CptStern
suckmonkey
- Joined
- May 5, 2004
- Messages
- 10,303
- Reaction score
- 62
no it's not a confessional it's a new movie that made it's debut in cannes this week
here's a sypnosis:
"This informative and quick-moving doc explores the seemingly oxymoronic concept of gay conservatives. Don't laugh. More than a million gays and lesbians voted for Bush in 2000.
Focusing on four members of the Log Cabin, a gay Republican group, Wash Westmoreland tracks the last few tumultuous years, with special emphasis on Bush's 2004 stand on gay marriage to woo the religious right.
Westmoreland doesn't examine what made the queers conservatives in the first place. Most are white, male and wealthy, so you can assume it's the fiscal policies. He gets a few cheap laughs at two of his more ridiculous subjects: one collects Reagan memorabilia, the other, a Palm Beach hairdresser, is an ass-kissing idiot.
But you see genuine conflict in the lives of the film's other subjects, a lawyer who wants to marry her Democrat partner of seven years, and Steve May , the first openly gay member of Arizona's state legislature, who makes a life-changing decision. "
source
the movie tackles being a repulican yet living a lifestyle that's contrary to repulican ideology. I guess the surprising bit of info about this movie is:
"Don't laugh. More than a million gays and lesbians voted for Bush in 2000."
my point is: is it possible to believe in a set of political ideologies even though they conflict with some of your own?
here's a sypnosis:
"This informative and quick-moving doc explores the seemingly oxymoronic concept of gay conservatives. Don't laugh. More than a million gays and lesbians voted for Bush in 2000.
Focusing on four members of the Log Cabin, a gay Republican group, Wash Westmoreland tracks the last few tumultuous years, with special emphasis on Bush's 2004 stand on gay marriage to woo the religious right.
Westmoreland doesn't examine what made the queers conservatives in the first place. Most are white, male and wealthy, so you can assume it's the fiscal policies. He gets a few cheap laughs at two of his more ridiculous subjects: one collects Reagan memorabilia, the other, a Palm Beach hairdresser, is an ass-kissing idiot.
But you see genuine conflict in the lives of the film's other subjects, a lawyer who wants to marry her Democrat partner of seven years, and Steve May , the first openly gay member of Arizona's state legislature, who makes a life-changing decision. "
source
the movie tackles being a repulican yet living a lifestyle that's contrary to repulican ideology. I guess the surprising bit of info about this movie is:
"Don't laugh. More than a million gays and lesbians voted for Bush in 2000."
my point is: is it possible to believe in a set of political ideologies even though they conflict with some of your own?