I'm going to catch so much hell for this but I loved In & Out.
It was a 1997 comedy which was inspired by Tom Hanks' Oscar speech (when he won Best Actor for Philadelphia.) In the speech, he thanked one of his teachers and classmates.
In&Out repeated the speech moment but made one big difference.
What if Hanks had accidentally outed the people he thanked.
That's what happens in In & Out when an actor (played by Matt Dillon) thanks one of his high school teachers from the podium and outs him as a gay man.
Only one thing, however. No one knows that the man is gay, including the teacher himself.
Okay, some folks didn't like this movie because they felt it exploited stereotypes about gay men. This is true. Kline's character is a stereotypical gay man who likes Barbara Streisand and has a "fey" manner about him even while constantly insisting that he isn't gay.
And there are some scenes - i.e. the dance scene and the "I am Spartacus" type ending - which I felt were corny as hell:
But the saving grace of this movie has to be the performances. Tom Selleck is okay as the openly gay talk show host willing to exploit the entire incident for ratings. I found Kline to be marginal as the main character. Of course the scene everyone remembers is when Selleck liplocks Kline:
However the person who really steals the show in this movie, and this becomes its saving grace, is Joan Cusack as Kline's fiance - a woman who is counting on marrying him so much that she lost weight and based her entire self-worth on the fact that he would lead her down the aisle.
Cusack received a much deserved Oscar nomination for her role as a jilted bride (you really didn't think they would get married, did you?)
Not to worry though. This is a comedy, which means it has a happy ending for all parties involved, including Cusack. Guess who her character ends up with at the end of the movie?
Past Know Your LGBT Posts: .
It was a 1997 comedy which was inspired by Tom Hanks' Oscar speech (when he won Best Actor for Philadelphia.) In the speech, he thanked one of his teachers and classmates.
In&Out repeated the speech moment but made one big difference.
What if Hanks had accidentally outed the people he thanked.
That's what happens in In & Out when an actor (played by Matt Dillon) thanks one of his high school teachers from the podium and outs him as a gay man.
Only one thing, however. No one knows that the man is gay, including the teacher himself.
Okay, some folks didn't like this movie because they felt it exploited stereotypes about gay men. This is true. Kline's character is a stereotypical gay man who likes Barbara Streisand and has a "fey" manner about him even while constantly insisting that he isn't gay.
And there are some scenes - i.e. the dance scene and the "I am Spartacus" type ending - which I felt were corny as hell:
But the saving grace of this movie has to be the performances. Tom Selleck is okay as the openly gay talk show host willing to exploit the entire incident for ratings. I found Kline to be marginal as the main character. Of course the scene everyone remembers is when Selleck liplocks Kline:
However the person who really steals the show in this movie, and this becomes its saving grace, is Joan Cusack as Kline's fiance - a woman who is counting on marrying him so much that she lost weight and based her entire self-worth on the fact that he would lead her down the aisle.
Cusack received a much deserved Oscar nomination for her role as a jilted bride (you really didn't think they would get married, did you?)
Not to worry though. This is a comedy, which means it has a happy ending for all parties involved, including Cusack. Guess who her character ends up with at the end of the movie?
Past Know Your LGBT Posts: .