Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Race to the Middle: Ginger vs. Traci

Vice Academy_Vice Academy 2_Extramarital Posters
 “Ginger, do you really think they’re going to give you an Oscar? You suck cock for a living, for God’s sake!” 

— Amber Lynn, reacting to Ginger Lynn’s
decision to pursue a mainstream acting career

The above quote came from the podcast Once Upon a Time in the Valley, which, besides revealing Amber Lynn as a surprising voice of reason, sought to uncover the mysteries behind the Traci Lords scandal. Though the podcast ultimately generates as many questions as it answers, it’s still worth a listen.

Ginger Lynn in the 1980s
1980s-era Ginger Lynn,
photographed by Suze Randall
But back to Amber’s comment. While porn stars won’t necessarily be barred from mainstream entertainment, they’ll be lucky if they’re able to make it as far as the D-list. Sure, Sibel Kekilli’s porn past as Dilara didn’t keep her off Game of Thrones, and Sasha Grey was the lead in Steven Soderbergh’s The Girlfriend Experience, but they are recent exceptions. The sad truth is, if you suck cock for a living, you’ll not only be denied an Oscar®, you also could be denied a spot on a network reality show.

Still, as long as they make peace with the fact that they’ll never be awarded a gold statuette or know the respect attendant to reality show fame, porn stars can transition to mainstream careers. Inspired by the Once Upon a Time in the Valley podcast, I thought I’d take a look at a couple of the legit movies made by Ginger Lynn and Traci Lords, two of the biggest porn stars of the 1980s and fierce rivals (seriously, Ginger hates Traci), and see if they have the talent and star power to carry a film without sucking any cock (or doing DPs, or anal, or girl-on-girl...).

Right off the bat, I’ll say Ginger Lynn is at a disadvantage. While she has been in some bigger mainstream movies like Young Guns II and The Devil’s Rejects, those roles were too small to provide much of an impression. Also, I fucking HATED The Devil’s Rejects and have no intention of watching it again, ever. How much did I hate it? At least as much as Ginger hates Traci. I hated it so much that I watched two VICE ACADEMY movies instead.

The Vice Academy franchise is the brainchild of writer-director Rick Sloane, the man behind Hobgoblins. Suffice it to say, these movies aren’t exactly going to launch anyone’s career. If anything, the Vice Academy movies are the kind of cinematic dross that leads actors to give up on their Hollywood dreams and just do porn, so I really have to wonder what Ginger Lynn was hoping to achieve by appearing in them. Maybe she just welcomed the opportunity to appear in movies that didn’t require her to fuck Ron Jeremy, which, fair enough.

Screen grab from the 1989 comedy VICE ACADEMY
Ginger Lynn begins to wonder if maybe
Amber had a point.

VICE ACADEMY (1989) is terrible, but it is better than Hobgoblins, if only because its campy sensibility comes off as intentional rather than a byproduct of incompetence. In this Z-grade Police Academy rip-off, Ginger, using her serious actress moniker Ginger Lynn Allen, plays Holly, the stuck-up daughter of the police chief and the top of her class in the titular vice academy (mitigating factor: the combined I.Q. of all the characters in Vice Academy is 35.) Holly’s adversary is DiDi (scream queen Linnea Quigley, squawking all her lines), who, along with friends Shawnee (busty Karen Russell) and Dwayne (Ken Abraham), a character whose sole reason for existence is a repeated nut shot joke, is among the worst students in the class. In a twist, DiDi is the horny one while Holly is Miss Goody-Two-Shoes, though she dresses only slightly more modestly than DiDi. This twist means that it’s DiDi who goes undercover to bust a porno ring and later a prostitution ring. BTW, it also means Quigley is the one showing any skin. You want to see Ginger naked, watch a Ginger Lynn video. Ginger Lynn Allen is above such crass exploitation—for now, at least.

Screen grab from the 1989 comedy VICE ACADEMY
Karen Russell (center) provides half the gratuitous nudity
in Vice Academy.

