‘Rocketman’ is a Brilliant Blast: Weekend Movie Review

‘Rocketman’ is a Brilliant Blast: Weekend Movie Review

Taron Egerton as Elton John in “Rocketman,” one of the best films of the year

Pop stardom is a notoriously fickle thing. For every “legacy” artist out there, there are thousands of one-hit wonders, and hundreds of sort-of famous B listers. One imagines that anyone in the center of the hurricane of New Fame imagines it will last forever. If you find yourself engineering your own biopic in your golden years, congratulations, it did. Which brings us to Reginald Dwight… better known as Elton John.

In the first frames of Rocketman, Elton John (Taron Egerton) strolls into focus, cheekily dressed as a horned devil to confront his own demons in a therapy session framing device. Despite initial reservations, this navel-gazing is remarkably unannoying as framing devices go, surely because of the inspired visual winking of that devil suit, and the fact that we return to the therapy so infrequently. Elton’s got a show to put on!

The famous 1974 B-side “The Bitch is Back” is adorably placed right up front in the movie and confirms, delightfully, that this is a full fledged musical and not a standard and-then-this-happened-and-that-happened musical biography. In fact, the movie thankfully cares not a whit about being a traditional biopic, and songs from Elton’s whole catalogue come fast and furious, and not remotely in their order of creation.

“The Bitch is Back” is performed by both Taron Egerton (20 and 30something Elton) and Matthew Illesly (Elton’s child prodigy self Reginald Dwight). To the piano man‘s immense credit, the song feels raucously earned despite literally no build-up. It’s as simple as this — Elton John hasn’t done something this fabulous in ages.  

Not that we should give Elton John all the credit.

Dexter Fletcher, previously something of a journeyman director who was famously hired to resuscitate  Bohemian Rhapsody late into its troubled production, suddenly announces himself as an assured visualist. And he commands a great team. The screenplay by Lee Hall (War Horse, Billy Elliott) is smart and doesn’t get bogged down in most of the usual biopic traps (apart from the over-familiarity of addiction dramas), nimbly leaping from one song to another.

Taron with Bryce Dallas Howard (as Elton’s mother) and Richard Madden (as his manager/lover)

The cinematography by George Richmond (The Kingsman) is bold with its lighting and color choices. The production design by Marcus Rowland (Baby Driver) is attuned to the loud but earthy 1970s and Elton’s excess. The costumes by Julian Day (Bohemian Rhapsody, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies), even when they aren’t directly recreating Elton’s famously extravagant wardrobe, are blessed with touches of the fantastical. Here’s one blink-and-you’ll-miss it example: In one musical sequence we see little Reggie Dwight conducting an imaginary choir while wearing a pair of pajamas and if you look closely at the pajama top it has a little bowtie on it made of the exact same fabric!

Jamie Bell is typically wonderful as Elton’s instantly close friend and longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin (when is Hollywood going to realize that Jamie Bell is a star and shouldn’t always be playing second fiddle?). But, more often than not the supporting cast leans into broad caricature. Still nobody is there for the supporting players…

Biopics of famous people live and die on the star turn at center. Taron Egerton carries the picture with both style and depth, proving himself a dazzling and confident showman as an actor. This is no generic impression but a fully realized character. His Elton is a raw-nerve tangle of pain, humor, confusion, sexual longing (no straight-washing this time- there’s even an enthusiastically gay sex scene), idiosyncratic beats, creative impulsives, and ugly mood swings.

And then of course there are the hit songs. Though Egerton’s falsetto might not be as strong as Elton’s, his singing voice is resonant with emotion and storytelling, and thus perfect for John & Taupin’s early pop masterpieces, with their unusually rich lyrics and full melodic journeys. Egerton could be a movie musical star if he chose to be (if only Hollywood made more of them). He’s blessed with the ability to act through singing, rather than just pausing the performance to sing.

In one flamboyant moment in Rocketman, the title becomes literal, with a fire erupting under Elton John’s feet, blasting him off into the night sky to become his own fireworks display. This is the point we’re at in this review when the gushing has become its own performance; the movie isn’t perfect, you see, but we were in heaven.. So here’s a whorish pullquote. Rocketman is everything a big screen biopic should be!  It’s reflective of the character and temperament of its subject (something Bohemian Rhapsody failed miserably at last year, selling such a heteronormative version of “Freddie Mercury”), it’s entertaining whether you’re a die hard loyalist or a casual fan of the subject, and its crafted with delicious care by a top notch team.

If you missed it this opening weekend, run to see it first chance you get on the biggest screen near you. It deserves to fill your eyes, and not just with tears. Be warned that the movie is a tearjerker. Rocketman risks going very earnest and sentimental but the finale is emotionally earned even if it’s awfully literal about the ‘inner child’ business of self-care. Still, it’s a grand entertainment despite the traditional rise to fame – get messed up on drugs narrative.

