|
Bit 1
|
There's something deliciously camp about a young gay guy jogging
about and pumping iron in his tracksuit like Sylvester Stallone in
Rocky (John G. Avildsen, 1976) but to a piercing
soprano Jimmy Somerville soundtrack. The song could have been "Small
Town Boy", because Craig (Steve Bell) -- the wiry pretty-boy fighter
-- has made it from Blackpool to London on the rocky road toward
coming out. These punching scenes, however, arrive near the film's climax:
when Craig's back in Blackpool, having come a long way too fast but not
quite out far enough ...
|
|
Bit 2
|
Like It Is starts out with Craig abandoning his living as an
illegal bare-knuckle fighter in the Northern English seaside town
and heading to London to track down slightly-older and already-out
Matt (Ian Rose), after a disastrous but magnetic one night stand.
The chemistry's still there on their second meeting, and after Craig
moves in, their engaging romance gradually enrages both Matt's
flatmate, Paula (Dani Behr), and his gay boss, Kelvin (Roger
Daltrey).
|
|
Bit 3
|
Matt disc-jockeys at a gay nightclub and promotes new artists for Kelvin, a
recording company executive. Paula needs Matt to boost her waning career.
Kelvin needs him to sell the latest Brit Pop boy group. Both are envious of
Craig's increasing consumption of Matt's time...
|
|
Bit 4
|
This film samples some of the best moments of Queer gay cinema (and
parodies straight male films like Rocky), and like a good
club mix is worthy of a wide audience. Touché to The
Classic for again screening a clever and entertaining Queer film.
|
|
Bit 5
|
The dialogue between Craig and Matt isn't as complex or provoking as that
between the two men on a one night stand in the excellent
Together Alone (P.J. Castellaneta, 1992). The action and
tension isn't as manic as that between the two HIV+ lovers in
influential gay road movie The Living End (Gregg Araki,
1992). Yet Like It Is blends some of the best of both these North
American movies, also with great casting. Bell and Rose make a photogenic
pair and their fluid verbal exchanges in a stolen car and spellbinding safe
sexual exchanges outdoors in a boat, are both hot.
|
|
Bit 6
|
Daylight home video-style shots of same-sex affection in London's queer
streets set an atmosphere of youthful and active anti-homophobic defiance.
Particularly salient considering that a nailbomb exploded in a gay
nightclub in a vicious attack on the city's queer community one evening
this year.
|
|
Bit 7
|
The lanky leading lads in Like It Is are more attractive than
the gay teens in Beautiful Thing (Hettie MacDonald, 1996) and
ironically so, considering that Paul Oremland's debut film satirises
the obsessions with beauty, youth and drugs in gay clubland culture.
These desires are encapsulated in the figure of Kelvin, the middle-aged
queen who doesn't believe in love, worships his collagen therapist, deals
out Es and buys young men with his pink dollar. Daltry is superb in this
rather repulsive fatherly role and sure, there are shallow Kelvins in the
real gay world.
|
|
Bit 8
|
But hey, reality also means loving middle-aged out gay men who are happily
single (or partnered or in between), with healthy wholistic and Leftist
outlooks (whether HIV+ or -). Take this confession as more of a criticism
of queer cinema on the whole than of the thoroughly moving Like It
Is in particular: Watching spunky young men coming out and getting
(it) into each other is fine, but I'd just like to sometimes lie back in my
seat in the dark savouring one (or more) of those nice older greying gay
daddy figures above me on the big screen. Like, that too is occasionally
how it is for me!
|
|
|
Bit 9
|
Details
Like It Is, by Channel Four Films 1998.
Director: Paul Oremland.
Scriptwriter: Robert Gray.
Cinematographer: Alistair Cameron.
Production Designer: Tim Sykes.
Costume Designer: Sarah Bowern.
Cast: Steve Bell, Ian Rose, Dani Behr, Roger Daltrey, P.J. Nicholas, Charles Hargreaves.
|
|
|
Bit 10
|
Citation reference for this article
MLA style:
Simon-Astley Scholfield. "Lust for Love: 'Like It Is'." M/C Reviews 2 Sep. 1999.
[your date of access] <http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/reviews/screen/lust.html>.
Chicago style:
Simon-Astley Scholfield, "Lust for Love: 'Like It Is'," M/C Reviews 2 Sep. 1999,
<http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/reviews/screen/lust.html> ([your date of access]).
APA style:
Simon-Astley Scholfield. (1999) Lust for love: 'Like it is'. M/C Reviews 2 Sep. 1999.
<http://www.uq.edu.au/mc/reviews/screen/lust.html> ([your date of access]).
|