Screen grab from a scene in the 1989 comedy VICE ACADEMY
Linnea Quigley provides the other half, her breasts taking
priority over including her scene partner,
Steven Steward, in the shot.

Ginger Lynn Allen isn’t in Vice Academy to do much of anything, it turns out. With the bulk of the movie devoted to DiDi’s undercover work, Vice Academy is more Quigley’s movie than Ginger Lynn’s. The few scenes featuring the leads together are often commandeered by Jayne Hamil, who cranks it up to eleven in the role vice academy instructor Miss Devonshire. The scenes not overpowered by Hamil are handily stolen by Russell and, in the role of criminal mastermind Queen Bee, Jeannie Carol — or, more accurately, Carol’s wig. Ginger Lynn gets left on the sidelines.

Screen grab from the 1989 comedy VICE ACADEMY
No one can upstage Jean Carol’s wig in Vice Academy.

Screen grab from the 1990 movie VICE ACADEMY PART 2
Marina Benvenga is a slightly less awesome
villain in Vice Academy Part 2.
This dynamic changes in VICE ACADEMY PART 2 (1990), which has Holly and DiDi, both now officially on the police force, being assigned to take down the diabolical Spanish Fly (Marina Benvenga, looking like Ann Magnuson parodying Siouxsie Sioux), who has threatened to poison the nation’s water supply with, well, Spanish fly unless she’s given $20 million by… the LAPD? The details don’t matter. The point is, Holly and DiDi must try to infiltrate Spanish Fly’s lair at the Vicerama, which is, per Miss Devonshire, “the sleaziest, seediest and vilest nightclub in town!” (“That place isn’t so bad,” DiDi says. “They have good drink specials at happy hour.”) So, they set out to go undercover as strippers, only to find out that the Vicerama’s single job opening (“I hope you girls realize there’s only one position available,” drools the club manager) is for a bookkeeper.

When Holly and DiDi fail, the LAPD implements its newest weapon: BimboCop (Teagan Clive, of Alienator, um, fame?). BimboCop’s first assignment? Switchboard duty, proving herself to be more competent than the current dispatcher, Jeannie (Jo Brewer), who spends more time making dates with horny truckers and satisfying the sexual demands of Officer Petrolino (Scott Layne) than doing her job. Determined to show their worth to the vice squad, Holly and DiDi return to Vicerama, this time under the guise of being strip-o-gram dancers, ensuring gratuitous nudity from Quigley and Ginger Lynn. But they’re cover is soon blown, as is Miss Devonshire’s when she shows up to fill the bookkeeper job, and Petrolino’s when he just shows up. It’s up to BimboCop to save the day. Too bad Jeannie has sabotaged BimboCop’s programming (that’s what happens when you include an easily accessible “worthless” setting). Can Spanish Fly be stopped? Can the Vice Accdemy series? Rick Sloane kept on making these things, ending with Vice Academy Part 6 in 1998. I chose to stop at Part 2.

Screne grab from the 1990 comedy VICE ACADEMY PART 2
Holly braces herself for a night of #MeToo with Officer Petrolino.

A scene from the 1990 comedy VICE ACADEMY PART 2
Introducing BimboCop (groan).

Screen grab from the 1990 comedy VICE ACADEMY PART 2
 It’s not just the women providing the gratuitous nudity this
time around.

Screen grab from the 1990 comedy VICE ACADEMY PART 2
That may not be a cucumber in his pants.

Vice Academy Part 2 has slightly higher production values (it features a real police car!) and a lot more skin (in addition to Quigley and Ginger Lynn, Toni Alessandrini, as Vicerama stripper Aphrodite, and future Playgirl model Layne do their parts to increase the movie’s flesh quotient), but Vice Academy has more laughs. These are movies to watch with bong in hand.

Jayne Hamil in scenes from the 1990 movie VICE ACADEMY PART 2
The many faces of Jayne Hamil.

