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Big Gay Picture Show

Taking a look at the world of film through gay eyes - news, reviews, trailers, gay film, queer cinema and more

Taking a look at the world of film through gay eyes - news, reviews, trailers, gay film, queer cinema & more

Gay Film/Novel Boy Culture Set To Return As A Series, But It Needs Your Help

August 7, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Back in 2006, Q. Allan Brocka, director of Rick & Steve the Happiest Gay Couple in All the World and Eating Out, brought us Boy Culture, based on the novel by Matthew Rettenmund. Since then the movie about the complicated romantic entanglements of a hustler, simply called ‘X’, has become a bit of a cult gay favourite, with its spirit kept alive by Rettenmund’s Boy Culture blog.

Now though, there are plans to bring it to the small screen as a series, with Brocka and Rettenmund working on six 15-minute stories, which put together will create a feature-length, 90-minute whole. To help do that, they’ve launched a Kickstarter, which aims to raise $50,000 towards the cost of creating the show.

We’re also promised that, ‘the sequel will explore themes of sexuality, sex work, age, race, closeted celebrities, cosplay, PrEP, and how gay men can make a committed relationship work in a world where sex — just like your favorite show to binge-watch — is available on demand.’

A great cast is coming together to make it happen, including Gayby’s Matthew Wilkas, Noah’s Arc’s Darryl Stephens, Instagram star Matt Crawford, singer Steve Grand, and The Big Gay Sketch Show and BearCity’s wonderfully funny Stephen Guarino.

So what’s set to happen in the new series? Well, according to the Kickstarer, ‘Ten years after the drama of Boy Culture, “X” and Andrew — who were a couple when we left them — have broken up after a move to L.A., so are back where they started: They’re roommates with way too much chemistry.

‘”X,” out of hustling for years, is getting back into it, but finds himself rusty about how the business works. Hilariously, he is unwillingly taken under the wing of Chayce, a barely-legal twink who is ruthlessly up to speed on how to sell what he’s got.

‘Who says millennials are afraid of hard work?

‘In no time flat, this snarky kid is leading headstrong “X” around by the nose, and it’s a dynamic that the grumpily insecure, almost-over-the-hill-but-still-hot “X” never saw coming.’

You can take a look at the crowdfunding video below, and if you like what you see, head over to Kickstarter to help out. [Read more…]

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Call Me By Your Name Trailer – Take a look at the sensual gay Sundance hit starring Armie Hammer

August 1, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

There was lots of praise and plenty of column inches written follow Call Me By Your Name’s debut at Sundance, ensuring there’s plenty of anticipations for its cinema release. Now, just a few days after the first official poster was released, comes the trailer for the movie. Even from these brief scenes, you can start to feel why Sundance audiences liked it so much.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘It’s the summer of 1983 in the north of Italy, and Elio Perlman (Timothée Chalamet), a precocious 17- year-old American-Italian boy, spends his days in his family’s 17th century villa transcribing and playing classical music, reading, and flirting with his friend Marzia (Esther Garrel).

‘Elio enjoys a close relationship with his father (Michael Stuhlbarg), an eminent professor specializing in Greco-Roman culture, and his mother Annella (Amira Casar), a translator, who favor him with the fruits of high culture in a setting that overflows with natural delights. While Elio’s sophistication and intellectual gifts suggest he is already a fully-fledged adult, there is much that yet remains innocent and unformed about him, particularly about matters of the heart.

‘One day, Oliver (Armie Hammer), a charming American scholar working on his doctorate, arrives as the annual summer intern tasked with helping Elio’s father. Amid the sun-drenched splendor of the setting, Elio and Oliver discover the heady beauty of awakening desire over the course of a summer that will alter their lives forever.’

The film is due out in the UK on October 27th and in the US on November 24th. Take a look at the trailer below. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Armie Hammer, Michael Stuhlbarg, Timothee Chalamet  DIRECTORS: Luca Guadagnino  FILMS: Call Me By Your Name  

New Report Suggests No Progress For LGBT Characters In Hollywood In The Past Decade

July 31, 2017 By Tim Isaac 1 Comment

With the success of movies like Moonlight, it’s easy to think that perhaps things are slowly getting better for gay representation in Hollywood. However, according to a new in-depth study by Professor Stacy L. Smith and the Media, Diversity & Social Change Initiative at the University Of Southern California (USC), there’s been little change for the representation of women, ethnic minorities or LGBT characters in the past decade.

