अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंReligion, politics and gay pride clash in a small Tennessee town when out, proud and living in New York Jason Potts returns home to make life better for the LGBT teenagers.Religion, politics and gay pride clash in a small Tennessee town when out, proud and living in New York Jason Potts returns home to make life better for the LGBT teenagers.Religion, politics and gay pride clash in a small Tennessee town when out, proud and living in New York Jason Potts returns home to make life better for the LGBT teenagers.
- पुरस्कार
- कुल 1 नामांकन
Elle Anderson
- Church member
- (as a different name)
- …
Chatt Graham
- Young Dewayne
- (as Graham Ellwood)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
A slow moving low budget movie with mediocre acting. The characters were mostly cliche with some bordering on absurd. I suppose there are some ministers that advocate rounding up Gays but the anti Gay characters are shown with enough savvy to be duplicitous. The ending of the movie and Pride parade falls flat. This could have been much better even without major funding.
Recently I've gone back into research into the life and death of a young gay man who was killed in 1983 in New York City. What made Winthrop Bean's case so unique to me was the very good small town upbringing he had in South Strafford, Vermont. He was a loved figure in the town and now is something of a legend in his region of the White River Valley, especially for young LGBT people.
Sad to say that Tennessee Queer is a more typical tale of gay youth especially those who live in red state America. Christian Walker grew up as a bullied teen there and left the first chance he could. Now he lives in New York with a partner who might be a married partner now there. He gets a call from his mother who cons him into coming back so she could talk him into moving back at least to the region if not their small town of Smythe, Tennessee.
Without going into the particulars Smythe gets itself a Gay Pride Parade, first in the area. A particular bully from Walker's high school years Billie Worley who is now a city councilman with big plans to ride homophobia into higher office. His ally is Jim Eikner the local fundamentalist preacher who has conceived of this brilliant plan target the gay youth of Smythe whom if they march he can steer them into conversion therapy.
What starts out as a jest for Walker has mushroomed and turned him into a champion for the rights of LGBT people in the area. Does the parade go on? It does with some unintended consequences for the marchers and the opponents.
What Tennessee Queer does and its greatest value is illustrate that things are different in that we no longer consent to be closeted and afraid. Even in a southern small town where the word from fundamentalist pulpits was law this just isn't happening any more. Gays stand up for themselves and the fundamentalist response is now to claim they're the victims. I fear we'll see more and more of that.
Worley tells Walker that smearing the queers never gets old. But in fact it is quite old and getting quite out of style.
Tennessee Queer is a wonderful film about red state life for gays in America. But it's also quite the blueprint for how to fight back. Gay and mainstream audiences should see this film.
Sad to say that Tennessee Queer is a more typical tale of gay youth especially those who live in red state America. Christian Walker grew up as a bullied teen there and left the first chance he could. Now he lives in New York with a partner who might be a married partner now there. He gets a call from his mother who cons him into coming back so she could talk him into moving back at least to the region if not their small town of Smythe, Tennessee.
Without going into the particulars Smythe gets itself a Gay Pride Parade, first in the area. A particular bully from Walker's high school years Billie Worley who is now a city councilman with big plans to ride homophobia into higher office. His ally is Jim Eikner the local fundamentalist preacher who has conceived of this brilliant plan target the gay youth of Smythe whom if they march he can steer them into conversion therapy.
What starts out as a jest for Walker has mushroomed and turned him into a champion for the rights of LGBT people in the area. Does the parade go on? It does with some unintended consequences for the marchers and the opponents.
What Tennessee Queer does and its greatest value is illustrate that things are different in that we no longer consent to be closeted and afraid. Even in a southern small town where the word from fundamentalist pulpits was law this just isn't happening any more. Gays stand up for themselves and the fundamentalist response is now to claim they're the victims. I fear we'll see more and more of that.
Worley tells Walker that smearing the queers never gets old. But in fact it is quite old and getting quite out of style.
