It's the 1990s. Toby, just out of college in Wisconsin, comes to Manhattan to spend the summer with his older cousin, Packard, a gay man whose lover John R. has just died of AIDS. Toby is sh... Read allIt's the 1990s. Toby, just out of college in Wisconsin, comes to Manhattan to spend the summer with his older cousin, Packard, a gay man whose lover John R. has just died of AIDS. Toby is shy, the openly-gay society around him makes him nervous. Packard gives Toby a pair of John ... Read allIt's the 1990s. Toby, just out of college in Wisconsin, comes to Manhattan to spend the summer with his older cousin, Packard, a gay man whose lover John R. has just died of AIDS. Toby is shy, the openly-gay society around him makes him nervous. Packard gives Toby a pair of John R.'s shoes; when Toby puts them on, he has powerful visions of the pre-AIDS scene in the 1... Read all
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I never liked Thelma Houston's "Don't Leave Me This Way" until I saw The Dead Boys' Club. Now I don't think I'll ever hear that song without this film being brought instantly to mind. This is not a bad thing.
Take 25 mins out of your life and see this movie. Different people will see different things in it, I guess. But everyone will get *something* out of it.
Toby, the hero of "Dead Boys' Club," finds a way to revisit the pre-AIDS era without any of that gloom on the horizon. Unsurprisingly, he finds all the fun of being young and discovering the excitement of sexual attraction--just what many a young man before him had found on his first visit to the big city. Sure, there are complications and consequences--some serious, some hilarious--and the threat of HIV isn't taken lightly. But director Mark Christopher perfectly juxtaposes past exuberance and modern realities, letting viewers feel what it's like to recall a world without HIV, while refusing to dismiss or ignore the disease.
This mix of past and present could feel forced or artsy, but it doesn't. "Dead Boys Club" shows the balance of present and past almost the way we feel it, seeing the present in front of us as our minds flash to the past, and then back to the present.
Even though the movie was a student film, I've never seen anything like it. In his next movie, "Alkali, Iowa," Christopher would expand on the idea of looking back at past events that shaped the present. Both films clearly represent a new, exciting, unconventional way of storytelling in movies, which made the choice of Christopher as director of "54" all the more surprising. Someday I hope to see what Christopher had wanted for that film; meanwhile, I'm happy to hear that he's working on other projects.
Oh, yeah: Sure, "Dead Boys Club," is sweet and wistful. It's also uproariously funny. Just recalling this movie brings a smile to my face, on so many levels.
In this short, that `ecstasy effect' is in a pair of shoes that are given to the `twink' Toby by his cousin Packard. The shoes belonged to Packard's late lover who has died of AIDS. When Toby puts them on, he channels the "Disco Era". The music soars, his pulse races, he becomes self-assured and every man is appealing.
This film invokes the spirit of the pre-AIDS era and revels in the hedonism and `joi de vivre' of a now-gone era. For anyone who came out during that period this film will bring back some great memories.
In this short, the shoes are black and only the real film buffs will recall what putting on the Red Shoes led to.
Did you know
- Crazy creditsThis film is in memory of John Reed, Ricky Wilson and other boys I never knew.
- ConnectionsEdited into Boys' Shorts: The New Queer Cinema (1993)
- SoundtracksDon't Leave Me This Way
Performed by Thelma Houston
Words & Music by Kenny Gamble (as Kenneth Gamble), Cary Gilbert, and Leon Huff
© 1975 Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp