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House of Boys: Inside Out Toronto 2011
ON SCREEN / A community's most turbulent decade
Scott Dagostino
/ National / Monday, May 16, 2011
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It’s not a good sign when the beating heart of a film is a character reading aloud from a book, but in
House of Boys
, a 2009 AIDS drama from Luxembourg, the book featured is
Dance on My Grave
, a 1982 gay teen novel that reads, “The only important thing is that we escape our history.”
Set in 1980s Amsterdam,
House of Boys
seeks to capture our community’s most turbulent decade: rampant and cheerful sex and drug use mixed with political activism and the terror of a new epidemic. It’s clear that
Boys
is a labour of love from first-time writer/director Jean-Claude Schlim, formerly a production manager on films like
Highlander: Endgame
.
After a beautifully shot opening sequence, we meet handsome blond high-schooler Frank as he’s getting fucked in the toilets.
Layke Anderson as Frank and Benn Northover as Jake.
We follow him as he’s bullied in the locker room, daydreams a dance number, gets caught masturbating by his mom and argues with his dad about his new earring. Busy day!
There’s a generous amount of eye candy in the sexy dance numbers – the band Dangerous Muse gets a welcome cameo – though the film is oddly prudish in its sex and drug scenes. Some of the history is handled clumsily, which, frankly, is embarrassing, but for younger viewers,
House of Boys
might work as a tidy summary of what previous generations survived.
House of Boys
Friday, May 20, 7:15pm
TIFF Bell Lightbox
350 King St W
Insideout.ca
Tags:
house of boys
,
inside out
,
jean-claude schlim
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