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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

Brothers, The Web Series About Trans Men, Is Looking For Season 2 Funding

September 21, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

brothers-s2-kickstarterWe loved the web series Brothers when it hit the internet in 2014 (you can watch it here, here and here), and since then we’ve been hoping for a Season 2. Now it might be on its way, as long as it can pull together some funding through Kickstarter.

The show, about a group of trans men, is hoping to raise $40,000 to get the rest of Season 2 made (the first episode hs already been released and you can watch it below, alongside the fundraising video). As the makers are proud to boast on their Kickstarter page, ‘We were the first narrative series, in either broadcast or online, to not only feature transgender male storylines, but also to cast transgender actors in the main roles.’

There’s not too much info on where the plot will take us, but it’s promised that ‘The more money we are able to raise, the more content we will be able to deliver to you! This season already promises longer episodes, with deeper storylines and new characters.’ The hope is to get some more episodes out before the end of the year.

It’s a really good show, so if you’d like to help make Season 2 happen, head over to the Kickstarter campaign and donate some cash. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

The New Girlfriend (Une Nouvelle Amie) (DVD Review)

September 21, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Romain Duris, Anais Demoustier, Raphaël Personnaz, Isild Le Besco
Director: Francois Ozon
Running Time: 108 mins
Certificate: 15
Release Date: September 21st 2015 (UK)

Throughout his career French director Francois Ozon has shown a great interest in both sexuality and femininity. Those two things come together in The New Girlfriend, which is based on a story by Ruth Rendell, but is certainly not a murder-mystery.

Claire (a brilliant performance from Anaïs Demoustier) is devastated when her best friend since childhood, Laura, dies. She has promised she will look out for Laura’s husband, David (Romain Duris), and their young child, but due to her grief she puts off this duty. When she finally decides to visit she is shocked to discover David looking after his baby while dressed as a woman. [Read more…]

Big Game (DVD Review)

September 21, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Onni Tommila, Ray Stevenson, Victor Garber, Felicity Huffman
Director: Jalmari Helander
Running Time: 90 mins
Certificate: 15
Release Date: September 21st 2015 (UK)

Big Game will not be winning the award ‘Most Sensible Movie Of The Year’. Indeed it reaches Fast & Furious levels of preposterousness, where you either have to submit to its inherent silliness or alternatively break down in tears and decry the state of modern entertainment. Personally I went for the former.

The US President (Samuel L. Jackson) is flying to some important talks when an evil terrorist (played by an actor who looks the dictionary definition of ‘stereotypical foreign bad guy’) blows Air Force One out of the sky. The Pres is put in an escape capsule and dropped into the middle of the remote Finnish wilderness. [Read more…]

Roland Emmerich’s Stonewall Movie Meets Mixed Reviews Following Toronto Film Festival Premiere

September 21, 2015 By Tim Isaac 1 Comment

stonewall-brick-slideThere was a huge amount of controversy and calls for a boycott following the release of the trailer for Roland Emmerich’s Stonewall, due to the fact it made it look like the whole thing was solely about a cisgender, young, pretty, white guy, and that it would therefore remove the key contribution of trans and people of color to the 1969 riots.

However, others said that as it was just  trailer, it might be best to wait until the entire film had been screened. Now it’s recieved it premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, and if the first reviews are to be believed, the movie isn’t the triumph its director might have hoped.

In a Guardian review titled ‘There’s a riot going on! Pity Roland Emmerich missed it’, Henry Barnes writes, ‘It’s still difficult for gay cinema to pass into the mainstream. Emmerich, who put his own money into making the film, should be cheered for giving it a shot. Unfortunately the compromises he’s made leave Stonewall feeling neutered. A member of the Mattachine Society makes a speech about how gay men should assimilate. “Wearing a suit and tie will make them realise they’re just like you,” he says. Stonewall tries the same trick. By trying to disguise itself as a coming-of-age romance, it hides the real story underneath.’

Henry DeBruge in Variety, isn’t much more postive, saying ‘While it’s encouraging to see such a subject treated with the same grandiosity afforded alien invasions, particularly at a moment when gay rights hold such currency, representation-starved audiences deserve more than this problematic collection of stereotypes, which lacks the galvanizing power of such recent we-shall-overcome triumphs as “Selma” or “Milk,” and won’t draw anywhere near their numbers.’

In The Hollywood Reporter, David Rooney is a bit more of a fan, although he certainly doesn’t give the movie a rave, saying, ‘While Stonewall hits every obvious, manipulative button with a forceful hand, it’s also consistently engaging, relating experiences grounded in the turbulent past that should resonate for many in our more complacent present.’

As for the question of how the movie treat people of color and trans characters, he notes, ‘Diversity representation mostly functions as colorful window-dressing, with notes of humor pretty much confined to routine sassy attitude, and when the riot starts, the Wonder Bread lead gets to throw the first brick. But the secondary characters are treated with affection and respect, and far from sidelined during the climactic clash.’

John Hazelton in Screen Daily also find issues with the movie, saying ‘Stonewall almost lets its tale of a young gay man finding his way in New York City overshadow its account of the 1969 riots that give the film its title and led to the birth of the gay liberation movement. That might not have mattered if the personal story had been more satisfying, but as it is this passion project from blockbuster director Roland Emmerich… feels like a strangely squandered opportunity.’

The Playlist meanwhile doesn’t mince its words, saying, ‘While Emmerich’s intentions may be pure, he lacks the delicacy, intelligence, and skill to do right by a premise rife with potential for disaster — a topic in which the man is all too well-versed… The insulting obviousness with which characters make declarations about the Change That Must Come and the Injustice That Has Been Suffered For Too Long strip the film of any potential for resonant poignance with its intended audience. Emmerich’s freedom fighters speak not like human beings, but political mouthpieces designed to express the simplest ideas for the simplest-minded audiences.’

It certainly doesn’t bode well for the film, which was already facing controversy and resistance. However Emmerich’s career has been marked by getting unfavourable reviews (for films such as 2012 and The Day After Tomorrow) and yet making money at the box office, so he’ll be hoping for the same when the film reaches US cinemas later this week.

You can take a look at a clip from the movie below. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Jeremy Irvine  DIRECTORS: Roland Emmerich  FILMS: Stonewall  

Kristen Bell Joins Hubby Dax Shepard In The CHiPs Film

September 21, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

kristen-bellWhile it might feel like every classic US TV series has been made into a film, there are still a few out there, including CHiPs, which ran from 1977-1983. However for a while a film version has been in the works, with Dax Shepard set to write, direct and star.

Now it’s been announced that he hasn’t gone to far to find a co-star, as his wife, Kristen Bell is set to appear in the movie, according to TheWrap. Michael Pena, Adam Brody, Rosa Salazar and Vincent D’Onofrio are also set to star.

The film, ‘follows two California highway patrol officers and their adventures in crime-fighting. Shepard takes over the role of Officer Jon Baker, while Pena inherits the role of Frank “Ponch” Poncherello from Erik Estrada.’

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Dax Shepard, Kristen Bell, Michael Pena  

Hamlet – Maxine Peake (DVD Review)

September 20, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Maxine Peake, John Shrapnel, Barbara Marten, Gillian Bevan, Thomas Arnold
Director: Sarah Frankcom, Margaret Williams
Running Time: 184 mins
Certificate: 12
Release Date: September 14th 2015 (UK)

Taking a classic play and swapping the traditional genders is always in danger of looking a little gimmicky. There were certainly a few who thought that would be true when it was announced that Maxine Peake would be taking on the role of Hamlet in a new stage production. It’s not the first time it’s happened (Sarah Berhardht famously took on the role in 1899), but it’s certainly not common.

Peake’s performance was filmed live in Manchester and beamed live to cinemas, and now that’s been brought to DVD. [Read more…]

Pitch Perfect 2 (DVD Review)

September 20, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, Hailee Steinfeld, Brittany Snow, Skylar Astin
Director: Elizabeth Banks
Running Time: 110 mins
Certificate: 12
Release Date: September 21st 2015 (UK)

The Pitch Perfect movies are proof positive that despite many people arguments to the contrary, originality isn’t the key to an entertaining film. Indeed, both films are just about as clichéd as it’s possible to get story-wise, following tried and tested formulas for this sort of film. However, despite that – or actually arguably partly because of the oddly comforting nature of that – they are huge amounts of fun.

This time around things have moved on a few years and rather than being a freshman, Beca (Anna Kendrick) is now getting ready to graduate and thinking about the future. Her a cappella group, The Barden Bellas, are now three time national champions, until disaster strikes when ‘Fat’ Amy (Rebel Wilson) suffers a major wardrobe malfunction while performing for the President, which results in the group’s tour being cancelled and threatened with never being able to compete again. [Read more…]

Gay Short Film Showcase: The Disgustings: Save The Date – Jordan Firstman & Drew Droege hate everything once more

September 19, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

disgustings-save-the-dateAlmost a year ago we got The Digustings, a great short film about a couple of gay men who hate and bitch about absolutely everything, putting down the world around them as a way to ignore their own deficiencies.

