When I first saw the
film Fight Club, I distinctly recall
another person viewing with me yelling out during the ‘meeting Tyler Durden scene’
on the plane: “WHO DROPPED THE SOAP?” Some
chuckling, but not much, and then quickly the moment had passed. Yet my thoughts remained stuck on this notion—considering
it really is a highly charged homoerotic/fear-based stereotype. The movie-poster is a close-up shot of a bright
pink, sudsy bar of soap with ‘Fight Club’
imprinted like a logo on to the bar. I
was shocked to read in the article “Hiding homoeroticism in plain view: the
Fight Club DVD as digital closet” by Drs. Robert Alan Brookey and Robert
Westerfelhaus, that the director [Fincher] was so forthcoming in denial of a
homoerotic element to the film.
I may not have read the
novel Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk,
however, I have read other works by him, and I cannot fathom the novel being
done without a STRONG element of homoeroticism driving the plotline. In fact, the film’s Wikipediapage references a review by Louis B. Hobson from the Calgary Sun, stating: “The director copied the homoerotic overtones
from Palahniuk's novel to make audiences uncomfortable and keep them from
anticipating the twist ending.[1]”
Indeed, homophobia is alive and well in American media, and—narratively speaking—adaptations
of books into movies too often take the easy way out by skirting the issue
altogether.
Another adaptation of a
book into a movie that fell short of telling the whole truth was the film
version of Rules of Attraction by author Brett Easton Ellis. Within the novel,
two of the male characters—Paul and Sean—maintain a sexual relationship which
is central to the narrative. So, what
did they do in the movie? They merely made
the whole relationship into one scene, which is not technically a gay love
scene, but rather just a masturbatory fantasy of Paul’s (on which he founds a mild
romantic obsession). For being an
otherwise well-done and faithful adaptation of the book, it remained a real
letdown in the end. Honestly…what are we
so afraid of?
(Word Count = 350 words total)
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