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To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar
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Directed by Beeban Kidron.
Patrick Swayze plays Vida Boheme, a classy and long-reigning drag queen. With his understudy Noxeema Jackson (Wesley Snipes), Vida wins a New York drag stage contest and an all-expenses-paid trip to Hollywood. But when Miss Chi Chi Rodriguez (John Leguizamo) cries at having lost the contest, soft-hearted Vida cashes in the airline tickets so the three of them can take a car out West. The film becomes a strange sort of buddy road movie, with the three cross-dressers traveling across the American heartland in a shiny yellow Cadillac. First they tangle with Sheriff Dollard (Chris Penn). He stops them for a minor traffic violation, puts the moves on Vida, and Vida knocks him out, so they flee. Later, they are stranded by car problems in a small town in Nebraska. Renting a room in a hotel, they put some life into the town and its annual strawberry festival. They provide a mousy local woman, Carol Ann (Stockard Channing), with new role models of assertiveness. They also insist on chivalrous treatment from the local good old boys and give lessons on courting to a teenage girl. This film was released on the heels of the more outrageous Australian film The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, which featured Terence Stamp as a drag queen. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
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jlgdrdjlgdrd Balanced Indelicacy: Girls will ...
by jlgdrd in Wicked Fun
hasn't rated it.
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"While drag humor is definitely not new to movies, queer drag may only be relatively new to mainstream film. Whether or not you care to differentiate between straight and gay men playing women, and straight and gay men playing gay men playing women, it’s all about interpretation. It’s all about spin. Breeder or queer, they’re making a statement about the excesses of feminine behavior, and what sort of comportment society expects of its’ women. Of course now, while Patrick Swayze may be copying gay men in a movie like, To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar or doing his best to tap into his own homoerotic energy, that can be very different from Charles Busch doing a (relatively subtle) caricature of the whiskey-voiced matriarch in Die Mommie Die! Queer drag always carries the implication that gay men can trump self-identified, biologically designated females when wielding bitchy attitude. It is, without a doubt, a step forward that major studios are ... " [More]
unemployedwaifunemployedwaif Queer Musicians + Film = ?
by unemployedwaif in Queer Cinema
liked it.
"The addition of our talented new member nathan503 got me to thinking about representations of queer musicians and how they are portrayed and/or their music is used in film.For me, at least what is coming to mind at this moment, are the glam rockers; specifically Todd Haynes' Velvet Goldmine and John Cameron Mitchell's Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Both films are written and directed by gay men about queer musicians and miraculously succeed at telling poignant, engaging stories that don't fall victim to the abundance of stereotypical cliches that so many others do.Within recent years, a number of films have begun to delve into the lives of rather famous musicians of the past whose queer sensibilities have only recently come to light. Irwin Winkler's De-Lovely which chronicles the life of Cole Porter, and Atom Egoyan's Where The Truth Lies. Unfortunately, due to the (homophobic) powers that be, the films tended to skim the surface of this aspect of their lives and ul ... " [More]
CairoBelfastCairoBelfast ...Yup...
by CairoBelfast in CairoBelfast Blog
liked it.
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"The 90's were a scary time in which to grow up. This movie is a product of that strange, enchanting time. Anyway, worth watching. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Men dressing in women's clothing has long been an axiom of comedy, and the trio of drag queens in Beeban Kidron's breezy comedy mines that basic fact for all it's worth. The script sends the unlikely queens, played by Wesley Snipes, Patrick Swayze, and John Leguizamo, on a trip across the American heartland, where they encounter a number of people unfamiliar with their lifestyle choice. The comedy takes a fanciful turn, when, after being stranded in a small town in Nebraska, the drag crew, as if by magic, begins to reform the bad manners of the local men and improve the personal lives of some of the women, assimilating with amazing speed. Also fanciful is the film's decision to skirt the issue of the trio's sex lives, which might not have seemed so amusing to some viewers. In general, the three principals are so committed to their roles and queen it up with so much attitude, that it's impossible not to be entertained. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide
 



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