In the new year, let's go back to the beginning, or at least to 2019, for Righteous Gemstones Episode 1.1
Kelvin and the Vampire: Kelvin walks into his game room, and starts sorting his mail. Suddenly a half-naked man appears in the doorway, lowering from a sit-up bench like a vampire rising from his coffin -- next to an Egyptian mummy case. This is the Land of the Dead.
Kelvin: "You scared the bullcrud out of me!"
Left: At the gym
He continues to criticize Jesse for not "letting me be me."
Is this a reference to Kelvin being gay? Will he come out during this season, or is he already out?
After a bro fist-bump, Kelvin asks (his friend has not yet been named, but we'll call him Keefe) how the housesitting went.
It went fine. Keefe slept in Kelvin's room one night, "But it felt odd, so I slept the rest of the time here on the couch." The huge house must have a dozen guest rooms. Why the couch?
Kelvin: "Hey, man, you do not need to feel odd sleeping in my bed. I told you you could." Is he easing Keefe into the idea of sleeping with him, so sex can happen by "accident"?
Keefe didn't like being in Kelvin's room: "The energy in there is just unsettling. It's lonely" Very insightful. He can sense Kelvin's loneliness. There's no one in his life, no friends, no romantic partner. He doesn't realize it yet, but he is, in the words of Dag Hammarskjold, "screaming for love." .
Kelvin thanks him for looking after the place: "Home-run friendship." Keefe is appreciative: "I know not everybody wanted me here." House-sitting? Why would the family care?
Timeline problem: Keefe was a Satanist before he and Kelvin met. Maybe Kelvin even brought him to Christ. How long have they known each other? In a future episode, Keefe's Satanist friends wonder why he hasn't been around lately, so just a few weeks. But there's a faded 666 tattoo on Keefe's chest. Laser tattoo removal takes 6-10 sessions, scheduled 6-8 weeks apart. Did Keefe start the removal long before he met Kelvin, or did the writers goof? .
Keefe decides to return to his apartment: "I'm pretty bushed. Gonna go soak in a tub. " It's the middle of the day! You haven't seen your friend in a week or so. Why don't you want to stick around? Are you worried about things heading in a direction you're not ready for?
"No, man!" Kelvin pleads. "Let's stay up late, play some video games, smash some Pixie Sticks." Staying up past your bedtime? Eating sugar? Are you planning a sexual encounter or a junior high sleepover?
Keefe refuses politely. "That sounds good, but I really need a soak...I like to turn it up real hot." A sexual double-entendre. Keefe is overtly excluding Kelvin from his erotic life, saying "I'm going to have sex, but you're not invited."
Kelvin asks for a hug. Keefe reluctantly approaches. "So happy you're home," he whispers.
Kelvin seems to be pushing for a sexual relationship, but Keefe isn't sure. He's been saved (converted) for only a few weeks. He might find Kelvin attractive, but the power differential is enormous, and maybe he's been abused by clergy before. It's best to reject overtures that sound too sexual, play it cool, and see what happens.
This has been a lot to digest. Who would expect a show from Danny McBride, producer of Vice Principals and Eastbound & Down, would have a major gay character? And played by Adam Devine, who played a hetero-horny dudebro on Workaholics and fell in love with a girl in Modern Family?
But wait a minute: if you want Kelvin to be gay, why not say so? Say the word "gay," or have the guys kiss. Other tv shows with gay characters do the word or the kiss in the first scene. If you don't, the "they can't be gay!" camp is going to argue and argue to the bitter end.
Plus, in an interview during Season 2, Adam envisions that in ten years, Kelvin will be married to a woman. In another interview, he says that he wants to play a gay guy who doesn't go through a long, painful coming-out process, but has regular adventures with his boyfriend. It sounds very much like he perceives his character as straight. Or is he dissimulating to keep viewers guessing?
Things are going to get even crazier after the break
Squeezing Out the Competition: Eli is planning to open a new satellite church in Locust Grove. A fictional town, not the suburb of Atlanta. The pastors of smaller churches in the area, especially Rev. Seasons (Dermot Mulroney, right, from a 1994 movie), fear that it will draw away their members. Tough. Eli admits that he's intentionally trying to steal their congregations. In-joke: his name is John Wesley Seasons, but he's a Baptist!
