Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.3 4.3bsd-beta 6/6/85; site spdcc.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!burl!ulysses!bellcore!decvax!genrad!panda!talcott!harvard!spdcc!dyer From: dyer@spdcc.UUCP (Steve Dyer) Newsgroups: net.motss Subject: Re: Kudos to CBS/CTV Message-ID: <20@spdcc.UUCP> Date: Thu, 27-Feb-86 01:07:17 EST Article-I.D.: spdcc.20 Posted: Thu Feb 27 01:07:17 1986 Date-Received: Sat, 1-Mar-86 02:15:45 EST References: <173@ubc-cs.UUCP> Organization: S.P. Dyer Computer Consulting, Cambridge MA Lines: 69 Keywords: Welcome Home, Bobby [First, I would like to apologize for the length of this posting. I'm generally a member of the one-screen-fits-all camp, and would hate to think that this article would imply any sort of approval for the recent trend here in net.motss towards longer articles without correspondingly greater content. But I haven't said much lately, anyway. Count me down for two articles...] I was about to put my two cents in on this movie, but Vince beat me to it. Unfortunately, I have to disagree with just about everything he said. I made somewhat similar comments about "Early Frost", but with my admittedly failing memory, "Welcome Home, Bobby" makes "EF" look like a masterpiece of the genre. Basic point: I would have liked to see the movie they wanted to make before the TV executives got their hands on it. More than even "EF", this is a fatally, fatally compromised movie. It's a rather touchy topic, of course: a teenager confused about his sexuality gets involved with a 35-ish man, gets caught, and suffers at the hands of his parents and schoolmates. The basic elements of an OK melodrama with a decidedly "pro-choice orientation" are all there, but what finally ended up between the commercials is a disaster, thematically and dramatically, told with all the sensitivity and subtlety of a screenplay written by committee. You see, to the TV executive crowd, it's too controversial to let a vaguely pro-gay script appear uneditted: they need some "equal time" for the sleazy, slimy side of Gay Life. But, of course, these people lack convictions, let alone the courage of same, and the result is a fragmented, dissonant view of the gay experience, rather like looking at a 3-D movie without the glasses. As an example, the relationship between the teenager and the older man developed rather naturally, and one of the main points which managed to escape through the final script was that this guy couldn't simply be considered a simple "child molester": that there was a real affection and even love which developed between them. Now, this is too darn revolutionary to let appear on TV without some "equal time": I can just see the execs talking in the back room, chomping on their cigars, saying, "No, you need a scene where the kid returns to the guy's apartment, claims that the guy exploited him as a father figure, only to find a creepily cynical boy of the same age in the guy's bedroom, telling him what a chump he is..." Don't get me wrong, I don't doubt there are kids and chicken-hawks like that. A better script could have done something interesting with such a confrontation: as it is, this and other scenes come off as a pastiche, a parade of good-gay/bad-gay sequences without any organic point of view. This makes for good advertiser relations, but bad drama. Also, the events just didn't jibe with my sense of reality: like most TV movies about gay people, you have the feeling that they haven't caputured What's True about being gay, and what is on the screen rings false. Here are a few which bothered me; perhaps this might start a discussion: o Bobby tells his girlfriend and best buddy about his gay experiences with the older guy. Very very hard to swallow. o The math teacher's coming out to Bobby as an expression of support, after he sees the extent of Bobby's ostracism and hazing in school. Makes a good story, but I am sure that would be the LAST thing any closeted gay teacher who feared for his job would do. o This "I am what I am" sentiment was passable in "La Cage aux Folles", but it's really tiresome, especially in the mouth of a 16 year old. If this is some kind of new slogan, I'm resigning from the club. One last point, it was unsettling to see the actor playing Cleary, Bobby's straight buddy, simply rehash his role as the bodyguard in the wonderful film, "My Bodyguard." It makes me respect his original performance less. -- Steve Dyer dyer@harvard.HARVARD.EDU {bbncca,bbnccv,harvard}!spdcc!dyer