Showing posts with label GLBT Cinema. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GLBT Cinema. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Reel Thoughts Interview: Julianne Moore is All Right with Playing Gay

“Why didn’t I see the script for High Art?”

Julianne Moore remembers asking director Lisa Cholodenko that question when they first met at a "Women in Film" luncheon. “It was a very 'actorly' thing to say,” she laughed. The part in question went to Ally Sheedy, but Cholodenko ended up creating the role of Jules in The Kids Are All Right specifically for Moore, who has been attached to the project for five years.

Moore is an icon in the LGBT community for a lot of reasons. She’s played gay or bisexual characters in The Private Lives of Pippa Lee, The Hours, Boogie Nights and this year’s Chloe, and also played the unsuspecting wife of a closeted Dennis Quaid in Todd Haynes’ gorgeous Far from Heaven. She’s committed to women’s reproductive rights and speaks out against policies like Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and Prop 8. Playing Annette Bening’s committed partner was a joy.

“You know, I just loved (Jules). I love how she’s someone who’s so present emotionally and so good at connecting with people and communicating but is incredibly lost. Her oldest child’s leaving for college, the next one’s going to go in a couple of years, and she’s at a point in her life where she’s going “What have I done with the last eighteen years and what am I going to do with the rest of it?” Like Nic (Bening’s character) says, she really puts the cart before the horse, she acts “as if”. The searching quality I really loved about her. Emotionally, I think she’s the one who’s got the antenna. I liked that she feels first and thinks later.”


“The thing that Annette and I have going for us is that we’ve both been married for a really long time and we’re both parents. So the degree of affection that we show to one another commented on how the characters felt for one another and how connected they were. Even though there’s different stuff going on with them, they still touch each other and sit on the couch together and kiss each other hello. We wanted them to be affectionate and married.”

On meeting donor dad Paul (played by Mark Ruffalo), Moore remarked, “Jules is much more open to it. The one thing she’s secure about is her family. She’s not secure about herself, but she feels really solid about this family.”

One of the best parts of Moore’s performance is the way Jules seems to blossom when Paul appreciates her talent as a landscape designer. “I think what you’re noticing is that I have a real attraction for characters in transition and human stories. In film, you want to see someone go through an emotional arc. The great thing about film acting is that you want to put yourself in a position where you’re having an experience on camera.”


Moore understands how Jules and Nic get to the place where they’ve been together twenty years and pick on each other’s habits. “I think any of us who’ve been married or partnered for a long time, you know that there are ups and downs. It’s like Jules says, “Marriage is hard.” You’re not the same person you were when you met somebody, you’ve changed. There’s a lot of time, a lot of history ... there are going to be a lot of things about each other that you don’t like because that’s just how life is, and there are going to be things about someone that you can’t live without.”

And when one partner strays? “Another journalist told me that the person behind them at the screening said, “I wouldn’t take her back.” And I said, “Yeah? And how old were they?” They said, “About thirty.” I said, “Well, give them another thirty years.” Once you’ve invested the time and have the children and the life ... a lot of things happen in life. At my age, I know a lot of people who are getting divorced; and the ones who stay together haven’t gone through anything less than the ones who are getting divorced. They’ve hit the wall at some moment or the other. Everyone has a different tolerance level.” She gets why people would split up, but hopes people understand Jules’ motivations.

Moore concedes that LGBT couples face the pressure to be these perfect family units. “For same sex couples, it’s that thing that people used to say about race. If you’re going to be the only African-American student in the school, then you had to be the best student. For gay families, then you have to be the best parents. In this case, with these women, I think Nic, being the perfectionist, particularly feels that, and you see that energy in Annette’s performance.”


She noted a twenty-four year AMA study of the children of gay parents that was reported in the New York Times, saying, “They found that collectively, they are more well-adjusted, they are better students, all of that. They have been cherished and parented and “polished to a high shine”. I think there’s an incredible amount of pressure whenever you feel you’re a minority and you’re being watched that you have to be better than everybody else. I also think it’s interesting, as same-sex parents, you don’t have a baby by accident. You’re going into parenting with a real desire.”

