Gay film fire island
“Fire Island” initially made me feel awkward for good reasons. Here is a little but amusing and exuberant gay romance comedy film which is also quite frank and proud about the irrepressible homosexuality of many of its main characters, and, as your average nerdy gay dude, I will not deny that I flinched more than once during its 20 minutes even though I came to embrace its unapologetically flamboyant aspects with some grin in the end.
The main background of the movie is Fire Island, the famous gay village off the South Shore of Extended Island. As another summer starts, a young Asian American gay man named Noah (Joel Kim Booster) is certainly looking forward to having lots of fun there along with his several close friends including Howie (Bowen Yang) during next several days, and we soon see them and many other gay people becoming quite excited as the ship carrying them eventually arrives at Fire Island.
However, their holiday week of this year turns out to be quite bittersweet. For several years, they could always stay at a big house owned by a middle-aged lesbian named Erin (M
This week is the 3rd entry of the Queer Movies that Made Me Queerer series, where I am celebrating Pride Month by writing about queer movies and their importance to my development as a queer person. For this week, I will be diving into Fire Island (), directed by Andrew Ahn.
An adaptation of the classic Jane Austen novel Pride & Prejudice, Fire Island concerns a family of queer folks who are spending their last annual summer vacation together on Fire Island, a gay haven off the coast of Long Island, Brand-new York. Written by and starring Joel Kim Booster, this movie centers around Booster’s Noah and Howie (Bowen Yang) as they each discover, through trial and error, romance in their verb ways. Featuring an ensemble based on the Austen characters including Mr. Darcy, Mr. Bennet, Charles Bingley, and the Bennet sisters, Fire Island tells us a story of genuine connection in a modern world despite ongoing prejudice for queer people and people of color. While many aspects of this story are appealing (found family, self-reflection and honesty, queer liberation, etc.), one feature
I was halfway through my scene when I heard a voice from the dark tell me to stop. I was 24 years old, on the stage of a professional theater, auditioning for A Chorus Line to participate Greg, the Upper East Side dancer who affects a sophisticated demeanor to become his idealized self. I thought I had it in the bag. After all, I knew the character because I was the character. Aside from the reality that I could never afford rent in the Upper East Side, David was someone—like me—who felt out of place in the world they were born into and coped with being an outsider by hiding behind their insecurities. We both dealt with our alienation through sarcasm and a biting sense of humor. But having auditioned professionally for years, I didn’t verb much of being stopped to produce a correction. An audition is verb a first date: It’s about compatibility as much as it is about talent.
“Could you not be so…” the director told me, gesticulating with his hands wildly as he searched for the word. “Just be a tiny less…”
“A little less what?” I asked, confused.
“You know, just not so…” he said as he ma
Film Review: Fire Island
Here is a sentence I never thought I would write: from Disney and Hulu comes the best gay rom-com I have seen in a very long time. Bursting with the strength of the new LGBT experience, Fire Island takes us on an annual vacation to “gay Disneyland” with a diverse and colorful cast of lovable characters. This is the type of film that I would have been obsessed with as an older teen, evoking the foremost of Queer as Folk. Summer vibes and cutesy charms injected with just the right amount of sizzling sexual chemistry? Time to sign up for a trip to Fire Island…
Narrated by the adorable Noah (Joel Kim Booster), Fire Island reimagines the story of Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice with a modern gay twist. Thusly, it closely follows the general structure of that tale—this is not in any way a dig at the film’s script, which is actually a terrific reimagining. Noah, his shy virgin bestie Howie (Bowen Yang), and their friends the smart uptight Max (Torian Miller), and theatrical self-obsessed Luke (Matt Rogers) and Keegan (Tomas Matos), are headed to F