But how to judge Ginger Lynn’s acting ability in movies where no one gives a real performance? I’ll say that while neither Quigley nor Ginger Lynn are particularly good, they do work well as a duo, and that Ginger Lynn doesn’t stand out as egregiously terrible. But no one should really have their talent judged on their performance in a Rick Sloane movie. Ginger Lynn did get positive notices for her star turn in Bound & Gagged: A Love Story, a 1993 indie comedy co-starring Chris Mulkey and Karen Black, though the movie itself is reportedly painful to sit through. It’s also not yet available for streaming. Ginger Lynn made enough of an impression to be considered for the female lead in Martin Scorsese’s Casino, but the studio wanted Sharon Stone for the role — at least, according to Ginger Lynn’s IMDb bio; the Casino IMDb page reports that a different ex-porn star was considered for the part.

From Scandal to the C-List

Traci Lords in the 1980s
 Traci Lords, 1980s
Unlike Ginger Lynn, Traci Lords had to leave the adult industry, burning so many bridges on the way out that she either had to pursue a career in mainstream entertainment or go back to being Nora Kuzma. She chose the former, obviously. While I’m sure it wasn’t easy for her to establish a mainstream career, Lords didn’t have the same burden as Ginger Lynn. Not only could Lords’ porn past be blamed, rightly or wrongly, on predatory adults taking advantage of a stupid teenager (who nevertheless was smart enough to get a fake I.D. to enter the business of adult entertainment), much of the evidence of that career had been scrubbed from the marketplace. Lords was essentially starting in Hollywood with an almost-clean slate.

(One of the theories put forth in the Once Upon a Time in the Valley podcast is that Lords’ underage porn career was part of a long con; that she intended from the beginning to report her underage status when the time was right and escape the porn business as a “survivor.” It’s an interesting theory that I don’t entirely dismiss. I certainly don’t believe Lords was an innocent teen exploited by the industry, as she reportedly portrays herself in her 2004 autobiography, but I doubt she had formed this Machiavellian scheme when she first started as a nude model.)

Lords never made the A-list, but she’s done OK on the C-list, kicking off her mainstream career by starring in the 1988 remake of Not of This Earth, directed by schlockteur Jim Wynorski, but getting even more attention for appearing in John Waters’ 1990 comedy, Cry-Baby. There were guest appearances on Married…with Children, Melrose Place, and Roseanne, as well as a role in the TV mini-series The Tommyknockers. She even released an album, 1,000 Fires, in 1995. But most of her Hollywood career has been spent starring in direct-to-video fare. Among those DTV movies was EXTRAMARITAL (1998).

Screen grab from the 1998 movie EXTRAMARITAL
Traci Lords: Journalist.

Lords plays Elizabeth, an aspiring journalist (just go with it) interning at We@r magazine, where she must endure her editor Griff (Jeff Fahey, showing off what he learned in the Kevin Spacey School for Portraying Sleazy Southerners) belittling her at every turn. Elizabeth — who sometimes goes by Beth, sometimes Lizzy — is married to Eric (Jack Kerrigan, looking like an alcoholic Mark Ruffalo), who is not altogether supportive of Lizzy/Beth pursuing her dreams, especially since she gave up a high-paying job to do so, jeopardizing their chances of getting a loan to finish renovations on their L.A. home. Nevertheless, Eric takes Elizabeth to the airport so she can fly to San Francisco to interview “a city big-wig who’s been implicated in a huge sex scandal.”

On her flight Elizabeth meets Ann (statuesque Marìa Dìaz), traveling from her Malibu home to Napa Valley where she and her husband have a ranch. The two women later bump into each other in San Francisco when they discover they’re staying at the same hotel. What are the odds? Ann is accompanied by Bob (child actor-turned-hot cub Brian Bloom), who is most definitely not her husband. And just to make doubly sure that Elizabeth understands that Bob is her side piece, Ann and Bob get the foreplay started in full view of the reporter before they’ve even opened the door to their room, which is, in yet another coincidence, right next door to Elizabeth’s.

