"Polyester" looks brilliant, can't wait to see it!
Another strange scene with heroically covered male-frontals is "Beowulf".
The mythical character non-chalantly strips before his men, as the poor female princess flees. Then he confronts the equally nude Grendel for some
terminal wrestling.
And boy are his comrades impressed as they cheer (about the death of Grendel, of course).
susty.com...enis-head-band-arm-cover-dick-zemekis-movie-hollywood-image.jpg
Despite the carefully controlled nudity, it was actually a family-orientated fantasy.
I see on the web that some viewers were surprised to find that the nudity is not explicitly mentioned in the original Beowulf poem. Similarly the
homoeroticism in "Rocknrolla" doesn't serve much purpose as far as characterization goes. I'm glad it's there and non-stereotyical - but it does
make me wonder why it's there at all.
I just remembered another great movie that could kinda belong here - Top of the Food Chain aka Invasion!
It's a satire of old sf movies and I don't have the words to do this odd little marvel of moviemaking justice. It features one of the greatest love
triangles ever - Dr. Karel LaMonte, Sandy Fawkes and her brother Guy.
Dr. Lamonte, Guy and others investigate 'the remains of a dead human corpse, deceased, in the hilly, lumpy, bumpy part of town outside of
town'....
One of those fan vids that sorta outlines the movie (spoilerific but you're probably not going to find this movie at blockbuster so whatever). I'll
remind you that this is a satire, so there's something to offend just about everyone.
Seems to me as I review the film snippets throughout the thread that masculinity is always a conceived as "loss" - loss of history, loss of physical
attractiveness, loss of authority. But in that loss there is a kind of stubborness, or refusal to let go of the moment. A constant nostalgia.
And death seems so heroic.
But that's just film.
The point has often been made about photography.
I remember, they used to say, take polaroids, they age with the family!
But like sepia tainted images, they remind one how quickly the time flies.
But in all those "hells" that history made, there was always that timeless moment.
I seem to recall a tad bit of heat generated in "Even Cowgirls Get The Blues". Giant thumb notwithstanding, I seem to recall Uma Thurman and Rain
Phoenix gettin' saucy.
As far as military based, not sure if anyone has mentioned Alexander yet. Fried Green tomatoes is another one. When Mary Louise Parker is watching
Mary Stuart Materson collect honey its pretty obvious whats on her mind lol. Very sad movie though, such as any unrequited love.
I MUST SCREAM MY HETEROSEXUALITY... before plunging into your filthy abyss!!!
My god, as a straight guy Tim Curry nearly turned me - I love Rocky Horror and I will rate anything by John Waters very highly... it's a tough one
to call and I think some mainstream movies do it very well, without it ever being overt to the masses (Top Gun).
It's not really erotic, but one of the most touching scenes I saw was towards the end of The Shield, when Vic Mackey and Ronnie Gardocki are in the
car and Ronnie goes on this long speech about how he thought they were going to run away together. :'(
I've got to say I thought Clash Of The Titans was getting there - terrible film though.
Top Gun, hands down. Wierd when you watch it now, in the eighties as a kid it was one of my favourites, and in no way crossed my mind as being gay...
Also had one of the best lines ever:
"I'm going supersonic, I'll be there in thirty seconds" or something like that.
Ever so slightly more obvious, I Love You Phillip Morris. Very funny, if not a little appetite destroying...
I recently saw a classic military movie called The Dirty Dozen.
Oh my hat!
Well here is a snippet that has everything: eye-candy (and for once in film, a hunky Native American), wrestling, domination, camaraderie, a split
dialogue which stresses personal freedom rather than the "family" as central to manhood, facial hair and an almost tangible aroma of masculinity.
Otherwise the current comedy series about football, Blue Mountain State always ends with a homoerotic irony.
It suggests that we have reached the point where homoeroticism is self-aware, and no longer just for those in "the know".
But lets go four decades back, indeed, The Dirty Dozen:
edit on 22-11-2010 by halfoldman because: (no reason given)
edit on 22-11-2010 by halfoldman because: (no reason
given)
All students of indy films and filmmakers, study Anger for his lighting, transitions, camera angles to suggest, in this case homoerotism. Anger was a
pioneer along with Warhol and DeSica in pioneering new ways of looking at moving images.