I'm always conflicted about posting nude pictures of homophobic actors. There's a little frisson of guilt that comes from looking at the penis of someone who hates you, as if you are somehow encouraging him. On the other hand, imagine how upset he would be to find himself the object of homoerotic desire.
In this case, I'm talking about Bug Hall, who hit the big screen in 1994. at the age of eight. He played Alfalfa in The Little Rascals, a modernized version of the Our Gang comedy shorts of the 1930s. Having already seen some of the shorts -- no, not in the 1930s -- I didn't watch, but I heard that Alfalfa falls in love with a girl. At age eight.
The original Alfalfa, Carl Switzer, had a hard life after Our Gang, and was killed in a bar fight in 1959, at age 31.
Bug Hall had a hard life after The Little Rascals, too. Far less successful kid movies followed: The Big Green, The Stupids, and The Munsters' Scary Little Christmas. I don't think anybody saw them.
He sprang into a heteronormative adolescence with Skipped Parts, 2000, about having sex with a girl. I didn't see it, but there's a clip floating around the internet where the 14-year old is getting undressed in preparation for the sex, and becomes aroused. I can't tell if it was scripted, or an accident. Either way, you don't want to see it.
More heteronormativity with Get a Clue, 2002, about two high school journalists who solve a mystery and fall in love. I didn't see it, but I like the theme song, "Get a Clue," performed by Simon and Milo, an animated gay-subtext couple.
More sex in Footsteps and Arizona Summer, which I didn't see, and then a fizzing out into guest spots on tv dramas: Strong Medicine, Charmed, Cold Case, The O.C.
Bug runs away naked in The Day the Earth Stopped, 2008: "Hundreds of massive intergalactic robots appear in all of the world's major capitals with an ultimatum: Prove the value of human civilization or be destroyed." Holy cow, that sounds awful.
It features a man and a woman falling in love -- heterosexual romance is the value of human civilization, get it?
At this point, you're probably wondering if I've actually seen Bug Hall in anything. I'm wondering about that, too.
American Pie Presents the Book of Love. No.
Camoflauge: "A troubled teen-aged boy is sent to a boot camp in a secluded forest where he must survive the horrifying disciplinary tactics of a demented camp counselor." No, and the blurb writer forgot the first rule of writing: minimal use of stupid, superfluous adjectives.
More Bug after the break