Though mystified by Ann’s unapologetic adultery, Elizabeth is also fascinated. Isn’t it convenient that We@r magazine is doing a sex issue, allowing Elizabeth to use Ann as a source? Ann is positively eager to answer the budding reporter’s questions. When Ann isn’t telling Elizabeth about her extramarital activities, she’s showing the audience, meeting Bob at an apartment for some afternoon sexy time. It’s during this encounter that we learn Ann likes to videotape their trysts and Bob likes to spice things up, paradoxically, by wearing a cunnilingus-impairing rubber mask that makes their sex scene look like a Halloween porn parody.

Screen grab from the 1998 movie EXTRAMARITAL.
The mask is supposed to be of Ann’s favorite actor,
so... Ray Liotta after suffering a debilitating stroke?

Is this sudden introduction of videotapes and Michael Myers cosplay really just a shoe-horned in plot-device? You bet your cheap champagne and lace thong it is! As is Ann’s calling Elizabeth so the reporter’s answering machine can record Ann getting plowed by her masked lover (as one does). But, oops, instead of a hot cock Ann gets penetrated by the cold steel of a knife, repeatedly.

Even if is the first erotic thriller you’ve ever seen, it should be no surprise that all of these coincidences aren’t that coincidental, that Elizabeth is being used, and that Bob is being set up, but by whom? Well, rest assured, Elizabeth will figure it out, right after she samples some of Bob’s lovin’ for herself.

Screen grab from the 1998 direct-to-video feature EXTRAMARITAL
Serious actresses don’t show their nipples.

Screen grab from the 1998 direct-to-video feature EXTRAMARITAL
“I’m not laughing at you, Jeff, I’m laughing ...
OK, you got me. I’m laughing at you.”

Extramarital was released by PM Entertainment, so it goes without saying that it’s not very good. It does more closely resemble a professionally made(-for-TV) feature than the Vice Academy movies, but that doesn’t necessarily mean Extramarital is better, just more polished. Screenwriter Don O’Melveny’s story is a bit of a mess, implying that Ann was somehow complicit in setting up her own murder, and it never quite clears one of the potential suspects. Jeff Fahey, the actor you call when Eric Roberts is busy, gives the movie a needed injection of camp, but not enough to boost the Extramarital’s entertainment value. 

As for Lords, she’s fine. She holds her own against the talents of Fahey and Bloom, and she’s Meryl Streep in comparison to Dìaz, who delivers all her lines as if she’s dubbing a Doris Wishman movie. But while Lords’ is a competent actor, she isn’t a very compelling one. It’s not surprising that the bulk of her acting work has been confined to the small screen; she just doesn’t have a movie star’s magnetism. She’s got sex appeal, but Extramarital, and likely Lords herself (she’s credited as an executive producer), has little interest in playing that up. I get it, she’s playing against type and, you know, trying to distance herself from her porn notoriety, but this is an erotic thriller, so the audience can’t be faulted for having certain expectations. Alas, there are Lifetime TV movies that have hotter sex scenes than those featured in Extramarital.

Final verdict? Lords is the better actress in her bad movie, but Ginger Lynn is a lot more fun in hers.

Despite Lords’ assertion, per her IMDb bio, that she still bears the stigma of her porn years, she continued to be cast in TV shows (Profiler, First Wave) and movies (Blade, Zack and Miri Make a Porno). Ginger Lynn, who wholeheartedly owned her porn stardom, never gained much traction as a mainstream actor. Her TV roles were sporadic (guest appearances on NYPD Blue and Silk Stalkings) and her mainstream movies were mostly direct-to-video dreck like The Stranger. Predictably, Ginger Lynn returned to porn in 1999. Today, both women’s careers face a far bigger roadblock in Hollywood than their involvement in the porn industry: getting old.

Saturday, January 9, 2021

We Heard You, But What Did You Say?

Trigger warning: This review quotes some racist dialog from the film in the sixth paragraph.