Deadline reports that Smith ‘examined the 900 top-grossing films from 2007 to 2016 (excluding 2011), analyzing 39,788 characters for gender, race/ethnicity, LGBT status and disability. The top 100 grossers of 2016 were included in the analysis.’

Her findings were that in 2016 a little under a third of characters were female, with a similar proportion of non-white characters. Meanwhile, just 2.7% of characters in top movies were disabled. It showed no meaningful change from 2007.

Things were even worse for LGBT characters, as despite a significant change in social attitudes and increased awareness, just 1.1% of characters in the top 100 films of 2016. Of those movies, only one had a gay lead character (Moonlight), and three-quarters of the top movies had no indentifiably LGBT characters at all. And not a single one of those films had a trans character. Even in those movies that did have an LGB character, more than half of those people were completely inconsequential.

Overall the report demonstrates Hollywood as a pretty stagnant world, where 95% of movies are directed by men, while a similar percentage are also white. Out of all 900 films sampled from 2007-2016, only three were directed by black women. With little progress for most under-represented groups across the past decade, it’s not exactly a hopeful picture.

You can read the full report here.

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Armie Hammer Gay Drama Call Me By Your Name Gets Its First Poster

July 30, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Call Me By Your Name perhaps got the most buzz of any of the movies that debuted this year at Sundance, with many suggesting the gay-themed romantic drama has a good chance of becoming a crossover mainstream success. Now the first poster for the film has been tweeted out, which you can take a look at below.

The movie  is based on Andre Aciman’s novel of the same name and stars Armie Hammer as a 24-year old American scholar spending the summer of 1983 in Northern Italy, where he attracts the attention of a 17-year-old Jewish-American boy, played by Timothee Chalamet. Michael Stuhlbarg rounds out the cast as the boy’s father.

The film is set to be released on October 27th in the UK and November 24th in the US. Take a look at the poster below, and you can click here for a clip from the movie. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Armie Hammer, Timothee Chalamet  DIRECTORS: Luca Guadagnino  FILMS: Call Me By Your Name  

Beach Rats Trailer – Take a look at the Sundance prize-winning, gay-themed film

July 24, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

This year was a good one for LGBT movies at Sundance, with the likes of Call Me By Your Name, God’s Own Country and Beach Rats making waves. A new trailer for the last of those films has now arrived, which you can take a look at below.

Beach Rats also won Best Director – US Features for Eliza Hittman at Sundance.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘On the outskirts of Brooklyn, Frankie, an aimless teenager, suffocates under the oppressive glare cast by his family and a toxic group of delinquent friends. Struggling with his own identity, Frankie begins to scour hookup sites for older men. When his chatting and webcamming intensify, he begins meeting men at a nearby cruising beach while simultaneously entering into a cautious relationship with a young woman. As Frankie struggles to reconcile his competing desires, his decisions leave him hurtling toward irreparable consequences. Eliza Hittman’s award-winning Sundance hit is a powerful character study that is as visually stunning as it is evocative.’

Beach Rats is will be in US cinemas from August 25th, and should arrive in the UK in November. [Read more…]

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DIRECTORS: Eliza Hittman  FILMS: Beach Rats  

My Friend Dahmer Trailer – Ross Lynch takes on a gay, future serial killer

July 24, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Films about real-life serial killers aren’t exactly rare, but movies about them when they were young, before they became multiple murderers are far less common. That’s the subject of My Friend Dahmer, starring form Disney Channel actor Ross Lynch as a teen version of Jeffrey Dahmer.

Dahmer is of course one of the most famous serial killers in history, who killed at least 17 people, most of whom he’d picked up at Milwaukee gay bars. The fact that he kept body parts, ate parts of them and had sex with their corpses ensured he stood out from nearly all other killers. He said what he really wanted was to create a kind of zombie so that the person would never leave him, and managed to kill several of his victims while injecting things into their brains as part of his experimentation. He also defied the stereotypical image of a monster, as Dahmer was quite handsome and most people thought he was pretty normal until it was discovered what he was really doing. He was killed in prison by another inmate in 1994.

His early life should make for an interesting film, as he killed animals as a teen, and committed his first murder while he was still living at home. Marc Meyers is directing the movie, based on Derf Backderf’s critically acclaimed graphic novel.

The first trailer for the movie has now been released, which you can take a look at below. It’s a rather creepy affair, especially if you know what really happened.

