Gemstones Episode 2.3, Continued: The darkness of roller coasters, hookups, club bulges, and apples. With lots of n*de musclemen
"Man in an Orange Shirt": Constantly depressed gay Brit hooks up, gets a boyfriend, plays cards with Gran. With bonus n*de Julians
Man in an Orange Shirt is a two-part BBC television series or coherent movie. Part 1 features the "forbidden love" of two soldiers immediately after World War II. It has a sad ending. I don't want to watch that, so I'll skip to Part 2, about a modern-day couple, Adam and Steve. Adam and Steve, like from the homophobic slogan: "God created Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve, therefore you shouldn't be gay"? That's ridiculous! Is this a comedy?
No, a drama: "A minefield of internalized issues and dangerous temptations line the road to their happiness." In 2018?
Scene 1: Long close-up of an eye as Adam (Julian Morris, who didn't come out until he was 38) scrolls through a hookup app while walking down the street. He stares with a sinister expression, as if he's on his way to murder someone.
Cut to a long close-up of an elderly hand next to black-and-white photos of a man getting married and in a soldier uniform. It turns out to belong to Mrs. Flora, a woman with a man's haircut, reading the newspaper while her attendant brings pills. If she was married to the WW2 guy, she'd be well over 90 now.
Psych! Adam wasn't on his way to murder someone, he was just going to work. He doesn't even seem to hate his job as a veterinarian. After returning a dog to its kid, he sees his next patient, a cat owned by Steve (David Gyasi)
Adam and Steve? Come on, that's ridiculous.
Some stuff about a sick, meowing cat that I'm fast forwarding through.
Scene 2: And then Adam (left) and Steve have sex, but blurry, in weird angles, with obstacles in the way. The dialogue is "Yes! Yes! Moan."
Mrs. Flora's attendant leaves, with shepherd's pie in the oven for later, while Adam walks down the street with a bouqet of flowers. Either the sinister look is his natural express, or Adam hates everyone and everything.
He sits down to dinner with his grandmother, Mrs. Flora, and compliments her plate warmers. She thinks that he is mocking her. A bit paranoid, Gran? Then she criticizes his jacket.
They discuss how Gran did a good job raising him, as opposed to...his sister?...who is having twins and therefore reprensible? I'm not catching these British insult/compliments.
Gran notes that she deflects all of the busybodies who ask when he's going to settle down: "Some of us prefer our own company." Or you could just out him. You know that he's gay, right?
Dinner over, Adam leaves, but Gran stays at the table, looking despondent. You left her to do the dishes?
Scene 3: In Adam's absurdly elegant London flat, he stands in the shower and tries desperately to scrub off a stain on his shoulder. I don't get it. This guy didn't appear in the last episode, so what is the significance of the stain? A reference to "Macbeth"?
He drops in to give Steve his dead cat's ashes, and finds a super-elegant apartment and a fey older boyfriend, Casper the Friendly Ghost (Julian Sands, below), who is annoyed but accepts the hookups as a necessary evil, required to have access to Steve's penis.
Adam tries to complement Steve's apartment and his job as an architect, but Steve find something wrong with each. Come on, dude, look on the bright side. You've got a great job, a great apartment in downtown London, a boyfriend who doesn't mind hooking up, and a tripod between your legs. Cheer up!
Scene 4: Adam having dinner with female friend Claudia and her husband David (Eddie Arnold, who died in 2008, leaving over 140 classic country-western songs. Aspiring actors might want avoid naming themselves after famous names, to make internet searches possible). They want to fix him up with swishy American drama teacher Dwight (Hal Scardino):
"So, how do you know Claudia?"
"She was my girlfriend at uni."
"Oh. I thought you were...um..." The word is "gay." Why is it so hard to say it?
"Um...,yeah...but..." "I turned him!" Claudia chirps in. Girl, don't say that, even as a joke. It gives the homophobes ammunition for their "Being gay is a choice" arguments.
