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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

French Kisses (DVD Review) – A collection of Galllic gay short films gets a release

January 15, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Various
Director: Various
Running Time: 117 mins
Certificate: 18
Release Date: January 8th 2017 (UK)

Many of the most interesting gay-themed films are shorts – not least because the lower budgets often allow them to explore themes and ideas that longer movies would be afraid to try in case it hurt their economic potential. French Kisses brings together six Gallic shorts, which vary quite a bit in quality. But are they worthwhile as a whole? Can a look below to see what we thought about each film.

Apollo
A young man is going swimming, but is worried that he doesn’t stack up ‘down below’ compared to the other guys. In his head everyone else’s package seems bigger and their body looks better. After an attempt to stuff his Speedos goes awry – and eating endless bananas doesn’t work either – he begins to despair about ever being ‘virile’ enough… until something unexpected happens. Quite short and a little odd, Apollo nevertheless has worthwhile points to make about the negative side of masculinity. It’s keen to point out that it’s not just women who feel the need to live up to unattainable standards. It’s also quite fun.
3 out of 5 [Read more…]

Saturday Church (US Cinema Review) – A musical look at a LGBTQ teen finding his home

January 14, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Luka Kain, Regina Taylor, Margot Bingham, Mj Rodriguez, Indya Moore
Director: Damon Cardasis
Running Time: 82 mins
Certificate: NR (US)
Release Date: January 12th 2018 (US)

Sometimes when you watch a film, one of the key things that exudes from the screen is how much love it was made with. That’s certainly true of the LGBTQ musical, Saturday Church, which has just hit US screens, following a successful, award-winning run at film festival.

Ulysses (Luka Kain) is a 14-year-old, African-America living in the Bronx. His father has just died, leaving him with his largely absent mother and domineering Aunt Rose (Regina Taylor). He’s also starting to explore his sexuality and gender expression – however both his mother and most particularly his aunt are determined that he shouldn’t ever wear women’s clothes – something they’ve discovered him doing more than once. While looking after Ulysses and his younger brother, Rose believes it’s her job to ensure Ulysses becomes a proper ‘man’. [Read more…]

It (DVD Review) – Pennywise is back and scarier than ever

January 14, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Bill Skarsgard, Jaeden Lieberher, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis, Finn Wolfhard
Director: Andres Muschietti
Running Time: 129 mins
Certificate: 15
Release Date: January 15th 2018 (UK)

I think it’s fair to say that after it had been in development for years, not many people held out much hope for the new version of Stephen King’s It. That’s especially true as after a number of interesting directors had been attached, the job eventually went to Andy Muschietti, whose only previous feature credit was the underwhelming Mama.

However, it not only turned out to be a really good movie, but also a bit of a record-breaker at the box office. It scored the biggest ever September opening in the US, and ended up with the highest gross ever for an R-rated horror movie. [Read more…]

American Assassin (Blu-ray Review) – Dylan O’Brien takes on the terrorists

January 14, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Dylan O'Brien, Michael Keaton, Taylor Kitsch, Sanaa Lathan
Director: Michael Cuesta
Running Time: 111 mins
Certificate: 18
Release Date: January 15th 2018 (UK)

Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’Brien) is just a normal guy until his world is turned upside down when terrorists storm a beach he’s on, shooting him and kill his fiancée. After that he becomes obsessed with hunting down the bad guys and making them pay. Initially he tries to do this by himself, until he’s pulled into a CIA programme and trained by Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton) to be able to go into the field and take the terrorists down.

He gets pulled into something deeper and potentially even deadly when an investigation into some seemingly random attacks leads them to a mysterious operative. Even worse, that operative may have a nuclear bomb. [Read more…]

Classic Gay Movie My Beautiful Laundrette May Become A US TV Show With Big Sick’s Kumail Nanjiani

January 14, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Still from My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)

Ever since it was first released in 1985, the gay-themed British movie My Beautiful Laundrette has stood out as a unique, idiosyncratic and rather special entry in the LGBT cinema canon. Now it may be getting a new life as a TV series, according to Variety.

