Shortbus – Opening Night of the Seattle Lesbian and Gay Film Festival

Jon got back from Japan on Friday morning, so he was able to come with me to see Shortbus at Cinerama. The place was packed, and it was a good time, all in all.

After talking to Jon about Shortbus over Septieme burgers yesterday afternoon, I came to the conclusion that some of the shortcomings of the movie, such as having on-screen heterosexual sex, but no penetrative gay sex, an estrangement from the female characters and being generally self-congratulatory in nature, were merely a byproduct of the process by which the film was made. For those of you who don’t know, this whole film was a product of open auditions for an unnamed, unwritten script that was workshopped with the actors and John Cameron Mitchell into what ultimately became the film. It reminds me of what I learned in art school about performance art (I really did love the performance department, though it was truly impractical for a major.)

In my performance classes, it wasn’t enough to do an improv. If you were going to do an improv, with a base scene, you NEEDED to have an artifact. I suppose that once you get so famous that people pay you for your improv, you don’t need an artifact, but for us lowly types, we needed some kind of prop– a set, an installation, a video (of the performance, to be shown again, or as a backdrop), slides, a sculpture, something — as long as there was something that echoed the creation of the improv. You created a space with the improv, and when you left, you would have this piece left for people to look upon as visual art.

Shortbus is an artifact of a process that is more artistic, challenging, and risky than the end result. All the footage, the workshopping, the inevitable improv that gets created into a script, the lives of the actors, the extras, the sexual heat that occured between the players of the film are where the art are, not in the film itself. The true risk was in the buds of creation, not in the end product, which as been sanitized for your protection (and to perhaps skirt any obscenity issues). Shortbus ultimately doesn’t take the huge risk that would make it a true catalyst of change in the hearts and minds of those who would see it, or even hear it’s name. It stands alone as a rather banal piece of work. Beautiful to watch in many ways, but banal and accessible to even the more prudish of movie goers. It’s sexy like a Victoria’s Secret catalog, which isn’t enough to challenge us cosmopolitans.

Perhaps it’s all money motivated — how do you sell a film like this to the theatres and the public? How do you prepare for the inevitable DVD sales, matching soundtrack, etc. You make something that is sanitized for global appeal, so in the very least, the self-congratulatory hipsters, LGBTQIAXYZ’s, art critics and sexual libertarians will want to consume it, and tell their more prudish friends to consume it to a positive end. It’s as close as you can get to a sure thing that will have more instantaneous monetary rewards vs. becoming revolutionary in retrospect 30 years later. It seems that no one wants to take a risk in media any more — Broadway is all rehashed movies, best-selling book adaptations and revivals of successful shows of the past. The most controversial visual experience I’ve heard about has been the plastination of human bodies touring in exhibits all over the world. If you’ve heard of other more controversial visual experiences in the past 3-5 yrs, please let me know.

I like Shortbus as a souvineir or an artifact of an event. I think, though, I’d prefer a documentary of the making of the film to the actual film itself.

My Advice for the Dixie Chicks

I like the Dixie Chicks. I’ve liked them since Wide Open Spaces and I’ve liked them ever since they got themselves into a whole mess w/ telling it the way they see it. It takes guts to stand up for yourself.

So it turns out they have a new album out. Yay for them. Even more interesting, they wrote or co-wrote all of the songs. They said in a recent NPR interview that it was because they wanted to address things more personal. Jon hypothesizes that perhaps no song-writer wanted to get near them after tons of radio stations boycotted their music. Anyhow, I find this to be a neato move, and I have one piece of advice for them–

Go Alt-Country. Seriously. I love the genre, and I think they could really transition over well. Even better, they can start their alt-country debut by doing a collaboration album with some alt-country favorites– Lucinda Williams, Steve Earl, etc. It would be groovy to have them singing with Gillian Welch. Or Neko Case. I think it could really be outstanding even to throw in some not-quite-alt-country but doing folky stuff Bruce Springsteen. An album of 10-12 songs collaborated, at least one or two where the Dixie Chicks take the lead and do most, if not all the work.

Call me crazy, but I’d so pay for this!

Realization: Goodfellas and Boogie Nights

I just saw GoodFellas for the first time last night. It turns out, after having seen Boogie Nights just a few months ago, that I really think that Goodfellas and Boogie Nights are the same movie. They start w/ the main character as a teenager, getting involved in seedy business, moving on into the big leagues, seeing what happens to their friends and compatriots around them, there’s guns, drugs (and some moralistic overtones) and we follow it straight through to the 1980’s.

This begs for a double feature.

Brokeback Mountain (possible spoilers)

Yesterday I saw the much hyped Brokeback Mountain, aka The Gay Cowboy Movie.

The movie had some beautiful shots and the acting was exceptional.

The only thing is… it’s really not much of a cowboy movie, or at least, not the cowboy movies I’ve ever seen. It’s a drama that follows two characters in 1963 Wyoming who meet, fall in love, and continue to weave into each other’s lives for the next 20 or so years. Because the characters are MSM (men sleeping with men, “not queer’) and this is the 20th century American West, they both see (though one sees more than the other) the hazard of flaunting their love. They are a bit careless at times however. They get older. They move to different places, get married to women and have children. One ends up doing well financially, the other not so much. Meanwhile they see each other intermittantly.

The movie really wasn’t that gay. Yes, the characters were men that slept with each other, but they were well closeted and didn’t ever seem to self-identify as gay. There was some tit-action on the screne, but in no part did you see the men’s wangs, and only BARELY did you seee their butts, and you never saw either of them looking at, or towards, each other’s wangs/buttocks. They did actively seem to like to kiss each other though. Maybe that’s *really gay* and I don’t know it. Rumor has it that this movie was filmed with heterosexual women in mind, so I keep translating the plot and the character’s relationships into movies of the past 20 yrs featuring lesbian characters. Those movies made money, avoided some of the hubbub and were generally inoffensive, like watching Willow and Tara’s relationship on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I keep thinking of the movie Kissing Jessica Stein, which was directed (and/or written by) a straight woman. It’s a quasi-lesbian movie that was inoffensive.

Brokeback is kind of the same.

There’s nothing really epic or new about it. Nothing terribly gay about it either. The only “gay issue” it truly tackles is being closeted and it only vaguely whispers of the threat of gay bashing/lynching, and doesn’t get terribly invested into the emotions surrounding those issues.

Maybe this is what makes the movie great – that it transcends common themes found in gay drama to just stick to the story of the relationship.