Adam continues to be despondent, and sneaks in the back room to check his hookup app contacts. Just date the swishy drama teacher. He wants to ditch his friends for a hookup. Claudia checks his face and dick shots to make sure he's worth it -- "yeah, hotter than Dwight, go on."
Meanwhile, Gran is playing cards with her old-biddy friends. One leaves to use the loo, and the others gossip about "two dates" with a man -- to a hotel! Gran doesn't get it -- she hated sex, and was thrilled when her husband died and she didn't have to do it anymore. Maybe you just hated sex with men, dear. Try out the Daughters of Bilitis.
Scene 4: Adam trudges despondently through the busy streets as if he's on his way to a funeral instead of a hookup. Cut to him topping the guy, Bruno (Phil Dunster) -- all dark, nothing showing. Afterward Bruno complements him on his passion and tries an introduction, but Adam isn't having it: no names, no overnights, no "I'd like to see you again." While Bruno is in the bathroom, he zooms away to trudge despodently through the streets of London. I get the impression that the showrunner strongly disapproves of recreational activity. Even the participants hate it, and have to take six-hour long showers afterwards.
Scene 5: Adam fixes Gran's router while she heats up the food that her attendant prepared -- and complains about it, of course. I like complaining, too -- "here are the things I hated about it" is much more fun than "it was good." But lady, there are limits.
In other news, the letting agency said that the cottage needs too much work to be lettable (rentable?), so Gran wants to give it to Adam. In Britain, a cottage is a small house in a rural area with no land around.
"Besides, it will get you out of the city!" You got it backwards, Gran: gay men move into the city.
Cut to Adam walking despondently and then being despondent at work. He calls Steve -- for a date? No, to help him renovate the cottage. He's an architect, yeah?
The place is a horrible dump, with moldy wallpaper, holes in the ceiling, a hole in the bedroom floor, no heat, and depressing furniture from the 1950s. But Steve thinks it's "brilliant," a perfect fixer-upper. He's bored with "tarting up kitchens" and is desperate to "get my hands dirty."
More after the break.
Robert's Hot/Hung Photos, Part 1: Burgers, bondage, butts, an oral lesson, and the love of his life
Wes Stern (sigh): Was the cutest teen idol of the 1970s gay, or just pretending? With bonus n*de Sal Mineo and Dustin Hoffman
Sigh. Isn't this most groovy, ginchy, dreamy, outta sight dude to ever have his name written amid little hearts in a chemistry notebook?
The minds of ABC executives started churning. Why not give him his own tv series? He could play "himself," and sing a different number every week. Surefire hit, right?
Thousands of groovy dudes showed up for open auditions, but Bobby really, really liked 23-year old Wes Stern (sigh).
Left: Bobby hasn't revealed much about his male loves, but we almost know he dated almost-out actor Sal Mineo.
Gemstones Episode 2.3: Kelvin topples, Keefe cuddles, and Titus is caged. With bonus semen loads
Previous: Episode 2.2: Kelvin clenches,Keefe dances, and everybody flirts with Eli.
Junior Threatens Brock: We cut to Eli at home, putting his bloody pants from last night into the hamper and watching a news report about the murders. Security guard Brock calls to tell him that Junior wants in. "Tell him I'm not here." Was Junior his partner in the murders, or did he do the job on his own?
Junior blusters and threatens him, but finally he drives away. You may recall that in Season 1, Scotty flirted with Brock to gain access to the Gemstone compound. But Junior has moved away from his gay-subtext flirting; he is pure threat.
The Human Pyramid: We see the God Squad perform before an audience of teens. Kelvin introduces the strongest member, Torsten, who dated a "female" in high school before she tried to seduce him, and he had to decide on "his celibacy or his soul." It is clear that by "celibacy," Kelvin means much more than avoiding sex with women. You must reject the entire heterosexist trajectory of job, house, wife, and kids, the nuclear family myth, the domestication and civilization threatened by the "female." The way to salvation lies in the beauty of male bodies, in homoerotic desire unhindered by emotional connection.
But when they move on to a human pyramid, with Kelvin on top, it topples. The House of Cards collapses. Maybe it can't be all about the penis after all. Keefe behaves like a concerned boyfriend, rushing onto the stage and embracing Kelvin -- to protect him from plummeting musclemen?
