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GAY
FILM REVIEWS BY MICHAEL D. KLEMM
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Green Plaid Shirt Wolfe Video, 1997 Director/Screenplay: Starring:
Unrated, 87 minutes
World
And Time Enough Director/Screenplay: Starring:
Unrated, 90 minutes |
Scenes
From A Marriage
This month's titles are both independent films which deal with the everyday complexities of such relationships, including how one partner deals with his lover having AIDS. For these men, being together is natural, but that still doesn't mean that it isn't hard work. Writer/director Richard Natale's Green Plaid Shirt (1996) takes its title from an early scene where two lovers, named Philip and Guy, meet at a garage sale when each tries to buy the same shirt. As the film spans their ten years together, one or the other is seen wearing that same green plaid shirt in almost every scene and it becomes a symbol for their union.
Perhaps Green Plaid Shirt's only flaw is a saccharine background score during Philip and Guy's most tender moments but this small quibble isn't enough to detract from the film as a whole. Its non-linear structure is beautifully composed. A second viewing was even richer than the first as all its subtleties rose to the surface. Green Plaid Shirt boasts a well written script, artistically composed cinematography, and terrific acting from all the leads. Gregory Phelan and Kevin Spirtas are so relaxed and natural in the roles of Philip and Guy that they don't even appear to be acting. This one is essential viewing.
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His lover, Joey, is a garbage collector in parks and along highways. He likes to bring home little pieces of junk which he arranges into his own art in a corner of the living room. The story is narrated by their best friend, David. His monologues are bitchy-funny but become intrusive and tiresome as the film proceeds. Mark is filled with anger but never takes it out on his lover. The baggage he carries stems back to an unhappy childhood and now, even though he is still healthy, he has contracted a terminal disease. And so he covers a fence along a highway with hundreds of different colored pieces of cloth and erects a sign which indicates that each cloth represents thousands who have died, or who have been infected with AIDS. He skips from one temp job to another so that he doesn't have to get close to any of his co-workers. When a sexist boss annoys him at a data company, he erases the hard drive on his computer before going home. He deals with homophobes by knocking them out with one punch. Joey, on the other hand, is a simple soul who just enjoys life. Still, he carries some of his own baggage too. For one thing, he feels guilty because of his negative status. Estranged from his adoptive father over his sexuality, he suddenly becomes obsessed with finding his biological parents. He is also afraid of the day when Mark will no longer be around. Together, they find solace and joy in each other. Until the film takes a bizarre turn in the middle. Their relationship is a bit offbeat, but it is also very touching. Every morning they reaffirm their love by mentioning some detail that they find cute about each other. Nothing and everything happens when they are together, and they remain faithful and supportive to each other. Joey resists the advances of a handsome African American co-worker even when their relationship develops problems. Both men haven't spoken to their fathers in years and so, as is often the case in real life, they create their own family with each other.
Despite a few heavy themes, most of this film is performed with tongue planted firmly in cheek. It is when the film indulges its offbeat humor that it is most successful. On first viewing this film last year, my strongest impressions were Mark's goofy, but passionate sculptures. Stripped of its initial spontaneity, the film didn't seem as polished on a second viewing but it was still enjoyable. The acting by the leads, Matt Guidry as Mark and Gregory G. Giles as Joey, is very good, but a few supporting castmembers play their parts so broadly that they almost become cartoons. Given the film's low budget, some of this can be excused but not all of it. Still, the characters of Mark and Joey are quirky and unique, and World And Time Enough is an entertaining and touching film. Both films gets into some heavy issues which they handle with different degrees of success. Each details human behavior at its ugliest and at its most beautiful. Ultimately, they stand as testaments to the power of love and forgiveness. And they're both pretty romantic too, especially Green Plaid Shirt. Both movies are unrated so their availability at Blockbuster is doubtful. I rented both videos at Rainbow Pride located inside Buddies at 31 Johnson Park.
Reviewer's note, 2007: There is much to admire in both these films, but I was being very kind when I reviewed these films seven years ago. Each one has a lot of flaws, but there are also riches to be savored if you can sit through the less polished moments. I still admire Green Plaid Shirt a lot, but I have to admit that it was incoherent the first time I watched it. And for some reason, the sound is inaudible on the DVD and I don't remember it being that bad on the VHS tape. Still, these are still both worthwhile titles from that great period of queer film experimentation, the 90s.
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