The DVD art for the 2018 film THE BREEDING
Surprisingly, this title wasn’t already
taken by Treasure Island Media.

Though its title suggests it’s about turning a man’s ass into a cream horn, THE BREEDING is actually about BDSM race play (because of course that’s a thing). It’s the kind of movie that might have had quotes from critics scattered about its poster, labeling it “controversial,” noting that it “pushes the envelope” and is “thought provoking.” But despite The Breeding winning the award for best feature at the 2018 Harlem International Film Festival, few critics bothered to review it.

But The Breeding doesn’t need such validation from critics. Its very premise is controversial, and it pushes the envelope not only in its subject matter but sexual content, too, crossing into NC-17 territory more than few times. And the movie is thought provoking, but the thoughts it provokes are less likely to be about racism and the fetishizing of Black men than about how fucking pretentious it is.

The main character, Thomas (Marcus Bellamy, so sexy and so sleepy), may be an erotic cartoonist by trade, but he’s sexually frustrated in life. Though his boyfriend Amadi (David J. Cork) always seems ready for sex, even after a rough day at his TV job, Thomas is never in the mood — at least, not with Amadi. Instead, Thomas goes looking for more extreme experiences outside the relationship, leaving Amadi’s balls to get ever-bluer. When we first meet Thomas he’s in a “confessional,” detailing his erotic dreams.

Michael Durso and Marcus Bellamy in a scene from THE BREEDING
You’d never guess they aren’t in a church.

Thomas drowsily shares his fantasy with the white “Father,” his dialog perfectly suited for a drinking game: “I want to do things with his body [take a shot], with our mouths. I want to kiss his body [take a shot], I want his breath on my body [take a shot]. I want to kiss his body [take a shot]. Make love to his body [take a shot], worship his body [take a shot].” And now you’re shitfaced. This dialog may be intended to have a poetic rhythm, but it just had me thinking Thomas has a really limited vocabulary. That Thomas tends to respond to all questions with a listless yea only re-enforces that opinion.

Marcus Bellamy in a scene from THE BREEDING
Thomas takes the first of many masturbation breaks.

When not going to tea room confessionals or turning down his boyfriend’s advances, Thomas spends his days sketching sexy scenarios featuring characters with outrageously swollen crotches and taking frequent masturbation breaks. “The thing I love, more than anything in the world,” Thomas shares in a voiceover, “is a big. Black. Dick.” But it’s the white dick of Lee (Joe MacDougal), who cruises Thomas in the men’s room during an art opening at Lee’s ex-wife’s gallery, that has piqued the horny artist’s interest.

In a text conversation the two men hash out what each other are into (“Do you sub?” Lee asks, to which Thomas responds with one of many yeas), then engage in a bit of phone sex. I knew it was a bad idea when Thomas told Lee he didn’t have any limits, thinking that that’s a good way to get roped into blood or scat play. But Lee’s kink isn’t as infectious or smelly, though I would argue it’s just as icky. “That’s what those lips are made for, suckin’ on white men,” rasps Lee. This line causes Thomas to stop mid-jerk, but only briefly. Then Lee takes things into a more Aryan Nation direction: “Yeah, that’s what that monkey mouth needs.” Understandably, Thomas hangs up.

A screen shot from the 2018 film THE BREEDING
Research.

He isn’t totally turned off, though, and, after Googling “gay black white slave sex” and “race play,” he goes to a sex party where he reconnects with Lee, the pair engaging in more conventional sex. Wanting more, Thomas goes to Lee’s apartment the following day, only to end up locked in an electrified cage with a ball gag stuffed in his mouth, held prisoner until he acknowledges Lee as his master. Getting out is suddenly more important to him than getting off. 

Marcus Bellamy and Joe MacDougal in the 2018 film THE BREEDING
“You know what would make this hotter? Racism.”

