 |
|
 |
 |
| Josie
(Ellen McLaughlin) |
Maria
(Olivia Negron) |
Luce
(Andrea Weber) |
Gina
(Gabrielle Messina) |
Everything
Relative
showcases every cliche from the bad-lesbian-movie handbook:
awkward dialogue, preachy messaging that is about
as subtle as a gay pride parade, a few bad actors, a few really
bad haircuts, and a corny sing-along to an improvised Holly Near
song.
But
I can't help liking it anyway.
Directed
by Sharon Pollack, the film (which first premiered in 1996 and
just recently came out on DVD) is about a group
of seven college friends who reunite
for the weekend twenty years after graduation
to catch up, settle some old scores, and relive their
glory days on the front line of feminism in the 70's. Think a
lesbian version of The Big Chill, but funnier (sometimes
even intentionally).
And
like The Big Chill, half of the the friends have slept
with each other at some point in the last twenty years, and of
course, by the end of the weekend, they'll be lots more of that.
The
official purpose of the get-together is a bris
for the new son of Katie (Stacy Nelkin) and Victoria (played by
Monica Bell), which then turns into a weekend with the gang at
their old stomping grounds in Northampton, Massachusetts.
Katie
(a therapist) and Victoria (a lawyer) have been a couple since
they were all friends in college, and though they are thrilled
with the birth of their first child, Victoria's desire to be closeted
in order to protect her high-profile job is a bone of contention
between the two which comes to a head during the weekend.
Early
on, we suspect something is amiss between Josie (played
by Ellen McLaughlin) and Maria (played by Olivia Negron),
who are awkward and strained with each other; soon we
learn that Maria left Josie all those years ago for "a house,
a car, and 2.2 kids." In other words, Maria left a devastated
Josie and married a man because she couldn't take the pressure
of being gay and the disapproval of her Mexican-American family.
When she finally admitted the truth to herself and came out to
her husband years later, she lost custody of her kids.
Josie, meanwhile, is now a writer and a recovering alcoholic now
with really bad clothes who has never gotten over Maria's departure.
This weekend is the first time in many years the two women have
seen each other, and it doesn't take long for unresolved issues
to bubble up to the surface.
Luce
(played by Andrea Weber) is a professional stunt woman who is
forever trying to get over the death of her
lover in college from a car accident. She shows up at the bris
with her girlfriend-of-the-month, Candy, an investment banker
who makes fun of feminists and doesn't think being gay is any
big deal (as the sole representative of us "younger"
lesbians, Candy is a really insulting character, but never mind).
Candy doesn't last more than a day in Northampton, and soon it
becomes clear that Luce and Gina have some unresolved issues of
their own.
Gina
(played by Gabriella Messina) is now a high-powered business woman,
but during college she earned money working as a prostitute. Her
biggest problem is her inability to let anyone get to close to
her (and her still-stuck-in-the-70's haircut), even as she makes
a play for the also-unattainable Luce.
Finally,
we have married, straight-woman Sarah (played by Carol Schneider),
who works at Planned Parenthood and is frustrated over her inability
to get pregnant.
The
cliches start flying fast and thick from the first few
moments of the film with the "lesbians bring a u-haul
on the second date" joke, and soon evolve (devolve?)
into the repeated use of "sisterhood is powerful," "the
personal is political" and "it's all water under the
bridge." Not
that these first two aren't important political slogans that were
revolutionary in their time, but by the end of the movie you felt
like you'd just spent two hours at a Michigan Womyn's Festival
teach-in.
There
are no real plot twists in the film--it all pretty much plays
out as expected--and the story seesaws inconsistently between
poignant and awkward, funny and corny.
So
given all this criticism, why am I still recommending the movie?
First,
there are some truly funny moments in the film, including much
of the banter between Luce and Gina, and Josie's
riff on municipal bonds during the sing-along.
And
despite a few really bad lines and moments of overacting by McLaughlin
and Negro, the relationship between Josie and Maria is actually
well-handled, intelligent, and moving. Lesbians who've "defected"
because of homophobia is a particularly thorny issue that has
been badly handled (or ignored) in many lesbian movies, but here
is approached in a thoughtful and compassionate way. Unfortunately,
the side-effect is that bisexuality is not exactly presented in
a good light in the film--but on the other hand this film already
tackles so many issues that I'm not sure it could cram another
one in.
Although
the women are obviously similar in some important ways
(i.e. mostly white and middle-class), they are fairly diverse
in others, such as their careers, religions, appearance, and attitudes
towards motherhood. It's nice to see a lesbian film in which there
isn't one overarching definition of what a lesbian looks like
or does for a living.
Finally,
the film's focus on a longtime group of mostly-lesbian friends
is refreshing, and Pollack's good intentions shine through the
bad dialogue, over-acting, and predictable plot developments.
Although my friends from college came of age in a different time
than these women, are more diverse, and have different issues
(and better hair, mostly), Everything Relative still
reminds me of them. And that alone makes it worth watching.