The film will be out in the US in the Autumn. No UK date is currently set. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Ross Lynch  

BearCity Director Doug Langway Shows Off His Epic Long-Distance Marriage Proposal

July 23, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Doug Langway gained a lot of fans for his BearCity film trilogy, which followed a group of hairier, burlier gay men than the twink/muscle that normally populate gay male movies, and which championed a different standards of beauty. It was a subject close to Doug’s heart, as he’s a self-confessed fan of the ‘polar bear’ (an older, grey-haired, larger gay man).

Now he’s found the man he wants and Doug is going for his own happy ending. He’s decided to share it with the world by posting the video of his marriage proposal on Facebook for us all to watch.

However, he did have a problem. How to make a big statement when your beloved is 10,000 miles away?

The answer he came up with involves an iPad, a Times Square billboard and plenty of well wishers. Take a look at the heartwarming video below. [Read more…]

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DIRECTORS: Doug Langway  

Howard Trailer – A look at the life of gay Beauty & The Beast lyricist Howard Ashman

July 20, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

In the annals of Disney history, Howard Ashman is a legend. The out gay lyricist was perhaps the key crative force behind the Disney renaissance of the late 1980s and early 1990s. After a couple of decades in the wilderness, Disney animation suddenly recaptured its magic with the likes of The Little Mermaid, Beauty & The Beast and Aladdin, all of which Ashman worked on.

Previously best known for his work alongside Alan Menken on Little Shop Of Horrors, Ashman’s importance to Disney wasn’t just to do with writing lyrics. He also produced, was heavily involved in the story creation and writing, and even held masterclasses with animators and others at the studio to help teach them how musicals worked and what it was they needed to do.

Tragically, he died of complications from AIDS before Beauty & The Beast hit cinemas (it’s been suggested Ashman saw that film as an AIDS metaphor) in 1991. Now a new documentary, simply titled Howard, is set to explore his life. A trailer has arrived to tie in with Disney’s annual expo, D23, which you can take a look at below. [Read more…]

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‘On Fire Island’ Gay Film Retrospective Heading To New York In August

July 19, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Over the past 40 years or so, Fire Island, on the edge of Long Island, New York, has become one of the world’s premiere gay retreats. Every summer, thousands of gay men descend on the area for fun and various forms of ‘recreation’.

The area’s gay history is intertwined with film. While it had been a gay enclave since the 1930s, the likes of Wahol’s My Hustler and perhaps more particularly Wakefield Poole’s legendary porn movie, Boys In The Sand, help bring it to wider – and more explicitly sexual – attention. That filmic legacy is being explored next month at Metrograph in New York City, with a series of screenings going under the title, On Fire Island.

The season includes some fascinating movies, including the ones mentioned above. Take a look at some more info from Metrograph below:

Sixty miles southeast of Manhattan, Fire Island acts as a calming tonic for those (mostly queer folks) looking for an escape during New York’s balmiest months. Former residents and visitors included Greta Garbo, W.H. Auden, Calvin Klein, Truman Capote, and Tennessee Williams. On screen, this 30 mile long utopia has served as the setting of a filthy two-act play (Warhol’s My Hustler), the backdrop of a cruel coming of age story (Frank Perry’s Last Summer), an environment for sexual discovery (Wakefield Poole’s Boys in the Sand), the setting for a dour 4th of July party (Stan Lopresto’s Sticks and Stones), and a place of contemplation for a man dying of AIDS (Bill Sherwood’s Parting Glances). Historical shorts will be paired with five features, beginning August 11, with special guests.

Boys in the Sand (Wakefield Poole/1971/90 mins/DCP)
Acclaimed Broadway dancer and director Wakefield Poole created a sensation when he and producer Marvin Shulman opened their gay adult feature, Boys in the Sand, at the 55th Street Playhouse in New York City in 1971. Starring Casey Donovan in three sexual vignettes, the film made Fire Island an international tourist destination and introduced gay sex positivity to straight audiences.

