this post was submitted on 11 Oct 2024
33 points (100.0% liked)
Movies & TV
22881 readers
120 users here now
Rules for Movies & TV Discussion
-
Any discussion of Disney properties should contain a (cw: imperialism) tag. If your post isn't tagged appropriately it will be removed.
-
Anti-Bong Joon-ho trolling will result in an immediate ban from c/movies and submitted to the site administrators for review.
-
On Star Trek Sunday only posts discussing how we might achieve space communism are permitted. Non-Star Trek related content will be removed and you will be temporarily banned until the following Sunday.
Here's a list of tons of leftist movies.
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Looks like a complete version is on youtube, but with hardcoded spanish subtitles.
This is classic later Ed Wood Jr. alright. As usual he puts in a lot of personal effort to make something that's hilariously awful and off-putting and sleazy, yet you can't look away from the trainwreck.
Wood was most likely transfeminine. She went by the chosen name of Shirley, which she used in many of her screenplays, and regularly showed up femme presenting or in genderqueer attire in public and on set. Her movie Glen and Glenda is an early example of trans lesbian representation (back then trans women where assumed to be exclusively interested in men). Her gender identity was explained away by her contemporaries with pseudopsychological nonsense like "a neomaternal comfort derived mainly from angora fabric", but it's pretty obvious to me she was one of us.
I was not aware of that, thanks. Guess it's downplayed in mass media far more than I knew.
Yeah, i only learned it through a transfem friend of mine who's the biggest queer media nerd i know and loves to infodump this kind of stuff.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
The dialogue between characters after the dances gets me. It could be fun banter and Statler and Waldorf style quips but they just go nowhere.
That's why I could see a modern version working so well, but a bit of that magic would be lost