Jesse's Crew Sees the Tape: Jesse shows Kelvin and his crew, the guys who were at the party, the tape. Kelvin ignores the boobs, but wants to know who belongs to the cock -- Chad. He points out that his cock is bigger. Everybody's cock is bigger, dude.
We move on to a church service -- very money-grubbing. Eli, Kelvin, and Jesse perform, while Keefe stands in the balcony. Apparently he is working security. After the service, they find all of the cars in the parking lot plastered with fliers about how evil the Gemstones are. No doubt Rev. Season is responsible!
Suck your Satanic boyfriend: After a confrontation with Rev. Seasons about the fliers -- he denies responsibility -- Eli and his family head to dinner in a private dining room on the second floor of Jason's Steakhouse. Trivia alert: Really the Liberty Taproom and Grill in Mount Pleasant, a suburb of Charlesotn.
Kelvin: "How about you tell the family what kind of man you really are?"
Jesse: "How about you just go on and suck your Satanic boyfriend Keefe off?" This is the first time Keefe is named on the show.
"Suck your Satanic boyfriend" is a parallel to "what kind of man you really are," comparing two illicit sexual acts. But what is illicit, sex with a boyfriend or sex with a Satanist? From Jesse's statement that he has gay friends earlier, we can conclude that he means "Satanist," just as Judy is inadequate because of her non-believer boyfriend. But Kelvin responds as if Jesse has criticized him for being gay: instead of defending Keefe, he throws a water glass.
The Devil is a Top: They start throwing things at each other. Jesse throws a water glass at Kelvin, but hits BJ in the nose. Kelvin yells that they should have Jesse arrested for assault, and he responds "I hope the Devil fucks you dry!"
The Bigger Man: Later, at the urinals in the restroom, Jesse asks "With everything I got going on, you can't be the bigger man?" Kelvin looks down at Jesse's penis and says "Looks like I am the bigger man." This is the second time this episode where Kelvin announces that he has a big cock.
Left: Adam Devine's dick, in case you need proof.
They begin discussing how to take down rival Johnny Seasons Jesse bought kubotan weapons to assault him with."Why'd you get me a pink one"" Kelvin asks.
"No reason." Another gay implication. It looks like Jesse knows that Kelvin is gay from the start. I'm not sure yet if Kelvin has figured it out.
Jesse goes on: They used to be friends. They played together. They were going to grow up to be Double-Dragon Ninjas together. "What happened to us?" (Top photo: Scott Wolf, who starred in the 1994 Double Dragons movie). They are at least eight years apart, so they would not have been equal playmates.
Left, top, and below: more Scott Wolfe
"We grew up," Kelvin responds. This rift between the brothers apparently was meant to introduce a plot arc, but after this episode, it is rarely mentioned again. The main relationships this season will be Jesse/Gideon and Kelvin/Keefe.
We cut to Jesse discovering that Pontius has obsessively circled all the bad words in the Bible. Then on to Kelvin's house: he plays with his drum set while Keefe plays an arcade game. Kelvin grew up? These are junior high kids.
Houseguest or boyfriend: It's late at night, but Kelvin is not entertaining Keefe. They just happen to be in the same room. This suggests that Keefe is not a visitor; they are living together, a significant change in status since Scene 1.
Keefe complains that early versions of the game had a demonic character who said, if you listened closely, "I am the Devil. You're mine." It lured many teenagers into Satanism. Keefe is much more concerned about a literal Devil than he will be later,.Kelvin is staring into space, worried about...what? He starts playing Double Dragon, the game he used to play with Jesse, so maybe he is worried about not being friends anymore.
Jesse gets revenge: Later, Jesse and his crew go to Rev. Season's house to attack, but he shoots Chad, so they scram. They call Kelvin to help.
Judy finds out about the blackmail plan, and offers to help: she's been embezzling from the church for years, saving up to make an escape.
At home, Eli watches an old video tape of his tv show. While Aimee-Leigh asks "Who wants to make a real change in their lives?' the siblings drive back from the rendezvous, looking sick. The end.
The first episode covers a lot of ground, but it appears that all of the Gemstones except Kelvin are self-serving and immoral (we will see some redeeming qualities in future episodes.) Why is Kelvin the moral center of the family? Maybe so when his fall comes, it will be all the more dramatic?
See also: Dermot Mulroney: From tearjerker victim to corrupt preacher, with some nudity in between












No comments:
Post a Comment