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GAY
FILM REVIEWS BY MICHAEL D. KLEMM
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Circuit TLA Releasing, 2001 Director: Dirk Shafer Screenplay: Starring: Jonathan Wade Drahos, Andre Khabbazi, Paul Lekakis, Kiersten Warren, Brian Lane Green, Daniel Kukan, Darryl Stephens, Willliam Katt, Nancy Allen, Bruce Villanch Unrated, 130 minutes.
When Boys Fly TLA Releasing, 2000 Directors:
Unrated, 60 minutes |
Where
The Boys Are
A young man, handsome and shirtless, dances to a pulsating techno beat. Standing before a lavatory mirror, he inhales designer drugs and steps back to admire his body. More music, more strobe lights, more dancing, then quick sex. The images flash by in seconds and then reveal him passed out on the floor in a toilet stall.
John is introduced to the scene by his cousin Tad, a struggling filmmaker who is making a documentary about circuit parties. Tad brings John to a film industry soiree where he meets Hector (Andre Khabbazi), a handsome Latin hustler who only has sex for money. Hector, at first amused by this new kid on the block's innocence, takes John under his wing and transforms him into his mirror image. Together they take a walk on the wild side into a Dante's Inferno of drugs and sex. Secondary characters include Bobby, (Paul Lekakis), a porn dancer who is the focus of Tad's documentary. Bobby is HIV+, lives fast, and injects penile implants to counteract his impotence. ("It's for my fans, they expect a certain image," he explains to Tad and his camera.) Tad, caught up himself in the circuit scene, has just broken up with his longtime lover, Gill, to be with a "psycho guru DJ." There is also Nina, John's old college friend who is trying to make it as a stand-up comic. She functions as both a fag hag and as a Jiminy Cricket-style conscience when John's behavior gets out of hand. William Katt plays Gino, a seedy promoter who deals drugs on the circuit, and Nancy Allen plays his abused wife. A major subplot involves Gino having bought Bobby's life insurance policy and his subsequent anger that the young man is responding to treatment and not dying.
And then there's Hector, Circuit's most complex character. He has been playing the game for so long that he hates himself for it yet still goes along for the ride. He loathes himself but still finds solace in drugs. Approaching 30, and scared that his looks are fading, he is also addicted to plastic surgery and often stares at the mirror to see if his implants are shifting. He is also secretly in love with John but refuses to break his rule about no sex without money changing hands. Their destructive relationship peaks when he asks John to have sex with him while a client watches. After a trick tells him he's too old, Hector hits rock bottom. Tweaked out of his mind, he makes love to his reflection in a mirror.
Circuit is a great soap opera that could easily have degenerated into a gay version of Valley of the Dolls, (it does come close in spots), but the filmmakers successfully avoid that trap. Circuit explores all the facets of the experience, the good and the bad. There is redemption in the end, some of it a bit forced perhaps, but all in all this is a satisfying film which tells both sides of the story without being overly preachy. The director's cut is 130 minutes while the R-rated version is trimmed by 8 minutes. It could use a little tightening up, and there is a lot of gratuitous flesh but would anyone want to see such a movie without these sights included? The actors all do a fine job, though Drahos as John could have perhaps toned down his "gee-whiz" smiling in the beginning. He is totally convincing however as a club stud and his stoned scenes with Hector exhibit a scary intensity. The DVD features a director's commentary and over 30 deleted scenes mixed with behind-the-scenes footage.
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A companion film is When Boys Fly, a documentary about the circuit. Resembling a much more explicit spawn of MTV's The Real World, When Boys Fly was shot on digital video by Stewart Halpern and Lenid Rolov and follows the exploits of several young gay men, of varying backgrounds and experience, who attend Florida's White Party. The cast is large but four men dominate the interviews. Tone, aged 21, is a total party boy with a serious drug abuse problem. Brandon, 23, is a virgin on the scene who has no gay friends and seeks a sense of community. Todd, 35, is a circuit regular who is trying to capture the thrills he missed in his closeted youth. And Jon, 19, is Todd's new boyfriend who is abandoned at the party. Each of them have compelling stories to tell, all the more so because this is for real and not fiction. Their monologues are edited together in such a way that a smooth narrative flow with dramatic arcs is sustained. This may be a documentary but it is as gripping as a fiction film. It is difficult to watch these exuberant young men who are oblivious to the damage they are doing to themselves. But joy and pain intermingle. Brandon dismisses most of the people as being shallow but then sees two men proposing marriage on the dance floor. Tone, a walking drug store, calls the level-headed Brandon a "stick-in-the-mud" while Brandon wonders if Tone will still be alive in another six months. He isn't far off; Tone suffered a stroke a year later.
When Boys Fly is only 60 minutes long but tells a complete story that packs quite a punch. And, like a good documentary DVD should, the raw materials from its creation are preserved. Those wondering what wound up on the cutting room floor can watch numerous deleted scenes as well as interviews conducted with the principals two years later. A very worthy DVD for any collection.
More on Stewart Halpern: Jim J. Bullock also
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