Patrick Kazura and Dedrick Anthony in a screen shot from THE BREEDING
Jackson is hot for BBC.
There’s a pointless subplot involving a white gay artist Jackson (cockatoo-haired Patrick Kuzara), whose work will be featured alongside Thomas’s in an upcoming show, but who also works for the gallery curating the show. Jackson is into Black men, but his interest in them doesn’t go beyond sexual objectification. In one scene he hooks up with a couple of young hustlers he met through Craigslist (how quaint). They attempt to rob him and Jackson stabs one of the men, possibly fatally. Other than being questioned by a cop about a noise complaint, however, Jackson faces no consequences.

Lacks Focus, Often Literally

Part of what makes The Breeding such frustrating viewing is it’s simultaneously heavy-handed and vague. Director Daniel Armando and writer Dane Harrington Joseph thought it was important that we see Thomas acquire a discarded birdcage, but it’s solely to provide some obvious symbolism. You can practically see the thought bubble over the actor’s head: This could be a visual metaphor. Yet the fate of the hustler Jackson stabbed (we see Jackson mopping up blood, but no body) is left to audience assumption. 

A screen shot from the 2018 film THE BREEDING.
Nice package, though.
Complicating things further is Armando’s bombarding us with every technique he can think of. Split screens, jump cuts, soft focus — he uses them all, repeatedly. He is particularly fond of gelled lighting (especially red) and using a hand-held camera, so much so that half the movie feels like you’re watching it through a veil of blood while on stormy seas. It’s Carrie’s Homoerotic Poseidon Adventure. I’m not against using any of these techniques, but here they’re used in such excess they distract from, rather than enhance, the story. Buy a fucking tripod! shouldn’t be the dominant thought one has when watching a movie about race play.

Marcus Bellamy in a scene from THE BREEDING.
Thomas is a prisoner of red gelled lighting.

Marcus Bellamy in a scene from the 2018 film THE BREEDING
Focus!
I was going to write a paragraph about how, on the bright side, The Breeding has a lot of sexy moments, praising Bellamy’s physical charms if not his somnolent performance, as well as mentioning the appeal of some of his co-stars. However, as I started to write it I wondered if that could be construed as showing the same reductive attitudes the film is condemning. Or is it? Maybe the sexy scenes were simply meant to celebrate the beauty of Black men. Or maybe it’s to drive home the conflicts between being sex positive and woke. Or maybe it’s as simple as #BlackLivesMatter.

And that’s ultimately why The Breeding fails: its creators are so preoccupied with being artsy and sexy they lose sight of their message, whatever that’s supposed to be. We’re given no insight into why Thomas is drawn to this particular brand of BDSM, other than he’s bored. Boredom might explain his wanting to play outside his relationship, and even why he’d want to experiment with BDSM, but his willingness to subject himself to Lee’s Mandingo experience was a mystery to me. If it’s meant to be viewed metaphorically, to spark a conversation about racism in the gay community in general and within interracial relationships specifically, well, that message didn’t land, either. But, hey, at least Armando got to show off all those neat lighting and camera tricks.

Friday, January 1, 2021

In this Case, ‘Watchable’ is High Praise

Promo art for 2016 film SHARED ROOMS
Don’t be dissuaded by the text, “A Rob
Williams Film.”
I wanted to churn out one more post before the year ended*, so I went on Tubi and entered the search term “New Year’s.” From those results I picked the 2013 indie horror movie, Antisocial, about a group of college students attending a New Year’s Eve party just as an epidemic is sweeping the globe, like, all of a sudden. The virus was of the zombie-creating variety because 2013, but otherwise a movie about a New Year’s celebration derailed by an epidemic seemed ideally suited for 2020. Also, the title spoke to me.

Then I checked out the external reviews on IMDb and saw that plenty of other people had already reviewed this movie, and that my lil’ ol’ blog would likely get lost in that long list of other blogs. So, I passed on zombie horror in favor for the gay holiday comedy SHARED ROOMS, a choice made with such haste that I didn’t even notice that I’d selected a Rob Williams movie. Well, I knew this day would come eventually.

