Current:Home > Scams'Bottoms' lets gay people be 'selfish and shallow.' Can straight moviegoers handle it? -AssetVision
'Bottoms' lets gay people be 'selfish and shallow.' Can straight moviegoers handle it?
View
Date:2025-04-19 09:07:45
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! (8)
Related
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Mariah Carey’s Rare Update on Her Twins Monroe and Moroccan Is Sweet Like Honey
- 2 men sentenced for sexual assaults on passengers during separate flights to Seattle
- Justice Department sues TikTok, accusing the company of illegally collecting children’s data
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 6 people, including 4 children, killed in 2-vehicle crash in Mississippi
- Son of Kentucky dentist charged in year-old killing; dentist charged with hiding evidence
- The Most Instagram-Worthy Food & Cocktails in Las Vegas
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Meet the painter with the best seat at one of Paris Olympics most iconic venues
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- As gender eligibility issue unfolds, Olympic boxer Lin Yu-Ting dominates fight
- Miss Teen West Virginia Has the Perfect Bounce Back After Falling Off Stage at Competition
- First two kickoff under NFL’s new rules are both returned to the 26
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- New sports streaming service sets price at $42.99/month: What you can (and can't) get with Venu Sports
- Watch as Wall Street Journal newsroom erupts in applause following Gershkovich release
- JoJo Siwa Shares Her Advice for the Cast of Dance Moms: A New Era
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Baseball team’s charter bus catches fire in Iowa; no one is hurt
Golfer Tommy Fleetwood plays at Olympics with heavy heart after tragedy in hometown
Surgical castration, ‘Don’t Say Gay’ and absentee regulations. New laws go into effect in Louisiana
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Memo to the Supreme Court: Clean Air Act Targeted CO2 as Climate Pollutant, Study Says
Billie Eilish and Charli XCX Dance on Pile of Underwear in NSFW Guess Music Video
Analysis: Donald Trump questioning Kamala Harris’ race shows he doesn’t understand code-switching