Kelvin Wants to Spoon: What follows is very difficult to read. Fans are likely to shake their heads and say WTF? during their first, second, and third viewing. The showrunners want us to be unsure whether the guys are actually gay, of course, but that's been obvious since Episode 1 to anyone with a basic knowledge of queer codes. The real question: is Keefe Kelvin's assistant and acolyte, or his romantic partner? Are they friends with benefits, or are they in love?
On the surface, it seems easy enough. Kelvin, in underwear, is looking out the window at the God Squad below. Keefe enters, having drawn him a bath, and tells him that both Liam and Titus were injured in the human pyramid debacle. Kelvin thinks that it's their own fault for being soft on the fundamentals and skipping leg day. "Something might have to be done about Titus," he says menacingly, an action-adventure movie villain.
Keefe: "I completely agree." Note that he is not an assistant, or his opinion would be irrelevant. They are equal partners in the God Squad Cult. "But some of the others have been questioning their place here as well. That's the downside of assembling an entire group of alpha males. As they grow stronger, they grow more defiant." The men are not content with being mere objects of desire; they want autonomy and control.
Kelvin slips off his underwear and hands them to Keefe, who helps him put on his bathrobe -- from behind. He has to press his body against Kelvin, crotch to butt. Then he caresses Kelvin's thighs instead of breaking away. It would be much easier from the front. Why does he go in from the rear?
We see here Keefe struggling with his desire to move the relationship from "erotic partners" to "boyfriends," struggling with his urge to kiss Kelvin. Notice that he says "Are we in trouble?", not "Are you in trouble." He is not an employee, who could just find another job if the church went down. They are romantic partners; they are in this together.
Eli lays down the law: In the next scene, Eli notes that Liam (Peter Kaasa), who was injured during the human pyramid stunt, is suing the Gemstones. They don't need another scandal right now.
Bonus semen loads after the break. Warning: explicit.
"Population 11": Ben Feldman in an outback town with aliens, meat pies, secrets, lies, and dicks, doesn't get the Girl
Population 11, on Amazon Prime, stars Ben Feldman as a guy searching for his father in a paranormal-ridden Australian outback. He teams up with The Girl, of course -- not once in a series like this does the guy team up with a guy. But hey, Feldman is cute, it's Australian and there's paranormal.
Prologue: An old guy walks through the dark by a gigantic baobab and into a circle of giant termite mounds. Suddenly he is illuminated by light -- from above! He runs, stumbles, falls, screams. Abducted by aliens? I'll bet it's just a tease.
Scene 1: Andy (Ben) drives through the outback on the wrong side of the road, almost hitting a cop car! The lady cop makes it very, very clear that she wants to have sex with him. Her innuendos are extremely vulgar: "Breathe into my mouth, hot stuff...harder...harder..." Not The Girl: slightly overweight.
After she gives him her phone number and answers the question "Can I go now?" with that annoying "I don't know, can you?", he continues on his way through the desert to Bilgudgee, population 12. It has a park, a Chinese restaurant, and a pub in what looks like an old garage. A community board advertises trivia night and "Outback UFO Tours," hosted by the guy who was abducted by aliens earlier: "guaranteed sightings!"
It's Andy's dad with a new scam!
A race car zooms in, almost hitting him. Resident #1 is the lady who runs the pub/hotel. Not the Girl: middle-aged.
Resident #3, a German-speaking guy named Cedric, doesn't mind: he has nothing to confess.
Andy claims that he came to town for the UFO tour, run by Hugo...not mentioning that Hugo is his dad.
They haven't seen him in a few weeks, but they take Andy to his house -- horribly run-down, with a lot of alien memorabilia. Nobody home. Why not just say you're his son? Then you could go inside and investigate.
Scene 2: The Sundew Caravan and Campground. A caravan is a trailer in the U.S. Usually you bring your own to the campground, but sometimes you can rent them.