In all fairness, Rob Williams isn’t the worst writer-director to pick up a digital camera. Even his weakest movies aren’t as bad as the works of Jeff London, or that Tommy Wiseau of gay cinema, Sam Mraovich (that said, Ben & Arthur is a must-see for fans of bad movies, regardless of how one identifies sexually). But his earlier movies — Long-Term Relationship and Back Soon — left me hoping that before Williams made any more films he might consider taking some classes in how that’s done.

Well, maybe he did. Williams showed marked improvement with his 2010 romance Role/Play, and Shared Rooms is better still. Keep in mind, though, that the bar Williams needed to clear is pretty low. 

Shared Rooms follows the three different sets of gay Los Angelenos during the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve of a much happier time (2016, presumably, the same year this movie was released; alas, we still can’t escape a reference to the soon-to-be-former-President of the United States). The movie opens with Cal (Alec Manly Wilson) and his screenwriter husband Laslo (Christopher Grant Pearson), making catty comments to their dinner guests about mutual friends who have adopted a baby. “They go from gay dates to play dates,” Cal quips. Their guests, Blake and Ivan (respectively Eric Allen Smith and Christopher Patrino, both men mugging so hard they risk popping blood vessels) then sheepishly announce that they’re having a baby through a surrogate. (“We’re pregnant!”) 

Eric Allen Smith and Christopher Patrino in the 2016 movie SHARED ROOMS
The nuanced acting of Eric Allen Smith and
Christopher Patrino. 
  



Ryan Weldon in the 2016 movie SHARED ROOMS
Woodstock becomes a real boy!

Later that evening, Cal and Laslo reaffirm their commitment to remain childless. “But,” Cal adds, “we can keep trying the old fashioned way.” As fate and plot devices would have it, however, the couple must reconsider their decision to give fatherhood a pass when Cal’s 17-year-old gay nephew Zeke (twitchy Ryan Weldon) shows up on their front doorstep, kicked out by his mother for being an “abomination.” Cal, who’s sister’s homophobia lead her to cut him from her life before Zeke was born, feels the teen is owed a safe space. Plus, the boy can whip up an all-the-carbs-you-can-eat breakfast in no time. (Seriously, movie, coffee cake, stacks of toast and pillars of pancakes? Even Honey Boo Boo would consider that excessive.)

Cal and Laslo have plenty of carbs to choose from in SHARED ROOMS
If your breakfast for three can’t be shown in a single
shot, you’re eating too goddamn much.

Elsewhere, Cal and Laslo’s accountant, Julian (Daniel Lipshutz), is entertaining lanky, salt-and-pepper stud Frank (David Vaughn). Frank is not Julian’s date, as it first appears, but a paying guest, renting Julian’s roommate’s room (unbeknownst to the roommate, naturally) while he’s out of town on business. That said, Julian is quite eager to provide Frank with some extra personal service, if Frank would just pick up on the signals.

David Vaughn and Daniel Lipshutz in the 2016 movie SHARED ROOMS.
Julian’s signals aren’t exactly ambiguous.
But then the roommate, Dylan (Robert Werner), returns much earlier than expected, complicating Julian’s plans to seduce Frank, to say nothing of his clandestine subletting scheme. Dylan’s pissed that his room is being rented to strangers (“You call them strangers, I call them customers,” Julian says), though not nearly as angry as he should be. It turns out Dylan’s harbored a secret crush on Julian ever since they moved in together. Being forced to share a bed with Julian for a week might be what it takes for his deceptive roomie to see him as more than one half of the rent payment. Personally, I found Julian’s charms to be strictly physical (as played by Lipshutz, Julian is so oily it’s a safe bet he’s embezzling from his clients), but then Dylan wouldn’t be the first gay man to let a nice ass cloud his judgment.