Now writer/director/star Jordan Firstman is back with a follow-up, which once more co-star gay entertainment mainstay Drew Droege, where the duo’s alter-egos are giving relationship advice that nobody has asked them for.

The Digustings: Save The Date is a collaboration with Gawker and the Hulu show Difficult People, and it’s been suggested that we may get to see more of this satirical skewing of some of the worst parts of gay culture in the future.

If you know a short film we ought to be posting, tell us by getting in touch via our contact page. And check out more gay short films and web series here. [Read more…]

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

Stonewall Director Roland Emmerich Says He’s Found It Easy To Be Gay In Hollywood

September 19, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

roland-emmerich-stonewallWhile LGBT actors still have to face various issues in Hollywood, not least due to many executives (some of whom are gay themselves) still feeling it’s ‘easier’ to cast a straight or closeted person in case having a gay actors affects the project’s money-making potential in some parts of the world.

However, it doesn’t seem that’s as much of an issue for those behind the camera, with directors such as Bryan Singer and Roland Emmerich being handed massive projects with no one really caring about their sexuality (although it did become a bit of an issue for Singer last year).

2012 and The Day After Tomorrow director Roland Emmerich has been talking about how easy it’s been for him, telling The Guardian at the Toronto International Film Festival, “For me, being gay in Hollywood was easy. I never made a big deal out of it. I was just openly gay. It happened late because I never wanted to have the words ‘gay director’ in front of my name. I wanted to make such different films. It’s not befitting but now I can be openly gay and still make these films.”

He’s also promised that he’s included gay characters in his upcoming Independence Day seuqel, Resurgence, something that’s still incredibly rare in mega-budget movies.

Emmerich was in Toronto for the premiere of Stonewall, his movie about the 1969 riots in New York that are seen as the beginning of the modern gay rights movements. There’s been plenty of controvery over the film, with many accusing it – based solely on the trailer – of white-washing and erasing trans people, as it focuses on a white, cisgender gay man (played by Jeremy Irvine), but it’s only in Toronto that the first people have been able to see the full movie and judge whether the accusations are justified.

The director doesn’t seem too bothered about the controversy though, calling it “strange” and saying, “A friend of mine was executive for Tristar at the time of Philadelphia. They got so much shit from the gay audience and when this whole controversy over my trailer started, he actually just sent me a couple of quotes people had said about Philadelphia just to make me feel that there’s a precedent for this.”

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
DIRECTORS: Roland Emmerich  FILMS: Stonewall  

Brie Larson Will Be Billie Jean King In Battle of the Sexes Movie

September 19, 2015 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

brie-larsonThe battle of the Battle Of The Sexes movies continues with Variety revealing that Brie Larson has replaced Emma Stone in a planned film about the infamous tennis match between the legendary Billie Jean King and misogynist Bobby Riggs.

The film is one of two movies about the event in the works, with HBO planning one starring Elizabeth Banks and Paul Giamatti, while Fox Searchlight is behind the one with Larson as King and Steve Carell as Riggs.

Simon Beaufoy (Slumdog Millionaire) wrote the script. Previously Danny Boyle was set to direct, but it now appears he’ll produce with Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris (Little Miss Sunshine) helming.

The film will be set in the early 70s, when former male World Number 1 tennis played and self-proclaimed chauvinist Bobby Riggs’ declared that the female game was inferior and that a top woman player couldn’t beat him even at the age of 55. He then challenged the already legendary female player Billie Jean King to a match, but she declined.

However Margaret Court, who was then the top female player in the world, took on the challenge, but lost to Bobby in straight sets, seemingly confirming Riggs’ claims. King wasn’t going to stand for that and agreed to play Bobby in what became a nationally televised media sensation.

It was an important time in King’s life for another reason too, as for the first time she’d relatively recently become involved in a relationship with a woman, even though she was still married to a man at the time.

These aren’t the only Battle Of The Sexes movies in the works either, as Will Ferrell has previously been reported to be working on a comedy version where he’ll play Bobby Riggs. However there hasn’t been any news on that film for some time.

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:
ACTORS: Brie Larson, Steve Carell  DIRECTORS: Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris, Danny Boyle  
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