Andy goes to the office-trailer and asks Residents #4 and #5, a lesbian couple or mother-daughter, if they've seen Hugo. No, they don't speak with him, because "Mom's a drama queen."
Next Resident #6, a bearded guy with a neck brace (Rick Donald), wonders if he's an FBI agent. Andy says no, but the guy doesn't believe him, thinks he's a suspect, and starts yelling "I won't go down for this!" Um...Australia is rather out of their jurisdiction. Maybe he's with the Australian Security Intelligence Organization, ASIO.
Left: Rick Donald's backside
Residents #7 and #8, an older guy with muscles (Steve Le Marquand), and his young wife or daughter, tell him that Hugo is a pain in the arse, but that's part of his charm.
Left: Steve Le Marquand frontal
So when is Andy going to meet the Girl of His Dreams? He hasn't even been identified as heterosexual yet; that usually happens by Minute 2. Could he be....no way. I absolutely am not going to get my hopes up.
More after the break
"A Real Pain": Buddies have wacky adventures or a Dark Night of the Soul in Poland, but I'm off to the Horseman's Club
A Real Pain (2024), on Hulu, is advertised as a wacky buddy comedy with Kieran Culkin and Jesse Eisenberg, touring Poland, with a lot of exteriors.
Not to mention Kieran's backside.
Scene 1: Benji (Kieran Culkin) is sitting in the airport waiting for David (Jesse Eisenberg), who is just walking out the door of his Manhattan brownstone. He keeps calling: heavy traffic...no, it lightened up...Ok, so David is the Stick-in-the-Mud, Benji the Free Spirit.
At the airport, Benji grabs him and makes him twirl so he can see his cousin's butt. Um...an interested in a guy's butt is a sign of gay identity.
He brought yogurt, and some weed for when they reach Poland: "They're not going to arrest two Jews for a little weed."
He chats up the TSA lady: "Her Dad does security for the Knicks." This annoys David. Doesn't count as heterosexualizing him.
Priya made some trail mix for them. Doesn't count: she could be an aunt or a sister.
Scene 2: On the plane, David has to take the middle seat. Bummer.
They discuss their back story: David works in digital ad sales, and Benji is a deadbeat. They haven't seen each other for a while. They're going on a Heritage Tour of Poland.. wait, they're Jewish...is this a tour of the sites of pograms and concentration camps?
Naw, who would want to see those? Poland has 1000 years of Jewish history.
Later, David takes his prescription meds and gazes at a video of his daughter. Heterosexualized at minute 6.30.
It's actually Jesse Eisenberg's real-life son, Banner. I was confused by his long blond hair.
Scene 3: At the Warsaw airport -- "Welcome to Warsaw" sign in English. They meet their driver. Some nice location shots as they drive through the city, but David is still gazing at that video of his son. Why the heck aren't you looking out the window at this major European capital that you've never been to before?
They check in, retrive a package of weed from the desk clerk, and head up to their room. When David kicks off his shoes, Benji complements him: "You have really nice feet. Graceful as fuck. Reminds me of Grandma's feet." Foot fetish? Benji is giving off some gay vibes.
Scene 4: Tour Guide James (Will Sharpe, top photo and left) introduces himself: Not actually Jewish, but a degree in Eastern European Studies from Oxford.
The others in the tour are:
1. Marcia Kramer, recently divorced, from New York. Her mother survived the camps. One of the cousins is obviously going to fall in love with her, but I'm not sure which. Maybe David is divorced, and Benji's interest in men's butts and feet is supposed to be wacky, not homoerotic.
2.-3. Diane and Mark (Daniel Oreskes), an elderly couple.
Daniel Oreskes has 40 acting credits on the IMDB, including The Sopranos, Law & Order, Ray Donovan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and Only Murderers in this Building. He is heterosexual.
4. Eloge, from Rwanda, converted to Judaism. He's a survivor of the Rwandan genocide.
The Cameroon-born Kurt Egyiawan is a British theatrical actor who has appeared in The Exorcist, House of the Dragon, Bodies, and Kaos. No intel on whether he's heterosexual or not.
More after the break