PLEASE.Ĥ) All About Eve: Bette Davis’ volcanic performance as a fading theater actress is at turns bitchy, bawdy, and tragic. Just mute the screen whenever Mickey Rooney appears.
Probably the most oft-quoted movie of all time.ģ) Breakfast at Tiffanys: Slightly dated, but Audrey Hepburn’s role as a flighty call-girl is still the be-all and end-all of New York chic. (AND PLEASE DON’T WATCH THE TERRIBLE MUSICAL VERSION “MAME” WITH LUCILLE BALL)Ģ) Sunset Boulevard: Gloria Swanson as an absolutely demented silent film star trying for a comeback with the help of her creepy butler, Max, and a reluctant gigalo. You obviously haven’t got a camp bone in your body. Start here, and if you aren’t captivated, forget the rest of the list. (You don’t need to watch them in this order, but I’d start with the handful at the top and work your way down.)ġ) Auntie Mame : Rosalind Russell is Auntie Mame, the woman who taught gays to be gay. After the jump, I’ve listed the 50 most captivating, inspiring, and important movies that you absolutely NEED to see before you die. The camp classics that defined generations of gay men seem to have been all but forgotten lately.
P.S.REPOSTED FOR YOUR SELF-QUARANTINING NEEDS: Ask Any Buddy does include a clip from the first ever movie to feature fisting, and other sexual activities that may make you spill your drink. It’s a rather joyous and sexy look back in time Yet he also imbues his editing of the doc with a fine sense of humor which reflects an era when our community focused more on having fun. Purchell takes his role as the saviour of these films seriously especially as many of them are now impossible to find. It includes films from William Higgins, Wakefield Poole, Joe Gage, Peter De Rome, Bob Mizer, Matt Sterling and Jack Deveau. In this 80 minutes of mainly writhing naked bodies you can spot many of the iconic porn stars of that generation such as Peter Berlin, Casey Donavan, Al Parker and Jack Wrangler. New Yorkers (of a certain age) in particular will also recognise other legendary cruising spots long gone, but were also the locations for several of these films. In fact some of the movies were shot there too, alongside a notable spots in the city like the Meatpacking District when it was still a seedy part of town. The film reminds us that going to the sleazy movie theatres (mainly in NY and LA) was not just the place men went to see the ‘adult films’, but they were also one of the too rare cruising places. So the men in porn were extremely macho and all conformed to what was considered our ideal, or at least dream man.
It was all part of the need felt back then to pass as ‘straight’. Purchell includes clips from some 125 movies and in a lot of them there is a consistency in the men featured. It may be about sex but the film is also very much about how during this period, porn contributed to changing the face of gay culture and empowered so many of us to help come to terms with our own sexuality. Archivist Evan Purchell has combed his massive private collection of hundreds of films churned out by the gay adult film industry throughout the ‘60s, ‘70s, and ‘80s to make this fascinating compilation/mish-mash. Its a look back at a history of gay sex, or more accurately, gay porn. Or possibly a profile of a iconic queer who has furthered the cause for equal rights, or was an out-performer who made their mark entertaining usĪSK ANY BUDDY is about none of this. Usually when we come across documentaries that cover an aspect of gay history they are about the evolution of our community.