
Like
It Is
First Run Features,
1998
Director:
Paul Oremland
Screenplay:
Robert Gray
Starring:
Steve Bell,
Ian Rose
Roger Daltrey,
Dani Behr
Unrated, 90 minutes
|
Tea
And Discotheques
by
Michael D. Klemm
Reprinted
from Outcome, July, 2002

It's a major cliche
in many coming-out films; the young gay man is usually a shy sensitive
lad who listens to Broadway showtunes and gets beaten up by the bullies
at school. Wouldn't it be refreshing for a change to see the young neophyte
portrayed as somebody different? Like, maybe... a bare-knuckles street
fighter? Well, prepare to see worlds collide when such a character comes
out amidst London's Soho club scene in Like
It Is, a 1998 British sleeper by out director Paul Oremland.
Craig (Steve Bell)
is a young man who makes a living with his fists brawling in the basements
of Blackpool, England. He is also struggling with the realization that
he is queer. The film's opening images show Craig standing outside of
a gay cub and watching, with confused longing, the men who come and go
through its doors.
Inside
the club, we meet Matt (Ian Rose), a handsome young record producer and
DJ who is bored with the men on the dance floor. Upon leaving, his eyes
fall on Craig and he smiles in his direction. Craig, suddenly intrigued,
follows him. Matt goes home with Craig and they seem to bond over a shared
love of music. Their bedroom tryst, however, is disastrous and Craig freaks
out when things get too intimate. Matt seems to understand and, before
making an exit stage right, leaves Craig his card and says "call me sometime."
This scene cuts to a basement fight club where Craig, undoubtedly frustrated
by the previous night's events, is beating an older man to a pulp.
Following an argument
with his older brother, and some subsequent soul-searching, Craig takes
off for London and shows up on Matt's doorstep, hoping to make a fresh
start. Matt has been unable to stop thinking about that rough bloke from
Blackpool, so he lets him crash at his flat. He introduces his young protege
to the club scene, and Craig views everything with amazement. While still
unable to admit that he is queer, Craig does admit that he "doesn't
fancy girls" and that Matt is "all I got." And so love blossoms slowly,
if awkwardly, between the two men. All seems well, but there are two people
in Matt's life who are threatened by Craig and will do anything to get
him out of the picture.
The
first is Paula (Dani Behr), Matt's flatmate. Paula, a very spoiled club
singer, demands constant attention from Matt, who is her producer and
manager. She is also the quintessential fag hag who can't get it into
her head that Matt is unavailable. Wishing Craig would get lost, she tells
him that Matt is a "typical serial shagger," making the already-confused
street fighter wonder if he is only "the flavor of the month." The second
is Matt's bitchy boss, Kelvin, who (in a truly bizarre bit of casting)
is played by The Who's Roger Daltrey. Kelvin is a middle-aged sexual predator
whose bedroom is the doorway for any young man who wants to make it in
the music business. Kelvin is expecting Matt to mix a boy band's new single
and thinks Craig is too much of a distraction.
Many of the best
scenes in Like It Is portray
Craig's internal conflicts as he struggles with feelings of being gay
while trapped in a macho working class environment. London is seen as
a great Mecca and an escape, but Craig is disenchanted by what he perceives
to be a shallow lifestyle in the clubs. Equally conflicted is Matt, who
is torn between the fast life he has enjoyed, not to mention his ambitions
within the music industry, and the growing love he feels towards a man
who is truly out of place in his world. It doesn't help when he is being
pressured by both Kelvin and Paula to dump his first serious boyfriend.
There
is great chemistry between the two leads and both seem totally at ease
in their roles. The standout performance comes from Roger Daltrey as the
jaded Kelvin. Daltrey, who has always been the poster child of testosterone
in his days as front-man for The Who, plays Kelvin as a gay Alexis Carrington
from TV's Dynasty and has a blast chewing the scenery. Daltrey
plays him with just enough panache to get the point across without making
him an over-the-top stereotype. (He tells Craig on their first meeting,
"I'd like to stay and chat but I have something similar waiting for me
in the car.") Daltrey is still quite muscular, and looks terrific for
his age, and the only visual cues to his foppishness are a mop of curly
hair and some extremely loud neckties. This flamboyance is trumpeted in
his first scene: he is being given collagen injections by a doctor while
boasting about his latest conquest with a "Tom Cruise look-a-alike." He
is loathsome and charismatic at the same time; the kind of character you
love to hate.
Like
It Is is
rife with conflict, and some are resolved a bit too quickly, but generally
it is a believable tale that is smartly written with nicely developed
characters. Like many films that take place in the entertainment world,
it often veers a little too close to a Valley of the Dolls camp
sensibility, (most notably in a scene where Kelvin tells Matt that they
are both cut from the same mold and that they aren't made for love). Viewers
who like their drama to be punctuated with sex, drugs and techno will
not be disappointed.
While
it may lack the polish of a Hollywood studio release, Like
It Is is gritty and sexy. Yes, the film is not without
its faults. The background score in the non-club scenes is terrible (one
of the most dramatic scenes is ruined by the sudden intrusion of cutesy
techno pop music) and the ending is so abrupt that you almost wonder if
the filmmakers ran out of money. For some, the dialects might be maddening.
Like many British films, The Full Monty or Trainspotting
for example, it almost requires subtitles in a few scenes and I'm sure
I missed a few lines here and there because of the accents and the slang.
Like the original British Queer as Folk
(which this film resembles in some ways), the characters use the word
"shag" a lot and this adds to its charm.
The DVD is short
on extras but the brief documentary is highlighted by the director relating
how the opening scenes were derived from his own life experience. This
is hardly a great film but it is a very enjoyable one that puts a new
spin on the coming-out genre. Recommended.
More on Paul Oremland
and Ian Rose:
Surveillance
24/7
|