In one of the movie’s signature visual beats — chances are you’ve seen this bit in the trailer — Elton’s feet levitate off the ground at his legendary star-making concert at the Troubadour in LA, while his fingers keep pounding on the piano. What the trailers don’t show you is that the audience floats up, too — a small, but brilliant touch. I didn’t literally levitate out of my seat but it took hours to come back down.

Elton has a new song over the end credits called “(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again”, which is a duet with Taron Egerton. It is, in its own way, a fine bookend to the movie’s first exceptional musical number “I Want Love” (Elton’s brilliant 2001 ballad) which is sung by the entire ensemble. They begin the song together in one room, but sing their own lines while walking away from each other. The new song is entirely redundant given the narcissism of the film that precedes it. But, no matter. Elton wants your love and with Rocketman in theaters he’ll surely be basking in mass adoration again.

The post ‘Rocketman’ is a Brilliant Blast: Weekend Movie Review appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


‘Rocketman’ is a Brilliant Blast: Weekend Movie Review

Trade Night Club bartender Dusty Martinez on why everyone loves D.C. pride

Trade Night Club bartender Dusty Martinez on why everyone loves D.C. pride
Of course, we should expect nothing short of spectacular when it comes to Capital Pride. Thankfully, Washington, D.C., never disappoints.

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Does Hollywood fail gay actors who are out from the start?

Does Hollywood fail gay actors who are out from the start?

Chris and Rupert

Gay Pride wasn’t born yesterday, but at 50 this month, it’s never been more vital. That’s due, in part, to Rupert Everett, who was something of a pioneer in the movement as it entered adulthood. The 60-year-old actor came out in 1989, five years into his filmography, back when it still was considered certain career suicide to do so.

I’ve always thought of Everett as a successful actor, so I was surprised to come across a 2009 The Guardian profile in which he lamented the effect coming out had had on his career. He also cautioned aspiring gay thespians against making the same mistake: “I would not advise any actor necessarily, if he was really thinking of his career, to come out.”

His rant began with this: “The fact is that you could not be, and still cannot be, a 25-year-old homosexual trying to make it in the British film business or the American film business or even the Italian film business. It just doesn’t work, and you’re going to hit a brick wall at some point.”

Everett has enjoyed a solid, if not quite spectacular, 35-year career, so it’s tempting to dismiss his gripes as bitterness over its occasionally jagged trajectory, but consider this: If he had come out much later or not at all, would his early promise as the next Cary Grant — or a British Rock Hudson — have translated to eventual superstardom?

Although openly gay actors now can find fairly gainful employment, especially if they look like, say, Matt Bomer, and can be mistaken for straight, we still don’t have one of Will Smith’s or Bradley Cooper’s A-list caliber.

No openly gay actor has ever won a performing Oscar (Kevin Spacey, Sir John Gielgud, and Cabaret’s Joel Grey were not publicly out when they grabbed their gold), and even bisexual and sexually/gender fluid ones hit that brick wall. Nico Tortorella has publicly identified as all three, and that might partly explain why he has yet to parlay his exposure on Younger and his leading-man good looks into substantial TV roles.

It’s harder to answer that definitively than it is to blame Everett’s Oscar snub for playing Will to Julia Roberts’ Grace in the 1997 hit My Best Friend’s Wedding on an Academy that’s more likely to be floored by a straight actor negotiating a gay character with such finesse (see Rami Malek’s and Mahershala Ali’s 2019 wins — and even Olivia Colman’s). Did the Academy pass over him despite his receiving rave reviews and Golden Globe and BAFTA nominations because voters assumed he was just playing himself?

We’ll never know for sure, but by choosing the courageous road less taken, Everett may have instantly pigeonholed himself. That’s something any fledgling gay actor should consider. While there are benefits to being out from the start — never having to worry about the dreaded tabloid expose, for one — there are potential hazards.

If you claim stardom as a gay character, you run the risk of being typecast. This is particularly true if you don’t fit the “bro”-gay standard. Chris Colfer won a Golden Globe as the openly gay Kurt Hummel on Glee, but according to Wikipedia, most of his post-Glee TV credits have been playing himself — literally.

Four-time Emmy winner David Hyde Pierce never hid his sexual orientation, but he probably owes his longevity to staying quiet about it for so long. Had he been out of the closet during Frasier’s heyday, would viewers have been as invested in Niles’s romance with Daphne?

Like Pierce, Neil Patrick Harris, Matt Bomer, Zachary Quinto, and Ben Whishaw, all waited until they were fairly established before coming out as gay, which might have been wise of them. Harris probably wouldn’t have been cast as the womanizing Barney Stinson on How I Met Your Mother if he had outed himself 10 years earlier than he did. That the show’s popularity didn’t suffer after he came out in 2006, though, shows that Hollywood underestimates the viewing public’s capacity to suspend disbelief.