I kind of liked that (Nic and Jules) each had a child biologically and that there were some genetic resemblances as well. It was kind of cool,” she explained, adding that she and Josh Hutcherson (who plays son Laser) subconsciously started matching each other’s energy.

Moore would be flattered if The Kids Are All Right garners Oscar attention, but wants people to see it more than anything. Moore has a few intriguing roles coming up, including the thriller Shelter with Jonathan Rhys Meyers, as the Virgin Mary in the comedy Elektra Luxx and opposite Steve Carrell in an untitled romantic comedy.

Interview by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Reverend's Reviews: Firth Time on DVD

One of the best gay-themed films in recent years (at least since Brokeback Mountain) is making its debut on home video today. Tom Ford's A Single Man, adapted from the novel by Christopher Isherwood, is a suitably dramatic but also enormously stylish and disarmingly funny account of a gay man preparing to commit suicide in the wake of his partner's tragic death.

Taking place over the course of one day in early-1960's Los Angeles, A Single Man's strongest attribute is a magnificent, Oscar-nominated lead performance by Colin Firth as Professor George Falconer. I believe Firth would have won the Academy Award for Best Actor if a certain Jeff Bridges hadn't snuck in under the wire with Crazy Heart. Firth will have to content himself with his Venice Film Festival and BAFTA awards. His performance is subtle and frequently amusing as well as heartbreaking.


Julianne Moore, Matthew Goode and Nicholas Hoult provide excellent support. In addition to a director's commentary by Ford, the DVD has a great, 12-minute making-of documentary that includes insightful interviews with Ford and all the principle cast members. Worth noting among Firth's and Hoult's recollections is how "well put-together" fashion designer Ford was while shooting his first movie. Firth remarks that Ford "consistently looked better behind the camera than any of us in front of it."

As Ford himself notes, "Fashion is fleeting; film lasts forever." A Single Man deserves a prominent place in GLBT and general cinema history. If you haven't seen it — or even if you have — buy or rent the Blu-Ray or DVD today!

Congratulations to Terry A. of Chicago, IL, the winner of our "I Want A Single Man" contest, sponsored by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment!  Thanks to all who entered!

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Reverend’s Previews: Outfest 2010 Celebrates LGBT Diversity

This year’s Outfest, the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, will boast 60 LGBT-themed feature films and 87 shorts from 23 different countries. The 28th edition of the oldest film festival in LA and the leading LGBT festival in the US will run July 8th-18.

Having had the opportunity to preview a number of the movies to be shown, I can attest that this year’s Outfest selections are generally more thoughtful and of higher quality than those I saw the past two years. As Outfest’s Executive Director, Kirsten Schaffer, rightly proclaimed, “This year’s incredible line-up celebrates all of the forward-thinking artists that push the boundaries for LGBT rights and equality.”


One such artist was the poet Allen Ginsberg, who is the subject of the Outfest Opening Night Gala film, Howl (the movie also opened the prestigious Sundance Film Festival earlier this year). James Franco of the Spider-Man series plays Ginsberg. Howl is the first dramatic feature from veteran documentarians Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, who made The Times of Harvey Milk and The Celluloid Closet among several acclaimed prior films.

The opening night festivities will kick-off at 8:00 PM on July 8 with a special presentation of the annual Outfest Achievement Award to lesbian actress Jane Lynch. Currently enjoying huge success as the domineering cheerleading coach, Sue Sylvester, on the Fox TV series Glee, Lynch has also given memorable performances in such diverse films as The 40 Year Old Virgin, Best in Show and last year’s Julie & Julia.


Each year, Outfest features a foreign film as its International Dramatic Centerpiece. Contracorriente (or Undertow) will be this year’s selection on July 13. It is set in an exotic Peruvian fishing village where love between two men is forbidden. The film was a rare gay-themed winner of the Sundance Film Festival’s World Cinema Audience Award in January.

There are too many movies that I’d recommend to list here, but a few highlights are:

The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls, an insightful and thoroughly enjoyable documentary about New Zealand’s legendary yodeling lesbian twins. Jools and Lynda Topp have been performing together since the 1970’s, and were pivotal figures in the 1986 passage of their country’s pioneering gay rights bill. If you want to learn the hysterical punchline to the twins’ joke, “Why can’t lesbians wear make-up when they go to Weight Watchers?,” see the movie!