Last Summer (Frank Perry/1969/95 mins/16mm)
An X-rated (in the MPAA sense, not the XXX sense) cult coming-of-age classic, adapted from Evan Hunter’s novel by the eternally-underrated director/writer team of Frank and Eleanor Perry. Starring Barbara Hershey, Bruce Davison, Richard Thomas, and an Oscar-nominated Catherine Burns as a group of Fire Island youths whose impending maturity is marked by shattering emotional and sexual violence in this, the rare teen film untainted by sepia nostalgia. Print courtesy of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia

My Hustler (Andy Warhol and Chuck Wein/1965/67 mins/16mm)
Warhol’s camp tour de force concerns an idle competition on an empty summer day between tartly monologuing middle-aged queen Ed Weiner, his female Fire Island neighbor, and aging male prostitute, “The Sugar Plum Fairy,” for the attentions of peroxide-blonde “Dial-a-Hustler” hunk Paul America, ogled from deck chairs on the veranda. Bitchy, bitter, and among the flat-out funniest of Warhol productions.

Parting Glances (Bill Sherwood/1986/90 mins/35mm)
One of the first American movies to look the AIDS crisis dead-on, Sherwood’s bittersweet comedy-drama features a young Steve Buscemi in the star-making role of manic rock ‘n’ roller Nick, ex-lover of Richard Ganoung’s Michael, who is simultaneously coping with Nick’s illness and the imminent overseas departure of current boyfriend John Bolger. Setting his scene during one bustling 24-hour period which ends with a Fire Island foray, the sadly short-lived Sherwood faces tragedy with humane humor, creating one of the quintessential queer films of the Reagan debacle.

Sticks and Stones (Stan Lopresto/1970/85 mins/DCP)
A dime-store Rohmer via Boys in the Sand, Stan Lopresto’s chatty, cruel, melancholy film chronicles a 4th of July party on Fire Island. Featuring two lovers, Peter and Buddy, and friends The Lavender Guru, Bobby, and Bike-Boy Fernando, with a recently acquired Prince Albert, Sticks and Stones is a time capsule of now ancient gay norms and a portrait of the Pines long changed.

Further info is available at Metrograph.com

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Heroes Actor Thomas Dekker Officially Comes Out As Gay & Married

July 15, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

29-year-old Thomas Dekker has been acting since he was a kid, but is best known for appearing in TV’s Heroes, and as a young John Connor in The Sarah Connor Chronicles, as well as films such as the Nightmare On Elm Street remake.

A situation that occured during Dekker’s time on Heroes re-emerged last week when Hannibal creator Bryan Fuller was accepting an award. He recounted a story of how during his brief time as a producer on that TV show, an actor’s management threatened to pull them from the show if their character came out as gay. As a result, Fuller said, “The character became straight, and the actor came out as gay.”

Although Fuller didn’t name the actor, many were quick to realise this was a situation involving Dekker. There was one issue with what the producer said though, as the actor had never officially come out as gay.

Thomas has now decided to address that, releasing a statement on Instagram that reads, ‘My sexual orientation once again came into question this week when a prominent gay man used an awards acceptance speech to “out” me. While he did not mention me by name, the explicit details of his reference made it easy for the public and media to connect the dots. While it is an odd situation, I thank him because it presents a prime opportunity for me to publicly say that I am indeed a man who proudly loves other men. In fact, this April, I married my husband and I could not be happier. I have never lied to the press about the fluidity of my sexuality but this man claiming that I came out is not true. Because I have not “officially” until this moment. I simply refuse to be robbed of the glorious joy that belongs to me. To say the words myself. “I’m gay”. Those words are a badge of honor that no one can steal. Sexuality and who you love is a deeply personal and complicated thing. For some of us, it takes time to cultivate, discover and conclude. It is not something anyone should ever be ashamed of and certainly not something anyone should be rushed into. I agree with many who believe it is an important responsibility for LGBTQ persons with a platform to come out. It has the power to change minds, challenge beliefs and make others feel understood and supported. It can strengthen the progression of our community and help disarm those who discriminate against us. It is a brave, powerful and important thing to do but it is also a deeply personal decision. One that should only be made when you are ready. If we are to stand strong in the gay community, our mission should be support, not exclusion; love, not shame. I choose not to look back on the past with a regretful heart but rather focus on the future with a hopeful one. A future where myself and all others can feel free to express their true selves with honor and dignity. I embrace you, any of you, with open arms, kindness, faith and patience. For all of you who have supported me, before and now, I thank you from the bottom of my fledgling heart. Be proud of who you are. No matter how long it takes.’

Although he hasn’t been officially out, Dekker hasn’t shied away from appearing in LGBT-themed roles and films, including Gregg Araki’s Kaboom!, the TV movie Cinema Verite, 2014’s Lost In White City and the recently released (in the US) Do You Take This Man.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BWghACthQER/

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ACTORS: Thomas Dekker  
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