Springfield News-Sun

It’s OK to let gay art bomb

Movie ‘Bros’ flops, but don’t blame homophobia.

- By Matt Brennan

I didn’t want to write this piece. I didn’t want to diminish “the first major studio movie written by and starring a gay man” or spoil its Rotten Tomatoes score or dance on the grave of its box-office prospects.

I certainly didn’t want to attack the star of “Billy on the Street” and “Difficult People,” two of the most successful screen adaptation­s of the gay sensibilit­y in recent memory. But Billy Eichner forced my hand.

No one wants to support a movie at the point of a bayonet.

It’s not just straight people who failed to show up for Eichner’s rom-com “Bros” on opening weekend who might be feeling the pinch. As Variety pointed out in its autopsy of the film’s box office flop, its dreadful $4.8 million take last weekend “means many LGBTQ viewers didn’t show up to see the comedy in theaters either.”

Does that make us too the “homophobic weirdos” of Eichner’s confoundin­g post-bomb tweet spiral or simply the silent Benedict Arnolds of his self-proclaimed march into the history books?

“Even with glowing reviews, great Rotten Tomatoes scores, an A Cinemascor­e etc., straight people, especially in certain parts of the country, just didn’t show up for Bros. And that’s disappoint­ing but it is what it is,” Eichner wrote last Sunday in response to news of the returns.

Eichner could be forgiven for throwing a misplaced elbow or two in the aftermath of such a crushing disappoint­ment. But the sense of self-importance and, yes, entitlemen­t in his response dovetails with the film’s rollout. Before its world premiere at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, he bragged that “Bros” “is not an indie movie. This is not some streaming thing which feels disposable, or which is like one of a million Netflix shows. I needed to appreciate, ‘This is a historic moment, and somehow, you’re at the center of it. You helped create it.’ ” (His shady remarks weren’t lost on fans of Hulu’s “Fire Island,” even prompting its creator, Joel Kim Booster, to respond publicly and diffuse the backlash.)

“You’re at the center of it”: Here were words to stick in one’s craw, to suggest that, as wellversed as Eichner may be in the traditions of the rom-com, his understand­ing of queer history on screen had momentaril­y escaped him. It is precisely the indies, the “disposable” experiment­s, the made-for-tv movies and forgotten genre entries, in which LGBTQ people establishe­d themselves in the American imaginatio­n before there was a name for us. No one person, or cultural artifact, is at the center of that generation­s-long struggle, to which Eichner has referred again and again in his press tour for the film — or indeed, as the box office wags pointed out, on which Universal Pictures’ marketing campaign leaned with such misplaced abandon.

In truth, “Bros” is not nearly so radical as it claims, and that disjunctur­e between what it is — a perfectly entertaini­ng, middlebrow rom-com — and what it understand­s itself to be — a landmark moment for LGBTQ people in popular culture — is inextricab­le from the hand-wringing around it. It is eminently laudable that Eichner has made a sexually frank studio comedy featuring two gay men, and that he insisted, as wingman/co-star/ co-producer Guy Branum notes, on an ALL-LGBTQ cast.

Ultimately, though, the film’s innovation­s are incrementa­l: Rather than reinvent the genre around a different set of mores, it simply replaces the “marriage plot” with the “monogamy plot,” down to our former free-agent hero being harangued by his new beau about kids.

It’s especially frustratin­g because “Bros” knows better, or seems to. Its lacerating sendups of token representa­tion in Hallmark Christmas movies; the “haunted house of gay trauma” that pop culture passes off as queer history; even Eichner’s own public persona are all a potent, knowing nod to the ongoing challenges of telling LGBTQ stories — of living LGBTQ lives — without simply repurposin­g a tired, old, straight script.

Until the culminatin­g frame of its final act, that is, when the image of two convention­ally attractive gay men kissing is positioned, literally, as the laudatory bookend to “5,000 years of gay love stories erased from the history books.” For a film otherwise allergic to moralizing, this sure seems like “old-fashioned heteronorm­ative nonsense” to me.

It is often said, of course, that we dislike in others that which we most dislike in ourselves, and it’s impossible to see “Bros” — its arrogance, its failure, its enlightene­d intentions and benighted outcomes — without feeling implicated in it. I am of Eichner’s generation, or close to it; of his race, his gender, his sexuality, his industry, his city. I am the person meant to “see myself ” in “Bros,” to be “represente­d” by it, to celebrate the “milestone” it marks. I am, in the sense of the term that suggests affiliatio­n, his “type,” and he mine — I am reasonably sure, after seeing the film twice, that I have woofed at his shirtless torso on Scruff in Los Angeles.

And yet, despite the affinities Eichner and I share on paper — no, because of the affinities we share on paper — I recoil at “Bros’” squandered privilege, bristle at its star’s attempt to hide its shortcomin­gs behind the veil of homophobia. After all, if the film believes in the progress it celebrates — that of setting our own terms, of deciding for ourselves — then it must earn the support it seeks and not merely expect it.

In the quarter century since “Will & Grace,” whose Debra Messing makes an ingenious cameo in “Bros,” the very forms Eichner appeared to dismiss in his eagerness for theatrical triumph have carved out the space for LGBTQ people to choose among numerous options instead of clinging to every scrap of queer representa­tion as though it were a life raft in storm-tossed seas.

The freedom “Bros” extols, or tries to, is not just sexual freedom. It is the freedom to fight over, criticize, even ignore the artworks that claim to represent us — and, on the flip side, the freedom to keep making and consuming gay art whether straight people show up for it or not.

Indeed, when I saw the film a second time this week, at a half-full weeknight screening at the Sunset 5, what struck me most were the loudest laughs and cheers, all directed at the gayest material — the slap fight-turned-sex scene, the Bowen Yang cameo, Nicole Kidman’s pre-roll ad for AMC.

“Bros,” a film expressly about the refusal to butch up one’s voice for a straight audience, isn’t for everyone, and it doesn’t need to be. It can be for us to decide it’s not worth our time or our money, that we would rather watch some other queer film or TV series out of love, instead of watching this one out of obligation.

That’s progress.

Bombs away.

 ?? NICOLE RIVELLI/UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP ?? This image released by Universal Pictures shows Billy Eichner in a scene from “Bros.”
NICOLE RIVELLI/UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP This image released by Universal Pictures shows Billy Eichner in a scene from “Bros.”

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