Thursday, June 20, 2013

Delirious times

In honor of Pride Month I thought it’d be fun to watch some “classic” lesbian movies. OK, not necessarily “Maidechen in Uniform” classic. But more like old favorites. And today that old favorite is “Lost & Delirious.” You know, that tragic boarding school tale of first love lost.

The last time I saw it was the first time I saw it back n 2001 when it came out in theaters. So last night I had another look, thanks to my new best friend streaming Netflix.

The first thing you’ll notice is how young everyone looks. Piper Perabo is young. Mischa Barton is young. Jessica Paré is young. And there’s also young Emily VanCamp, Caroline Dhavernas and Meaghan Rath. So, so, so young.

The next thing you’ll notice is so much more of the movie is about general falconry. Seriously, there’s a lot of tending and feeding of that bird. I know, I know – metaphor. Though I’d definitely blocked the whole live mice thing out of my memory banks.

What might hit you after that is how so very melodramatic and emotional and angsty and crazypants the whole affair is. As a depiction of passionate, tumultuous, obsessional first love it’s not necessarily wrong. I mean, who hasn’t gone a little nutters, neglected personal hygiene and stabbed romantic rivals after a particularly bad breakup? Quoting Macbeth in the middle of the woods at night, we’ve all been there – in our hearts. Love makes you do the wacky.

And finally, you might wonder if this movie would ever get made today. The impossibility of two girls falling in love and living happily ever after is at the crux of the story. How it seems so absurd to think the world – your parents, your friends, your classmates – might accept who you really are. Certainly, sadly this still happens today. Homophobia is alive and well and continues to thrive and threaten our happiness and lives everyday. But for a movie to wax eloquent about the inevitable tragedy of two modern teenager girls falling in love in the United States (or was it Canada), well, that now seems quaint and a little absurd. And that’s a good thing.

5 comments:

  1. Carmen SanDiego9:43 AM

    Oh, Paulie... You so crazy...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous12:52 PM

    It does still happen, and there is a need to see happy lesbian relationships, especially on TV. Yet we don't. Why aren't we seeing TV shows where the queer girls end up happily together?

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  3. FASTTCR5:55 PM

    And the sexy was sexy hot... It's was then and is now in retrospect!

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  4. Do yourself a favor and instant stream KISS ME (Kyss Mig) instead. :)

    http://youtu.be/0D4Xh5AQleY

    ReplyDelete
  5. tlsintx9:52 PM

    Netflix streaming drives me nuts...so many searches, so many disappointments. And still I pay. :)

    ReplyDelete