For today's Know Your LGBT History post, I've selected The Jackal (1997).
The Jackal is a remake of a 1973 movie entitled The Day of the Jackal. Both movies are about an unnamed assassin paid gobs of money to kill a high ranking official. In the original movie, the assassin's target was French president Charles de Gaulle. In the remake, it was the First Lady.
What makes both movies so interesting is how the assassin covers his identity, moving from person to person and murdering whomever to keep said identity secret.
In both movies, he takes up with a gay man, making sure to dispose of the man when he no longer needs him.
The remake is viciously direct when it comes to this. The Jackal, played by BruceWillis, takes up with a gay man in order to hide out. There is a small hint that the two had sex, seeing that the gay man thinks that they are beginning a relationship.
Of course that ludicrous notion dies out in a scene so ridiculous that you can't get mad at what happens.
One could almost look at it as a parody of the many times in the movies where they create a gay character, only to kill him off:
Next week - Something nice and foreign that's just begging for an American remake. I would have posted it this week but I had forgotten about it until this post was half written. I'm not telling you what it is. Tune it next Friday.
Past Know Your LGBT Posts: .
The Jackal is a remake of a 1973 movie entitled The Day of the Jackal. Both movies are about an unnamed assassin paid gobs of money to kill a high ranking official. In the original movie, the assassin's target was French president Charles de Gaulle. In the remake, it was the First Lady.
What makes both movies so interesting is how the assassin covers his identity, moving from person to person and murdering whomever to keep said identity secret.
In both movies, he takes up with a gay man, making sure to dispose of the man when he no longer needs him.
The remake is viciously direct when it comes to this. The Jackal, played by BruceWillis, takes up with a gay man in order to hide out. There is a small hint that the two had sex, seeing that the gay man thinks that they are beginning a relationship.
Of course that ludicrous notion dies out in a scene so ridiculous that you can't get mad at what happens.
One could almost look at it as a parody of the many times in the movies where they create a gay character, only to kill him off:
Next week - Something nice and foreign that's just begging for an American remake. I would have posted it this week but I had forgotten about it until this post was half written. I'm not telling you what it is. Tune it next Friday.
Past Know Your LGBT Posts: .