Perhaps most interesting is that it involves Kumail Nanjiani, who’s just coming off the much-praised and Oscar-nomination tipped, The Big Sick. Nanjiani is on board to co-write, produce and star in the TV adaptation of the movie.

The original film starred Gordon Warnecke as Omar, a young British Asian man, keen to make a success of himself. He takes on the running of a lauderette, and around the same time reunites with an old school friend, Johnny (Daniel Day Lewis), who’s since become involved with a bunch neo-fascists. Despite that, the two of them find themselves getting closer until romance erupts.

We may be over 30 years after the film was first released, but the issues of fascism, sexuality, and the problems faced by second and third generation immigrants are more alive than ever in Trump’s America.

Also producing is Hanif Kureishi, who wrote the original screenplay for the 1985 movie, and Steven Gaghan, best known for writing Traffic and directing Syriana. It’s early days yet though, with no info on what changes they might be making for the TV version, and no TV channel or streaming service currently attached to finance or air it.

It’s certainly an idea with potenitial, so hopefully we’ll get to see it sometime soon.

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Producers Behind New Josh Radnor TV Show, Rise, Defend Turning The Main Character Straight

January 13, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

In this day and age, if you’re basing a TV show on a real person, and that person is gay, you’d better have a damn good reason for turning them straight. Unfortunately, many felt that Rise showrunner Jason Katims failed that test when he talked to reporters during the TCA Winter Tour about why the lead character in the upcoming show is straight, when he was inspired by a gay man.

The series is based on Lou Volpe’s book, Drama High, which chronicled how as a closeted gay man he attempted to challenge his students by putting of edgy, thought provoking drama productions, such as Spring Awakening. However, in the TV series Volpe becomes Lou Mazzuchelli (played by Josh Radnor), and he isn’t in the closet because he’s straight and a family man.

When asked about this Katims is reported as saying, “We took [the book] as an inspiration, and then I really felt like I needed to make it my own story. With Lou’s family life and Lou’s family itself, there’s a lot of reimagination. Not just in terms of gay or straight, but in terms of the family structure.”

Many sources also quote him as suggesting that one of the reasons he turned him straight was so he could ‘connect with the story’.

It is this latter idea that many have taken particular issue with, feeling it harks back to the endless examples of Hollywood striahgwashing, justified because either the makers couldn’t connect with a LGBT character or they decided the audience coudln’t. Or as Daily Beast’s Ira Madison III suggests in a tweet, ‘A story about a closeted gay man putting on Spring Awakening sounds a lot more interesting than a story about another Mr. Schue [from Glee]’.

Unsurprisingly US TV network NBC and those behind the show have been keen to suggest that what Katims said has been taken out of context, and that his full comments show that Rise is still committed to LGBTQ inclusion. They just decided to go a different way with the main character, and that, as with all other aspects of the series, the book and characters it was based on were treated as inspiration rather than adaptation.

Katims, along with executive producers Jeffrey Selle and Flody Suarez, released a statement to EW saying, “The misinterpretation by some of what we’ve done with this show goes against what we fundamentally believe and who we are as individuals. We are firmly committed to LGBTQ inclusion, and most of all, are excited for the community to see Rise, which we believe portrays positive depictions of LGBTQ characters and stories on broadcast television with honesty and sensitivity. To that end, we worked with GLAAD on the show’s LGBTQ storylines to ensure they are told with respect and authenticity.”

It also also worth noting that despite what some have said, Katims never directly said he turned the character straight to help connect with the story.

The showrunners full comments from the TCA panel were: “Well, I think that the source material that you’re talking about, Drama High and that teacher, Lou Volpe, was such an inspiration to me and to everybody doing the show. To see somebody who, as you said, spent 44 years dedicated to this program was amazing. And I really hope that — and believe that — we carry a lot of his spirit into the show. But in terms of the adaptation itself and why we made that decision, it’s like as you said, it’s very much we took that as an inspiration, and then I really felt like I needed to make it, you know, kind of my own story. And I definitely didn’t want to shy away from issues of sexuality and gender, but was inspired to tell the story of Michael, this transgender character, and Simon, who’s dealing with his emerging sexuality and growing up in a very sort of conservative religious family. And those stories felt like they were sort of resonant — resonated with me kind of as a storyteller, and I wanted to kind of lean into that. And then really with Lou’s family life and Lou’s family itself, there’s a lot of reimagination, not only in terms of whether he was gay or straight, but in terms of that family structure. Like, for example, you see in the pilot there’s a storyline with his son, Gordy, who we suggest has a drinking problem. As you go on and you watch the next several episodes, even in episode 2, that turns into a very a major story line and becomes, I think, a very powerful part of our storytelling. So, you know, I really wanted — I felt like it was important to me to honor what the source material was, but then to also kind of make it my own so that we would all be able to sort of lean in and do the work that we need to do as actors and writers.”

Although it seems the producers are sincere in what they say, there will undoubtedly be many who feel it’s still straight-washing and continues the very, very long history of film and TV taking inspiration from LGBT characters and then either turning them straight or hiding their sexuality. Even if you include different sexual and gender expression elsewhere in the show, to many it will still feel like pandering and laziness to make the lead heterosexual.

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ACTORS: Josh Radnor  

The Darkest Hour (Cinema Review) – A Golden Globe winning Gary Oldman takes on Churchill

January 10, 2018 By Mike Martin Leave a Comment

Starring: Gary Oldman, Kristen Scott Thomas, Lily James, Ben Mendelsohn
Director: Joe Wright
Running Time: 125 mins
Certificate: PG
Release Date: January 12th 2018 (UK)

If you need an actor to play Winston Churchill look no further than Harry Potter. The great Gary Oldman is the fifth man to play the wartime PM relatively recently after Timothy Spall, Robert Hardy, Michael Gambon and Brendan Gleeson, and he certainly has the gravitas to carry it off. That’s evidenced by his recent Golden Globe win and BAFTA nomination (the film also scored another eight nominations). Despite that, what he doesn’t have is a script that helps him out much, or a director who brings the story to life. A shame, as it could have been so much more, set during a pivotal month in WWII.

This is apparently the passion project of writer Anthony McCarten, but quite what he is trying to tease out of the well-worn story remains something of a mystery. He also plays fast and loose with history – the idea that Churchill was befriended by his best mate the King seems a stretch, as does the idea that most of Parliament wanted to do a deal with Hitler – some did certainly, but not the majority. Another idea, that a doubting Churchill was buoyed by taking a tube train and is roused by the voices of the people, is frankly ludicrous. Some truly dodgy acting by extras doesn’t help. [Read more…]

LGBTQ Film & TV Critics Group GALECA Announces Its Dorian Awards Nominations

January 10, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

The Golden Globes were handed out last week and the Oscars and still to come, but sandwiched between them is the Dorian Film and TV Awards, given out by GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics (of which yours truly is a member).

The nominations for this year’s gongs have been announced, which were unsurprisingly led by Call Me by Your Name, which scored nine nominations. That includes nods for both the film’s lead actors, Timothee Chalamet and Armie Hammer, as well as for Best Film, Best Screenplay, Best Director and more.

While other film awards have treated Call Me By You Name as the ony great gay-themed movie of the year, GALECA has highlighted others, most notably the excellent French movie, BPM (Beat Per Minute), about members of the activist AIDS organisation ACT UP Paris in the late 1980s and early 1990s. As well as expected nominations in the Best Foreign Language Film and LGBTQ Film Of The Year categories, it also scored nominations for Best Film, Best Actor (for Nahuel Perez Biscayart) and Unsung Film Of The Year.

It may also not be a coincidence that the other nominees for Best Film also had stories that focussed on outsiders – Lady Bird (which also features a prominent gay subplot), Get Out and The Shape of Water. Nods for LGBTQ Film Of The Year went to Battle of the Sexes, the excellent trans-themed Chilean drama A Fantastic Woman, and Britain’s gay farming flick, God’s Own Country, along with Call Me By Your Name and BPM.

Other than Call Me By Your Name, the most nominations in the film categories overall went to The Shape of Water with seven nominations, and Get Out, which scored six.

There’s also the Dorian’s more unusual categories, including Campy Film Of The Year, where Baywatch, The Disaster Artist, The Greatest Showman, I, Tonya and mother! will compete for being the most over the top. You can take a look at the nominees for all the categories across film and TV below. The winners will be announced on January 31st, ahead of the winner’s toast in LA on February 24th. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Armie Hammer, Timothee Chalamet, Nahuel Perez Biscayart  FILMS: Call Me By Your Name, 120 Beats Per Minute (BPM) Get Out, Lady Bird, The Shape Of Water  

Win A Three-Month Subscription To Online Live Performance Streaming Service, Digital Theatre

January 9, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Digital Theatre has officially announced the launch of an online subscription platform that brings the best of live theatre, ballet, opera and classical concerts, to your own screen. Performances can be streamed anytime, anywhere, and to any device.

Subscribers will have access to over 65 productions, including: Simon Russell Beale in The Tempest, Antony Sher in King Lear, Zoë Wanamaker and David Suchet in All My Sons; Richard Armitage in The Crucible and David Tennant & Catherine Tate in Much Ado About Nothing, with a further
50 curated productions from some of the world’s leading producers, all scheduled for release over the next six months.

The selection also includes the 20th Anniversary production of the acclaimed gay play, Beautiful Thing, which you can read our review of here.

We’re offering five lucky readers the chance of winning a free, three month subscription to Digital Theatre. To be in with a chance of winning, answer the question below and fill in your details, then press submit! The competition closes on January 23rd, 2017, so get answering and good luck.

To find out more about Digital Theatre, go to www.digitaltheatre.com. [Read more…]

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Submissions Open For The 2018 Iris Prize Festival, The ‘Gay Short Film Oscars’

January 9, 2018 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Still from 2017 Iris Prize winner, Mother Knows Best

There are a lot of great LGBT short films made every year, most of which struggle to get the kind of exposure they deserve. However, one festival has not only championed LGBT shorts, but has developed an impressive reputation over the last decade, with some now referring to it as the ‘gay short film Oscars’ – Cardiff’s Iris Prize Festival.

Submissions for this year’s Iris Prize Fest have now opened, with filmmakers invited to send in their LGBT-themed short and see whether it can make it onto the annual shortlist of 35 films that will compete for the International Iris Prize, or the 15 up for the Iris Prize Best British Short. All the shortlisted film will screen in Cardiff during the festival between October 9th and 14th. The International Iris Prize award is worth £30,000 and continues to be the world’s largest short film prize, thanks to the generous support of The Michael Bishop Foundation.

The festival can certainly be a great springboard, as the inaugural winner of the Iris Prize in 2007 was Dee Rees, who is tipped for Oscar success with the highly praised Mudbound. After winning the top prize at Iris, Rees travelled to Wales to make Colonial Gods, a drama set in an immigrant community in Butetown, Cardiff.

Iris Prize Chair Andrew Pierce comments, “This is always an exciting period for us at Iris HQ – that time of year when we realise we are still able to offer a prize fund of £50,000 to invest in new LGBT film talent. Thanks to the generous support of The Michael Bishop Foundation, the Iris Prize continues to be the largest and only LGBT short film prize in the world which allows the winner to make a new film.”

“Thanks also to Pinewood Studios Group we are for the fourth year running able to support British film makers directly with a prize valued at £20,000 – sound post production on their next short film project. Iris is more than just a trophy that gathers dust or a certificate that yellows on the wall. Iris is what film makers need – funding, support and guidance.”

“This year we will be visiting locations across the UK to encourage more local submissions and to encourage more people to join us in Cardiff for our annual celebration of LGBT film.”

You can find out more about submitting films to Iris over on the official website.

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