Daniel Lipshutz and Robert Werner in a scene from SHARED ROOMS
Dylan considers a midnight snack.
Finally, there is Sid (Justin Xavier Smith, delivering every line in a mocking drone), who has arranged a Christmas hook-up with Dylan’s ex, Gray (yet another actor with three names, Alex Neil Miller), through the Grindr-like app Manhandler (or is it Manhandlr?). Sid is so eager to get down to business that he greets Gray in all his full frontal glory, and quickly helps his sultry-voiced trick out of his clothes, giving us another penis to admire, albeit briefly. The pair remain naked for most of the movie as Gray stays for a second round, then a third, and ultimately until New Year’s Eve. When the couple isn’t fucking they’re discussing David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest, (“I read every chapter, every footnote, every end note, and I can’t even begin to tell you what it is about,” says Gray), spirituality (Sid believes in God; Gray’s an atheist), and Americans’ hypocritical attitudes about nudity (Sid tells of an actor friend who refuses to do full frontal nudity for acting roles but posts dick pics on Manhandler). These conversations, plus more personal revelations, soon transform their impersonal sexual encounter into a full-fledged relationship.

Justin Xavier Smith and Alex Neil Miller in a scene from SHARED ROOMS
Justin Xavier Smith and Alex Neil Miller go
full frontal early but not often.
The three storylines converge at Cal and Laslo’s New Year’s Steve-Not-Eve Party, where Williams doesn’t tie things up with a big red ribbon so much as slap one of those dollar store self-adhesive bows on top before wishing us a Happy New Year. 

Christopher Grant Pearson and Alec Manly Wilson in a scene from SHARED ROOMS
Laslo and Cal toast the conclusion of Shared Rooms.

Still Room for Improvement

As I said, Shared Rooms is one of Williams’ better movies. Unlike the aforementioned Long-Term Relationship, Shared Rooms almost manages to pass itself off as a made-for-TV movie rather than the work of a beginning YouTuber. The issues with pacing, tone and acting that plague his earlier movies aren’t as abundant this time out. Though the movie has its sluggish moments, particularly during the Sid and Gray scenes, it makes more efficient use of its 75-minute runtime. There are fewer tonal shifts, too, though the Zeke storyline threatens to take this bubbly gay rom-com into turgid melodrama territory, but thankfully Williams settles on letting it become A Very Special Episode with jokes about butt fucking.

Alex Neil Miller in a scene from the 2016 movie SHARED ROOMS.
Alex Neil Miller’s hair is on purpose, apparently.
It’s the cast who get the most credit for making Shared Rooms pleasant viewing. Wilson and Pearson are well matched, making their characters believable as a couple as well as funny. Pearson’s mocking the script he’s writing for a Lifetime-esque Christmas movie is a particular high point (“And the award goes to…something other than this crap.”) Werner and Miller were also standouts, as much for their persistent bed heads as their acting. What did they do that caused hair and makeup to refuse brushing their unruly mops, I wonder?

Just because this is one of Williams’ stronger films doesn’t mean the director has fully overcome his weaknesses, however. Though his script has plenty of funny moments, it has just as many hack jokes (“That’s what he said.”) that even his best actors can’t save. Williams also continues to be way too reliant on contrived situations, being especially fond of characters withholding information for dramatic/comedic effect, e.g., Zeke’s inability to make direct statements about, well, pretty much every fucking thing, be it his identity or his underwear preferences (yet freely sharing that he’s a bottom). Williams isn’t the first screenwriter to resort to hack jokes and plot contrivances, of course, but they don’t do his movie any favors.  

Justin Xavier Smith and Alex Neil Miller in SHARED ROOMS
This looks sweet, but it’s a totally impractical way
to watch a movie. Does Sid not own a TV?

Still, it’s good to see Williams is learning from his past mistakes. As it stands, Shared Rooms is a pleasant little gay rom-com, with enough laughs and gratuitous nudity to put one in a forgiving mood when confronted by its shortcomings. It’s not essential viewing, but it’s watchable, and for a Rob Williams movie, watchable is high praise.

*A goal I obviously failed to achieve. Happy 2021, regardless.