Current:Home > Stocks'Bottoms' lets gay people be 'selfish and shallow.' Can straight moviegoers handle it? -Secure Growth Solutions
'Bottoms' lets gay people be 'selfish and shallow.' Can straight moviegoers handle it?
View
Date:2025-04-13 04:15:08
Every queer kid has a formative movie experience.
For this journalist, it was seeing a hunky Brendan Fraser in Disney’s 1997 hit “George of the Jungle.” And for filmmaker Emma Seligman, it was being 14 and watching the 2009 sapphic horror comedy “Jennifer’s Body," starring Megan Fox as a literal man-eating cheerleader.
"I don't know what it was" about that movie, Seligman says with a laugh. "I think it was just the age and feeling surprised."
Now 28, Seligman has made an ultra-bloody high school comedy of her own with "Bottoms" (in select theaters, expands nationwide Friday).
The irreverent new movie stars Rachel Sennott ("Bodies, Bodies, Bodies") and Ayo Edebiri (FX's "The Bear") as PJ and Josie, two queer outcasts who are so unpopular that even the teachers refer to them as "ugly, untalented gays." Desperate to have sex before graduation, Josie and PJ start an all-female fight club under the guise of empowerment and teaching self-defense, when all they really want to do is bed cheerleaders.
'Shiva Baby':Jewish comedy is a perfect holiday watch – but maybe not with your parents
The film was co-written by Sennott, who also starred in Seligman's nerve-fraying debut feature, "Shiva Baby," in 2021. Bluntly titled "Gay High School" in the script's early stages, "Bottoms" mixes the gonzo weirdness of "Wet Hot American Summer" with the violent grit of "Kick-Ass." It's also a bracingly spiky antidote to the squeaky-clean queer stories we've grown accustomed to in recent years.
"One of my earliest motivations was to create a less sanitized movie with queer teen characters," says Seligman, who uses she/they pronouns. "Not just the coming-out stuff, because I think we're all tired of seeing that, even though those movies have value. But everyone should be allowed to see themselves onscreen in their most selfish, shallow forms, and teenagers are often the most selfish and shallow out of every age group. They're also the most honest and ambitious and hormonal."
With some radical exceptions, such as "Booksmart" and "But I'm a Cheerleader," most movies about young gay characters focus on the trauma of being closeted ("Moonlight"), shunned by one's parents ("Boy Erased"), or kneecapped by first love ("Call Me By Your Name").
But when "Bottoms" begins, Josie and PJ are comfortably out lesbians. They crack vulgar, borderline offensive jokes and play along with a rumor that they spent hard time in juvenile detention. They’re at times deceitful, manipulative and gleefully libidinous – in other words, all the things straight male characters have been allowed to be for years.
Seligman wonders if mainstream audiences can accept messy, queer characters. After all, it was only five years ago that a major studio released its first gay coming-of-age film: the well-intentioned but saccharine “Love, Simon.” The movie was a modest box-office success, unlike last year’s “Bros,” a raunchy gay rom-com that flopped despite critical raves.
“It’s that sort of model minority complex,” Seligman says. “When there’s such little representation of an identity you haven’t seen on screen, you want them to be perfect. You want them to be really admirable and innocent, and not have anyone doubt their actions or intentions. There’s nothing wrong with a young queer boy trying to pursue love and acceptance. Everyone can be like, ‘Yeah, that’s a really solid, normal goal.’ ”
But with a movie like “Bottoms,” when “you’re at the beginning of a new type of story, you can’t help but wonder, ‘Are straight audiences going to be able to handle this?’ ”
Yes, 'Bros' flopped at the box office.But Hollywood must keep making LGBTQ movies, anyway.
At least so far, the answer seems to be yes. In just 10 theaters last weekend, “Bottoms” scored one of the highest per-screen averages of any movie released since the pandemic began. Like “Love, Simon” before it, the movie could be a groundbreaking step forward for queer representation in Hollywood – but Seligman is reluctant to attach too much weight to her knowingly “ridiculous” and “absurd” comedy.
“I just want to give young queer people a chance to laugh and not have to think too hard and be entertained,” Seligman says. “I remember Ayo saying that this film probably would have helped her (when she was younger), but it also would have really messed her up. And I have a feeling it would have been the same with me, too.
“I want to think, ‘Aw, if I saw this, I would have known I was queer.’ But it also might’ve just freaked me out.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Carolinas bracing for second landfall from Tropical Storm Debby: Live updates
- Book excerpt: After the Funeral and Other Stories by Tessa Hadley
- A lost 140-pound baby walrus is getting round-the-clock cuddles in rare rescue attempt
- DC area braces for destructive evening storms, hail and tornadoes
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Arrest warrants issued for Alabama riverfront brawl
- Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes named No. 1 in NFL's 'Top 100 Players of 2023' countdown
- Texans minority owner Enrique Javier Loya facing rape, sexual abuse charges in Kentucky
- Report: Lauri Markkanen signs 5-year, $238 million extension with Utah Jazz
- Georgia kids would need parental permission to join social media if Senate Republicans get their way
Ranking
- Carolinas bracing for second landfall from Tropical Storm Debby: Live updates
- Biden jokes he can relate with Astros' Dusty Baker, oldest manager to win World Series
- Crossings along U.S.-Mexico border jump as migrants defy extreme heat and asylum restrictions
- Paramount sells Simon & Schuster to private investment firm
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- New national monument comes after more than a decade of advocacy by Native nations
- Electricity rates in Texas skyrocket amid statewide heat wave
- William Friedkin, director of 'The Exorcist' and 'The French Connection,' dead at 87
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
A lost 140-pound baby walrus is getting round-the-clock cuddles in rare rescue attempt
New York City doctor charged with sexually assaulting unconscious patients and filming it
What to know about beech leaf disease, the 'heartbreaking' threat to forests along the East Coast
Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
The best strategies for winning the Mega Millions jackpot, according to a Harvard statistician
Let’s Make a Deal Host Wayne Brady Comes Out as Pansexual
At this lab, the secrets of the atom — and the universe — are being discovered