Current:Home > reviewsMove over, 'Barbie': Why 'Red, White & Royal Blue' is the gayest movie this summer -FinanceMind
Move over, 'Barbie': Why 'Red, White & Royal Blue' is the gayest movie this summer
View
Date:2025-04-19 04:21:11
I'll say it. "Barbie" isn't the gayest movie of the summer.
Sure, I walked (strutted?) into my "Barbie" screening wearing a sleeveless "Barbie" T-shirt with a gaggle of gay men. While the movie was inherently a queer experience – the story of a woman finding herself after struggling with adversity while wearing hot pink is nearly always gay-coded (see: "Legally Blonde") – it also wasn't explicitly gay. No two dudes flirting or fawning over each other. Sure, we got Ken's BFF, the maybe-gay Allan, but viewers had to connect the dots to see themselves represented instead of seeing it plainly.
Watching "Red, White & Royal Blue" (streaming now on Amazon Prime), I felt seen. Based on the 2019 book of the same name, the story of an unlikely romance between a U.S. president's son and a British prince captivated readers and catapulted the novel to New York Times (and USA TODAY!) bestseller status. That same romance melted my screen: Two men developing a friendship, a flirtation, mutual crushes, kissing, sex, love – it was all there, without question.
Particularly, the sex. While the romance is cheesy and unrealistic, the book's surprisingly steamy sex scenes were simultaneously hot, humorous and honest. Just like straight couples get in many movies.
'Red, White & Royal Blue' is very clear: 'These two young men have sex'
That sexiness seamlessly translated to film, thanks to Matthew López and queer intimacy coordinator Robbie Taylor Hunt, as well as stars Nicholas Galitzine (Prince Henry) and Taylor Zakhar Perez (Alex Claremont-Diaz). The plot mainly focuses on the pair's trajectory from enemies to lovers as Alex's mother vies for a second term in the White House. After crashing into a large cake together at the top of the film – "Cakegate," as it were – it's suggested the pair have a publicity friendship to smooth over relations between their respective countries. That relationship blossoms into something much deeper.
"We wanted to create something that felt authentic, and that had a range between a tenderness and a hunger and something more animalistic maybe," Galitzine says.
For López, as a gay man, he knew he needed to get this right. Mostly because it's not something we see regularly. "We're always being asked to be tasteful, to not frighten the horses, so to speak, to just sort of, like, you don't want to offend anybody," he says. "I find that offensive. Someone is offended and it's me." (I recall nodding my head as aggressively as possible.)
What struck me most while watching was that the movie didn't shy away from what most mainstream queer movies do: indicating that the characters have anal sex. López says that was intentional.
"I was very, very clear with the studio and my producers from the beginning, that these two young men have sex," he says. "They don't have the idea of sex, they don't have some sort of generalized hint of sex. They have sex."
Taylor Hunt wasn't daunted by the simulated sex required. Still, the stakes are different for these types of scenes: "When I come to work on a scene between two men, I'm aware of that this is going to exist in less of a landscape of representation," he says.
He doesn't think good representations of loving sex between men exist too often. Typically, gay male sex on screen spills out of conflict and frustration. While still hot or exciting, it's born out of a toxic combination of love and hate. On the flip side, when queer love stories play out on screen, audiences usually don't see that moment of sex. "My worry is that it's (an) inability to conceive of loving sex between men," he says.
Yes, 'Bros' flopped at the box office.But Hollywood must keep making LGBTQ movies, anyway.
Don't let the hot pink marketing of 'Barbie' fool you
I can count on one hand the moments I've seen loving sex between men in this vein in media ("Elite," "My Policeman," "Special") compared with an awards favorite like "Call Me By Your Name," which infamously panned away from sex between its main characters. All I want is more authenticity. Not more gay sex at the expense of straight sex. Just more representation, period.
I'm glad both "Barbie" and "Red White, & Royal Blue" exist. Both are fun, poignant and meme-able. Sure, "Barbie" will win out at the box office and is a cultural phenomenon, while "Red, White & Royal Blue" is exclusively on a streaming platform and caters to a niche audience.
But I know that when I reflect on summer movies from 2023, one will stick out in my mind as meaningful progress for LGBTQ+ representation. And it won't be the one that blinded me with hot pink marketing.
'Call Me By Your Name':Is it still an important cultural touchstone, five years later?
veryGood! (86)
Related
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Reports: Frank Clark to sign with Seattle Seahawks, team that drafted him
- Australian police charge 7 with laundering hundreds of millions for Chinese crime syndicate
- Pakistan sets up deportation centers to hold migrants who are in the country illegally
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- I-80 reopened and evacuations lifted after windy brush fire west of Reno near California line
- Strikers have shut down a vital Great Lakes shipping artery for days, and negotiations are looming
- Nigeria’s Supreme Court refuses to void president’s election and dismisses opposition challenges
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Ex-NFL player Sergio Brown, charged with killing mother, has been denied release
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Strong US economic growth for last quarter likely reflected consumers’ resistance to Fed rate hikes
- After backlash, Scholastic says it will stop separating diverse books at school book fairs
- 'All the Light We Cannot See': What to know about Netflix adaption of Anthony Doerr’s book
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- 3 children, 1 adult killed in Canada shooting; wounded victim survives
- White House dinner for Australia offers comfort food, instrumental tunes in nod to Israel-Hamas war
- Southern Indiana man gets 240 years for 2 murders, attempted murder and robbery
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Judge says he’ll look at Donald Trump’s comments, reconsider $10,000 fine for gag order violation
South Korean scholar acquitted of defaming sexual slavery victims during Japan colonial rule
Southern Indiana man gets 240 years for 2 murders, attempted murder and robbery
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Judge dismisses Birmingham-Southern lawsuit against Alabama state treasurer over loan denial
House from hit Netflix show 'Sex Education' now on the market for sale, listed for $1.8M
Australian hydrogen company outlines US expansion in New Mexico, touts research