To paraphrase Jane Fonda, there are a lot of things to say about the happenings of this week. But this isn't the time to say them.
What it's time for another segment of my Know Your LGBT History posts.
I apologize for today's post because it's as bad as last week's. However, again I reiterate how important it is for the lgbt community to understand how far we have come concerning images of ourselves on television and movies.
Today's post is about a little-seen blaxploitation movie entitled Black Shampoo (1976). Like many other blaxploitation movies (i.e. Blackenstein, Dr. Black and Mr. Hyde, Blacula) Black Shampoo is supposed to be a black version of a more widely seen movie.
In this case, it is Warren Beatty's movie Shampoo.
However this version has less to do with angst and relationships and more to do with violence and the glorification of the stereotype of the "big black buck."
John Daniels (who never had a starring role after this one because his acting was abominable) stars as the owner of a hair salon whose touch makes women so crazy that he generally ends up doing more than their hair, if you get my drift.
The conflict comes when he is trying to rescue his receptionist from the mob.
For the purposes of this blog, let's focus on one of his assistants, Artie. Artie is a stereotypical gay man - weak, flighty, and subject to all sort of abuse.
Naturally he also a living version of "Chekov's gun," in that you just know that he is only in the movie for something awful to happen to him. And it does at 1:14 of this trailer.
My gosh, we have come a looooong way:
Past Know Your LGBT History Postings:
What it's time for another segment of my Know Your LGBT History posts.
I apologize for today's post because it's as bad as last week's. However, again I reiterate how important it is for the lgbt community to understand how far we have come concerning images of ourselves on television and movies.
Today's post is about a little-seen blaxploitation movie entitled Black Shampoo (1976). Like many other blaxploitation movies (i.e. Blackenstein, Dr. Black and Mr. Hyde, Blacula) Black Shampoo is supposed to be a black version of a more widely seen movie.
In this case, it is Warren Beatty's movie Shampoo.
However this version has less to do with angst and relationships and more to do with violence and the glorification of the stereotype of the "big black buck."
John Daniels (who never had a starring role after this one because his acting was abominable) stars as the owner of a hair salon whose touch makes women so crazy that he generally ends up doing more than their hair, if you get my drift.
The conflict comes when he is trying to rescue his receptionist from the mob.
For the purposes of this blog, let's focus on one of his assistants, Artie. Artie is a stereotypical gay man - weak, flighty, and subject to all sort of abuse.
Naturally he also a living version of "Chekov's gun," in that you just know that he is only in the movie for something awful to happen to him. And it does at 1:14 of this trailer.
My gosh, we have come a looooong way:
Past Know Your LGBT History Postings: