On the rare occasions when
gay men were portrayed in mainstream movies during the early ’70s, they were
generally depicted as freaks, psychopaths, screaming queens, and/or
self-loathing basket cases. (Even the groundbreaking 1970 drama The Boys in the Band features abundant
histrionics and stereotypes.) Given this context, the burden of representing
gay life in a non-sensational manner fell to indie filmmakers constrained to
the margins of popular culture because of limited distribution and low budgets.
Hence the serviceable drama A Very
Natural Thing, which is about a young man’s quest to embrace his sexual
identity and to find a partner for a committed relationship. The movie is
earnest and sincere and thorough, exploring everything from the pressure that
gay men feel to remain closeted while occupying professional spaces to the
tensions that arise when one partner wants to swing and the other doesn’t.
Still, it’s difficult to identify the audience for whom A Very Natural Thing was made. On one level, it seems to aimed at
hip gay viewers, what with the matter-of-fact depiction of casual drug use and
orgies. Moreover, flourishes including the slow-mo montage of dudes frolicking
nude on a beach seem ill-suited for drawing mainstream viewers into the tent of
tolerance and understanding. And then there are the elements that give A Very Natural Thing its gentle
sociopolitical message. The documentary footage from Gay Pride events. The
prologue showing that the leading character began his life in the ultimate straight
community—a monastery. The choice of an unthreatening protagonist who would
rather settle down than sleep around. If cowriter/director Christopher Larkin
endeavored to make a film bridging gay-rights activism and mainstream
entertainment, he didn’t achieve his goal, because the picture is too tame to
service the first priority and too in-your-face to service the second. (Even
viewed today, the sexual content in A
Very Natural Thing is quite frank.) Despite the film’s identity
crisis, it’s possible to experience the picture as a simple story about the
difficulties that plague all human relationships.
David (Robert Joel) quits
being a monk in order to become a public-school teacher and to embrace his
sexuality. At a club one night, he meets a lawyer named Mark (Curt Gareth), and
they sleep together. David craves a familial bond, and Mark is more into
keeping things casual. They find an acceptable balance between their opposing
desires for a while, but during a weekend trip to Fire Island, Mark’s
enthusiastic participation in an orgy reveals that being with David isn’t
enough to satisfy Mark’s hunger for adventure. And so it goes from there. All
of this is completely believable and relatable, even if the stilted dialogue
and uneven performances prohibit the creation of an immersive illusion. At some
points, the movie even starts to feel like an educational piece illustrating
the emotional dangers of trying to make things work with an incompatible
partner. At the risk of making a backhanded compliment, the fact that A Very Natural Thing slips into the
predictable grooves of old-fashioned relationship melodramas might be the
highest tribute to Larkin’s efforts; excepting the overtly homoerotic scenes,
he manages to make his characters’ journeys as generic as anybody else’s.
A Very Natural Thing: FUNKY
Yeah, the 70's were a brutal time to be gay if you wanted to see yourself reflected in the media. Thanks for a write-up of a film most wouldn't have bothered with.
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