Quinto has worked steadily since coming out in 2011, but his profile is considerably lower than that of his straight Star Trek costar Chris Pine. Meanwhile, Whishaw has won rave reviews, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA for playing Hugh Grant’s lover in the 2018 TV miniseries A Very English Scandal, but the onetime frontrunner for the role of Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody watched the part (and the Oscar) go to the more marketing-friendly (i.e., straight) Rami Malek.

Speaking of Mercury, music wasn’t particularly hospitable to gay and bisexual men when the late Queen frontman was alive or even for decades after he died. Coming out didn’t hurt the professional standing of Elton John in 1976, George Michael in the early ’90s, or Ricky Martin in 2010, but all three were already well-established by that time. Had they not been, Elton’s 1970-76 commercial peak, Michael’s Grammy-winning Faith, and Martin’s “Livin’ la Vida Loca” might never have happened.

The times, they are a-changing in music, though. Adam Lambert, Sam Smith, and Troye Sivan were out pretty much from the start, and all three have done well anyway. Then there is Frank Ocean, whose success still begs unavoidable questions: Did Channel Orange, his 2012 debut album, sell 131,000 copies in the U.S. during its first week because of the publicity surrounding his pre-release admission that his first love had been a man? Or did it sell that many in spite of it?

Was Ocean more acceptable because he resisted labeling himself as gay or bisexual, and veers far from the stereotypical campy gay man? I wonder how fans and the hip-hop community would have reacted had he come out and said, “I’m gay,” then showed up on a red carpet holding a man’s hand the week of the album’s release. Would Channel Orange still have done as well as it did?

At least the music industry occasionally bows down to gay pride. Hollywood merely curtsies politely. The movies still treat straight actors playing gay with far more respect. Until filmmakers respond to our gay pride with more gay pride of their own, the likes of Rami Malek and Mahershala Ali will continue to reap all the greatest benefits of living our lives.

www.queerty.com/hollywood-fail-gay-actors-start-20190601?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Wilson Cruz’s costume, Ronnie Woo’s meat, & Cody Christian’s facial

Wilson Cruz’s costume, Ronnie Woo’s meat, & Cody Christian’s facial

This week a racist gay bar reversed its ban on rap music, a storm chasing meteorologist proposed to his boyfriend in front of a tornado, and Aaron Schock’s nudes “leaked” online. Here’s what happened on Instagram:

Jacob Bixenman got a tan.

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happy birthday @jacobbix you’re old

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Antoni Porowski posed on the pool table.

Chris Marchant made friends.

Darren Young found happiness at DragCon.

Jake Miller kept his clothes on.

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Summers comin ???: @spottedmagph

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Bradley Kim went to the beach.

Simon Dunn adjusted his shades.

Milk told a story.

Amini Fonua read a book.

Wilson Cruz was a pirate.

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#FireIsland #BiffBash

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Jimmy Fowlie wore pink.

Matty Lee picked his teeth.

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Don’t bite your nails people ?? #caughtoffguard

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Dan Tracer spun the color wheel.

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reclaiming orange ?

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Cody Christian took care of himself.

Gus Kenworthy made it to San Francisco.

Jaden Smith graced the cover of Flaunt magazine.

Ronnie Woo ate meat on meat on meat on meat.

Justin Bieber hit the gym shirtless.

Andrew Walko climbed a waterfall.

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?

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Joshua Christie caught a beach ball.

Patrick McDonald took a bath.

Tom Daley took a break.

Sam Asghari took a hike.

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I’ve been a fat boy, and I have been a extremely fit person, and of course I choose the fit person every single time. When I was fat i got Criticized for being a fat piece of shit, also when I got fit I was criticized for being on steroid and blah blah blah. My point is no matter what you do, people will always run their mouth’s and have there own opinions #bullshit you will find peace and happiness when you do things for you and you only ?????? #letsgettowork when you do you and grow within, you will always inspire.

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Travis Wall trained his dog.

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Obey my dog

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Le1f flexed.

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i’ve been on a strict watagatapitusberry diet ?

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Cheyenne Parker sat in bed.

Ryan Cooper did some sit-ups.

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It’s that time again… #vanitypost ? – @smiggi

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Seth Tyler held a cat.

And Jake Shears slipped into something a little more comfortable.

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John Waters Tells Bill Maher About Tripping on Acid During Provincetown’s Bear Week: WATCH

John Waters Tells Bill Maher About Tripping on Acid During Provincetown’s Bear Week: WATCH

Filmmaker and “filth elder” John Waters sat down with Bill Maher on Friday night to talk about ageism, fame, being respectable, political correctness, Provincetown, Stonewall, and recently taking acid with his muse and the star of many of his films, Mink Stole.

