There was a point in film history when almost any film with gay or lesbian
characters or content was defined as transgressive. In the 1960s such films
as Victim, The Children’s Hour and
Compulsion, with their tastefully handled
homosexual content, were considered shocking. By the 1970s the closet was
opened and Boys in the Band, Midnight Cowboy, Sunday, Bloody, Sunday, and
The Killing of Sister George shocked and titillated audiences. Over the
past 15 years—thanks in part to the rise of independent cinema and the
work of queer artists and activists—there is no dearth of gay and lesbian
images or plots. Drag queens (and Kings) have had their day in Hollywood
with Victor/Victoria, The Birdcage, and To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything,
Julie Newmar. The light gay comedy—usually a pallid imitation of the style
of Noel Coward—has been well represented with Billy’s Hollywood Screen
Kiss, Better than Chocolate, I Think I Do, and Trick. Even television was
loosened up with “Ellen” and “Will and Grace” as well as a host of minor
sidekicks on a number of shows, and even hot pop junk like “Survivor” has
featured a real, live gay person as its anti-hero in Richard, the fag with
power and brains you love to hate.
But to a large degree all of these films are homogenized and pasteurized
versions of queer experience. They are, like most Hollywood products (and
an increasing number of independent films), lifeless reflections of a consumerized
world that has little to do with real lives and real people. The acceptance
of homosexuality in popular culture is predicated not on marginalization,
but on trivialization.
It is, of course, impossible for gay characters and scenes in films to
have that innate shocking power that the kiss between Murray Head and Peter
Finch had in Sunday, Bloody, Sunday 30 years ago. Nor is that even desirable,
since the scene’s power was based, in no small part, on revulsion. But
the impulse behind many gay and lesbian movies has radically changed from
wanting to deal with serious issues (in both light and serious ways) to
wanting to entertain in the most simplistic way. It is not that gay people’s
lives have to be treated with severe moral gravity—a gravity that, in the
past, usually focused on the existence of homosexuality—but they should
be taken seriously. Granted, there are a few films that do this—Kimberly
Pierce’s powerful Boys Don’t Cry about the murder of transgendered Brandon
Teena, Alex Sichel’s charming and scary All Over Me, and Roland Tec’s moral
examination of gay male relationships, All the Rage took their characters,
lives, and situations seriously. But for the most part the boon in gay
and queer cinema is a lifeless and insubstantial one.
Nowhere is this more evident then in John Waters’s newest release Cecil
B. Demented. There is no doubt that John Waters has an incredible knack
for hitting that ironic, queer cultural nerve. From Pink Flamingo with
its scornfully celebratory vision of white trash life to Polyester ‘s skewering
of middle class norms to Serial Mom ‘s dissection of female maternal perfection,
he had his finger on the ever-weakening pulse of U.S. culture. Certainly
the idea behind Cecil B. Demented is great: its eponymous hero (Stephen
Droff) a mostly insane, independent film maker who heads a cult of movie
mavens, called the Sprocket Holes, are bent on destroying Hollywood and
promoting their own “radical” brand of art. They live in an abandoned 1930s
movie palace and have dedicated their lives to destroying bourgeois art
and shocking middle class sensibilities. Cecil’s grand plan is to kidnap
fading Hollywood starlet Holly Whitlock (Melanie Griffith) and force her
to be in his new movie, which, in true cinema vérité, will be filmed in
a series of planned guerilla theater interactions. The joke is, of course,
that after some resistance Holly sees the error of her ways ands becomes
a full fledged member of the Sprocket Holes and happily participates when
Demented and his crew crash a luncheon for Hollywood bigwigs, or disrupt
a screening of mainstream schlock like Patch Adams: The Director’s Cut.
Demented, as true an activist as he is an artist, means business and the
Sprocket Holes’ guns are as loaded as their cameras. People start dying
until they are finally cornered and captured at their final film shoot/shooting
at a drive in where Holly becomes, literally, the flaming goddess she has
always wanted to be.
If this sounds great on paper, it is. The problem is that there are a handful
of jokes that pay off, some throwaway lines, parts of Griffith’s bitch
persona, the occasional demented glint in Stephen Droff’s eyes, but for
the most part Cecile B. Demented feels like an 88-minute movie that should
have been an 8 minute skit on Saturday Night Live. What went wrong?
In the early and mid-1970s John Waters was considered by many to the great
hope of the daring, dada-esque school of American movie making that was
not afraid to take chances, push boundaries, and offend. What Waters brought
to the table of contemporary cinema was a huge “fuck you”—bad taste, sloppy
editing, low production values, often horrid acting were carefully used
to outrage good taste. It was revolutionary, if occasionally boring. More
importantly, Waters began to say something. When Dawn Davenport (Divine)
in Female Trouble holds her audience hostage at gunpoint and demands to
know, “Are you willing to die for art?,” we knew that Waters was in complete
understanding of the power of the interplay between art and audience. Even
after Waters went more Hollywood, in films like Hairspray (1988), he still
had something to say.
In her famous essay “Notes on Camp” Susan Sontag states that along with
Jewish moral seriousness, it is “homosexual aesthetic irony” that fundamentally
defines contemporary western culture. Waters’s vision was a combination
of both—leaning heavily on the latter—and it was unique for its time. It
was also probably one of the first examples of an overt gay sensibility
making its way into the mainstream.
The early John Waters’s films work had a moral integrity about them. He
understood that mainstream culture—from socially enforced gender roles,
to the idea of good taste, to commercialized concepts of art—was vacant
and corrupt. In Cecil B. Demented he has strayed from that vision. While
ostensibly it is still the radicals vs. the bourgeoisie nothing really
matters very much. Cecil and his crew seem as supercilious and as pointless
as their “corrupt” antagonistic Hollywood counterparts. Even Water’s choice
of satire seems lame. Making fun of Hollywood with Patch Adams: The Director’s
Cut is far too easy a target, sloppy to the point of embarrassing. Who
exactly is he trying to offend here? Robin Williams? An edgier choice would
have been a mean, wicked parody of Life is Beautiful or even Boys Don’t
Cry.
