmy Zoole.
Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971)
Daniel Hirsh (Peter Finch), a gay Jewish doctor, and Alex Greville (Glenda Jackson), a divorced middle-aged recruitment consulant, share the same answering service. They also share the same lover, because both are both having affairs with the same male sculptor, Bob Elkin (Murray Head). He is much younger, bisexual, and quite self-absorbed. Not only are Hirsh and Greville aware that Elkin is seeing the other but they actually know each other as well. Despite this, they put up with the situation through fear of losing Elkin, who switches freely between them. For Greville, the relationship is part of the growing disillusionment with her life, failed marriage and difficult childhood. For Hirsh, it is an escape from his repressed Jewish upbringing. He is not concerned or obsessed with his homosexuality. Both realise their situation is temporary, and when Elkin decides to leave the country, they both come face to face for the first time, at the very end. Despite their competitive situation and love for Elkin, both know that it is time to move on.
This drama about the bisexual love triangle between three characters navigating the changing mores of the early 1970s sexual revolution straddles the line between character study and social commentary. Considered groundbreaking for its frank depiction of homosexuality, including one of the first onscreen same sex kisses, the film's nonjudgmental approach to its characters' loneliness is shaped by Penelope Gilliatt's screenplay, John Schlesinger's direction, and the excellent performances of its two leads. Ron Geesin composed the original music. Schlesinger's film highlights some facts about how people's attitudes to relationships and each other have changed over just two generations.
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