Said Waters of his recent LSD trip: “I had such nostalgia remembering that phlegm in your throat right before you blast off.”

Waters also talked about Provincetown, where he spends his summers, and the various theme weeks they have in town: “Bear Week is overweight, hairy gay men. But they’re gettin’ fatter. I’m telling ya. I saw one. I thought it was a hedge but it was a person. And when we were tripping, it was Bear Week, we didn’t go out. I couldn’t do Bear Week tripping.”

“They have every week,” Waters continued. “They have Gay Pilots Week. Who ever thought of that? Analingus week. That’s coming!”

And for anyone coming to Provincetown over the summer at any time, follow our Facebook page and Instagram for Ptown Hacks, Towleroad’s 6th annual guide to Provincetown. Our 2019 guide will be dropping very shortly and you will be first to hear about it, and everything new that’s happening in town this summer, including all of the theme weeks.

Waters also talked with Maher about Stonewall: “Who ever thought it was the same day Judy Garland died? Could there be that gay a day?

The post John Waters Tells Bill Maher About Tripping on Acid During Provincetown’s Bear Week: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


John Waters Tells Bill Maher About Tripping on Acid During Provincetown’s Bear Week: WATCH

How the LGBTQ community can find themselves in fanfiction

How the LGBTQ community can find themselves in fanfiction

Photo Credits: Carmilla

My first encounter with fanfiction was spurred by Commander Lexa’s death by bullet wound on The 100. I was an upset high schooler in search of an outlet that could and would tell the stories that Clexa (Clarke and Lexa) deserved. I wanted to find a place that would explore further into their possible stories that could have happened if Lexa had not met her end. I did not know much, if anything, about fanfiction as a medium. I was unaware of the sheer effort and hours of time that go into each work. Yet, when I had nowhere left to turn for the representation I was wanting to see so badly, I was thrown into the platform Archive of Our Own. Archive of Our Own hosts works from over 30,000 fandoms with tagging systems within each individual fandom so users can filter what they want to see, a response to the media overload on the internet that we as a society face each day. I quickly learned I was amongst a passionate community of creators who were interested in telling stories about characters they loved; characters they wanted to see grow in different ways than they were portrayed on screen and in more depth than a weekly show could ever accommodate.

Even today, GLAAD’s most recent Where We Are on TV report shows that queer women remain underrepresented in television as a whole. Representation of queer women of color is even further behind. These characters are rarely the lead of their series or even heavily focused on in the larger picture of the show’s storytelling, save for some anomalies like Starz’ Vida, Hulu’s The Bisexual and a vast collection of web series like Carmilla and How to Not. It’s for this reason that fanfiction still continues to reel in audiences who are looking for better or more representation of themselves. Fanfiction gives characters and couples we love the space to grow, and empowers fans to believe that they can lead happy and fulfilling lives even when the characters on screen are not living those lives. Fans have even led movements to campaign so that what holistic representation we do have on screen continues.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 #carmillamovie #carmilla #elisebauman #natashanegovanlis

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Networks and studios used to issue takedown notices for fanfiction fairly often, but I believe they are now recognizing the power of passionate fans. It is fans’ passion that can actually save television nowadays. For example, Netflix’s Sense8 may not have been fully renewed for a final season, but it did receive a finale special, in large part due to the outcries from fans on losing such an inclusive and relatable cast of characters who organized with petitions, a social media plan, and direct contact. Brooklyn Nine-Nine found success with its own fan outcries on social media, as it was picked up by NBC after FOX canceled the show. And currently, the fans of the cancelled sitcom One Day at a Time are pushing for a new service to pick up the show,and have spurred interest by other platforms in continuing the show. Fans perhaps have more power now than ever to influence the shows they love, and yet, people continue to turn to fanfiction.

Death doesn’t let you say goodbye. 2 hour finale episode in the works. Tell your cluster. pic.twitter.com/GHZgGuHwS0

— Sense8 (@sense8) June 29, 2017

When representation has not met the standards of imagination on screen, fanfiction writers can dig deeper into the worlds and character relationships and pull out what television writers refuse to or cannot explore with time, budget or other constraints. These brand new worlds inspire many people in underrepresented communities, and they absolutely inspired me as a high schooler coming into college. At that point in time, I did not know what my life would look like, being a part of the LGBTQ community in this new space I would call home.

It was fanfiction that allowed me to see that happy beginnings, middles, and endings did exist for young queer couples. It allowed me to see myself having a group of friends who loved me for all of me. This was not the reality of the screens in front of me. It was words written by fans that made me feel like I could thrive in whatever environment I entered, whether that was an alternate universe or the world we live in today.

May 31, 2019
Issues: 

www.glaad.org/blog/how-lgbtq-community-can-find-themselves-fanfiction