His casting of Melanie Griffith is no different that traditional Hollywood
casting against or aggressively with type. His use of Eric Roberts or Ricki
Lake (who made such a hit in Hairspray) is no longer the daring move it
might have seemed when Tab Hunter was the romantic lead (against Divine)
in Polyester. Casting Patty Hearst in Serial Mom seemed funny and apt—here
was an icon from the 1970s whose crazy life-history seemed to embody the
insane contradictions of politics and celebrity: today’s heiress is tomorrow’s
revolutionary is tomorrow’s pop star). But the use of Hearst here has no
significant meaning. Nothing pushes our buttons; nothing shocks us, or
even makes us think much.
There is a playful feeling that has been emerging in Water’s films over
the past decade since Hairspray and his attitudes towards sexuality—and
homosexuality—are friendlier and sexier. The boys are cute and there are
more overt gay characters and gay sexuality than we usually find in Water’s
films, but the jokes are silly. A character named Fidget (Eric M. Barry)
keeps playing with his dick; Lyle (Adrian Grenier) is a straight boy in
love with a gay man and suffering for it because he can’t get over his
heterosexuality—funny, but hardly cutting edge. Even the porn parody featuring
Cecil’s girlfriend, a porn actress named Cherish (Alicia Witt), features
gerbils crawling over her butt—old cable TV material. In the end Cecil
and his troupe make their statement against Hollywood and are destroyed
for it, even as Honey redeems herself and her art. The problem is that
Waters doesn’t seem to have any real statement to make and, alas, is also
destroyed for it. Having hit the bottom of the artistic barrel, maybe Waters
can retrench and—like Cecil B. Demented—dedicate himself to making us squirm
in our seats in discomfort and pleasure.
Chuck and Buck, written by Mike White and directed by Miguel Arteta, does
make us squirm. This strange, edgy little film knows exactly what it is
doing as it probes our insecurities and longings with what feels like a
thin pickaxe in our collective emotional brain. Part fairy tale, part psychological
study, Chuck and Buck uses a placid, ostensible, naiveté to mask a far
deeper, disturbing emotional core.
Buck (Mike White) is a gay man in its late 20s who, after his mother dies,
decides to look up Chuck (Chris Weitz) his former best friend from childhood
and to resurrect their friendship and sexual relationship. Buck is either
a complete innocent, or hopelessly naive, or slightly mentally impaired,
or the worst case of arrested development in current cinema. He seems to
have no relationship with prevailing social or emotional realities and
little concern but getting Chuck back into his life. Chuck, however, is
now Charlie, a successful record producer in Los Angeles, and engaged to
Carlyn (Beth Colt), a sensible, nice woman. Charlie also has a life and
does not want to share it with the needy, childlike, and sexually aggressive
Buck.
The bulk of the film details Buck’s stalking of Chuck and it’s painful.
Charlie doesn’t really want to see his childhood friend—and we sympathize:
Buck is creepy in his neediness, his lack of boundaries (he gropes Charlie
in the bathroom during the funeral), and his incessant desire to relive
this boyhood love affair—and becomes more and more hostile to him. On the
other hand, we can all sympathize, to varying degrees, with Buck’s simple
(and simple-minded) desire to be loved, appreciated, and acknowledged.
Mike White (who plays Buck) wrote the film, and he has an amazing ability
to convey the most elemental emotion without embarrassment or hesitation.
The performance is unnerving and often excruciating: he doesn’t understand
why Charlie refuses to leave his fiancée and pick up where they left off
15 years earlier. Buck may be creepy but he never loses our sympathy. But
part of the incredibly well crafted maneuvering and sensibility of Chuck
and Buck is that its anti-hero’s homosexuality never becomes
pathologized.
The issue here is longing and need, not sexual orientation per se, and
in a curious way Buck’s fragile (although demanding) emotional state cuts
through the divide of sexual orientation in the audience. Gay and straight
members alike can relate to feeling pathetically needy.
Mike White’s script takes some surprising turns. Buck writes a faux-fairy-tale
play about his relationship with Chuck that gets produced and, shockingly,
he finally gets his wish and beds down (if only for a night) his old friend.
White throws us some other loops, such as making it Chuck who started their
childhood affair—causing their friends to chant, “Chuck and Buck, suck
and fuck”—and implying that Chuck has been fleeing this attraction since
his teen age years. But what is so resonant about Chuck and Buck is that
it pushes us to responding emotionally, even viscerally, to the material.
Part of the risk is that Chuck and Buck could be read as homophobic. Buck
is a walking textbook of classic psychoanalytic symptoms that have defined
homosexuality—arrested development, mother-fixated, latent hostility to
women. He is the nightmare antithesis to the gamely happy, well adjusted,
and “normal” gay characters in films like Trick or Kiss Me Guido. It was
surprising that gay and lesbian groups, such as GLAAD, who monitor mainstream
media representations of homosexuality, did not complain about the film,
and even more surprising that gay magazines such as The Advocate even provided
positive, if somewhat wary, coverage of it.
It would be comforting to think that the success of films like Boys Don’t
Cry or Chuck and Buck signals a change in the maturity of both gay and
mainstream audiences. But such comfort may be premature. To a large degree,
for the time being, films that deal with gay, lesbian, and transgendered
characters with any complexity of depth are almost as difficult to find
as Hollywood films about interesting and complex heterosexuals. And that
may be, in our current contemporary culture, the closest we get to equality.