Mainstream

No Holes Barred: Sexual Pleasure and The Cronenberg Male

No Holes Barred: Sexual Pleasure and The Cronenberg Male
  • Written by: Kevin Sparrow
  • January 18, 2012
  • Categories: Film, Books, Mainstream
  • In an imaginary post-gender world, social structures break down and sexual impulse prevails for many of David Cronenberg's socially estranged characters. Trauma radically becomes the source of pleasure, internal homophobia conflicts with a man's duty to the family mafia, and a drug-induced trip to South America lead to a pansexual encounters with buggy doppelgangers.

How Audiences Can Learn to Accept Gay Actors Playing Straight Roles

How Audiences Can Learn to Accept Gay Actors Playing Straight Roles
  • Written by: Jon Bastian
  • January 18, 2012
  • Categories: TV, Film, Mainstream
  • Jon Bastian goes back to the 1960s for a take on how audiences have learned to accept gay actors playing straight roles leading up to "college-hero" Neil Patrick Harris.

Torchwood or Snorewood?

Torchwood or Snorewood?
  • Written by: Josef Steiff
  • December 14, 2011
  • Categories: TV, Mainstream
  • When Captain Jack Harness (John Barrowman) burst onto the scene (Doctor Who, "The Empty Child," 2005), what was most refreshing was his lack of bisexual angst. Or at least, what angst there was had nothing to do with his sexuality. Here was simply a man as likely to kiss the Doctor as his female companion, a man who could use his seductive charisma for good, a man who ultimately would run his own "fringe division" as if it were some nontraditional family structure unafraid of sex or sexuality. The real source of angst among the Torchwood team, at least at a personal level, was love and commitment. So what went wrong?

Women on the Verge: The Gender Queer Films of Almodóvar

Women on the Verge: The Gender Queer Films of Almodóvar
  • Written by: Kevin Sparrow
  • December 14, 2011
  • Categories: Film, Mainstream
  • As any proclaimed auteur, Pedro Almodóvar works in tropes. His most recent film, The Skin I Live In (2011), employs many of the director's favorites: disenfranchised motherhood, male-female dynamics, their social consequences, and the desire for an unattainable perfection of beauty. This contemporary take on Georges Franju's Eyes Without a Face (1960) a self-reported favorite of Almodóvar's–by way of Cronenberg body-horror slickness and the director's own preoccupations encapsulates so much of what makes his work integral. And its depiction of the transgender body highlights the running theme through his work of dismantling the gender binary to arrive at deeper truths. Throughout his career, Almodóvar has used non-traditional gender behaviors and transgender characters in supporting and featured roles to develop a body of genderqueer cinema that is perhaps the most potent we have available to us.

The Poster Actress of Queer-Friendly Cinema, Julianne Moore

The Poster Actress of Queer-Friendly Cinema, Julianne Moore
  • Written by: Randy Caspersen
  • Categories: TV, Film, Count Me Out, Mainstream
  • Back in 1988, Julianne Moore won an Emmy for her roles as identical twins in the daytime CBS soap "As the World Turns" for the category of Outstanding Ingénue in A Drama Series. Six years later, she appeared bottomless in Robert Altman’s Short Cuts (1993) proving to the world that, in fact, her carpet matches her crimson curtains. Those two roles may be worlds apart. Yet, they not only show Moore’s range but also her foremost asset as an artist: she has a mean streak for taking risks. Other actresses are more beloved or more successful, but no other film performer has been willing to court failure as often as Moore, or be as much a hero to gay audiences and directors alike.

'Like Electricity:' The Circuitry of Daldry’s Many Identities

Billy Elliott
  • Written by: Matt Fagerholm
  • September 01, 2011
  • Categories: Film, Mainstream
  • In only three pictures, veteran theatre director Stephen Daldry has established himself as a master of tackling taboo topics while resisting the urge to provide tidy closure. Though Billy Elliott (2000), The Hours (2002) and The Reader (2008) may appear to exist in separate cinematic universes, they are linked by themes of identity and sexuality that are somewhat reflective of the auteur's own personal life.