Grown Up Movie Star, written and directed by the talented Adriana Maggs, is a smart, observant study of a teenage girl in rural Canada’s coming of age. Living with her closeted gay father doesn’t make things any easier for her. The movie also benefits from an excellent cast (newcomer Tatiana Maslany is a revelation as the teen, Ruby) and great, naturalistic — if dysfunctional — family rapport.

Children of God utilizes overlapping storylines and characters in its expose of closeted homosexuality and religious hypocrisy in the Bahamas. An attractive, interracial gay couple run afoul of the local fundamentalist pastor, who at one point privately sums up the motivation behind his anti-gay campaign thusly: “You have to give people something to hate; it brings them together.” The film is also worth seeing for its beautiful photography of sun-bathed, seaside locales.


Forever’s Gonna Start Tonight, with its title taken from Bonnie Tyler’s hit song of the 80’s, “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” is an admirably unsentimental documentary that turns its lens on 75-year old, transgendered drag performer Vicki Marlane. Still performing today after 59 years as a drag artist at Aunt Charlie’s in San Francisco, Marlane speaks candidly of her upbringing, legal run-ins, ill-fated love affairs and addictions. Marlane and the film’s producer-director, Michelle Lawler, are scheduled to appear at the Outfest screening.

Role/Play, the latest from Rob Williams, director of past gay hits Back Soon and Make the Yuletide Gay. It is a smart and sexy account of what might happen if a closeted gay soap opera star (hunky Steve Callahan) and an outspoken gay activist with marriage troubles (Matthew Montgomery, Callahan’s real-life partner) were to meet at a Palm Springs resort.


A Marine Story is timely to say the least, what with the current debate over revoking the US military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. Based on actual events, the film focuses on a recently-discharged lesbian (a dramatically and physically strong performance by Dreya Weber) who discovers her troubles are just beginning once she returns to her hometown. Written, directed and even edited — all very well — by Ned Farr.

Standouts among the numerous recommended short films to be shown during Outfest are the cute and funny Go Go Reject, which features the adorable Heath Daniels as a stripper hopeful who is labeled as too skinny but who isn’t going to take “No” for an answer; Last Address, an unusual, quietly devastating travelogue of the final residences inhabited by New York City-based artists who died of AIDS; and Public Relations, an upbeat romantic-comedy in which two female personal assistants meet and fall in love.


For me, Outfest wouldn’t be complete each year without its Sing-Along Musical night at the Ford Amphitheater. The 2010 winner of the annual online vote by Outfest fans is Grease 2, the campy 1982 sequel to Grease. Hardly as well-received as its predecessor, Grease 2 is still entertaining and somewhat underrated. It stars Michelle Pfeiffer in her first big-screen lead role, as well as then-pretty Maxwell Caulfield, a then-hot Adrian Zmed and Judy Garland’s daughter, Lorna Luft. What’s not to enjoy? It will screen at 8:30 PM on July 15. Feel free to dress as a T-Bird or Pink Lady!

The hilarious-sounding new comedy Spork will wrap up Outfest during the Closing Night Gala on July 18. For a complete listing of films or to purchase tickets for screenings and related events, please visit the Outfest website or call (213) 480-7065.

Preview by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Monday, June 28, 2010

MD Contest: I Want A Single Man

Movie Dearest is launching our very first contest today! Thanks to the generosity of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, one of our lucky readers will receive a free DVD of Tom Ford's critically acclaimed, award-winning A Single Man starring Colin Firth and Julianne Moore.

To enter, all you have to do is send an email with the subject line "I Want A Single Man" to the email address below. Please include the address you want the DVD shipped to along with your full name.


All information received will be kept confidential.  Contest restricted to US residents only please.  The winner will be chosen randomly on Tuesday July 6, the day A Single Man is released on DVD and Blu-ray.

That's next week, so enter now, and good luck!

UPDATE: This contest is now closed. Click here for the final results.