Tennessee Queer is a wonderful film about red state life for gays in America. But it's also quite the blueprint for how to fight back. Gay and mainstream audiences should see this film.
We sort of just stumbled into this film at a local "art house" type theatre, and what a treat it was! It's the kind of refreshing indie film that can renew going to the movies when you've overdosed on big Hollywood formula "blockbusters." The cast was outstanding, in particular, the two leads Christian Walker and Billie Worley were just phenomenal. The story tackles a lot of heavy topics that are so current and relevant to "red state" gay people...but it does so with a light-heartedness that just works really well. Without giving away anything, there were several times where I was sure I knew where it was going, and was taken off-guard, and then was happy to see that everything ended as it should have. I really can't recommend this one enough.
There are times when a talented and/or charming cast of actors can save a badly written/scripted movie, but in Tennessee Queer, the amateurish acting only makes it all worse.
Gay-bashing & bigotry towards both the LGBT community and Blacks remain a deplorable reality even as we start the 21st century and any effort to expose its ugly existence is laudable. Exploiting the problem as an excuse to produce a childish, badly acted movie, however, is counter-productive and neither informs nor entertains. "We" can do better than this.
There have been many movies produced that sensitively & successfully combine drama and humor in dealing with bullying, prejudice & ignorance and the harmful consequences they have on so many. Tennessee Queer almost appears to lampoon the issue with unintended humor and soap-opera farcical drama.
I applaud the intentions of this production but not the results. If you want to see an excellent, realistic portrayal of community healing, a gay pride parade and excellent acting, watch the British movie "Pride," for example.
Gay-bashing & bigotry towards both the LGBT community and Blacks remain a deplorable reality even as we start the 21st century and any effort to expose its ugly existence is laudable. Exploiting the problem as an excuse to produce a childish, badly acted movie, however, is counter-productive and neither informs nor entertains. "We" can do better than this.
There have been many movies produced that sensitively & successfully combine drama and humor in dealing with bullying, prejudice & ignorance and the harmful consequences they have on so many. Tennessee Queer almost appears to lampoon the issue with unintended humor and soap-opera farcical drama.
I applaud the intentions of this production but not the results. If you want to see an excellent, realistic portrayal of community healing, a gay pride parade and excellent acting, watch the British movie "Pride," for example.
I really wanted to like 'Tennessee Queer'.(TQ). It's heart was definitely in the right place. The problems with this film are numerous, however. First of all, the writing is abysmal. It's clear that an amateur was in charge. I'm not sure who Mark Jones is, but he's in desperate need of refresher courses at a legitimate writing school. TQ centers around a New Yorker who goes back to his hometown for a visit at a rural place in Tennessee. What he finds there, needless to say, is extreme homophobia. Hello? This is Tennessee! He decides to organize a gay pride March down the Main Street and appeals to the city leaders who of course initially vote no. Then one of them who's seeking higher office decides they should support the rally, so they can identify those citizens, especially high school students, who are gay. The children will immediately be placed into conversion schools to rid them of their 'gayness'. Ridiculous premise for sure, but regrettably, this happens way more than we think it does, even though the writer sugar coats it here. The bad guys are made to look like bumbling fools. Who will prevail? Check it out if you want to waste two hours of your life.
Though it means well, 'Tennessee Queen' does absolutely nothing to elevate the discussion of what the LGBTQ+ community faces in any meaningful way. Bad job all around.
Though it means well, 'Tennessee Queen' does absolutely nothing to elevate the discussion of what the LGBTQ+ community faces in any meaningful way. Bad job all around.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThere is no Smyth, Tennessee. The Main Street location used in the film was a real Main Street for the town of Binghampton; a small town, which the city of Memphis annexed in 1919. The buildings hadn't changed much over the years and was a perfect place to film. It was right in the middle of the city of Memphis making transportation easy for the cast and crew.
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