pleasure is complicated
by Douglas Messerli
Paul Donagy (screenwriter and director) Story of
a Bad Boy / 1999
If
the 17-year-old of Donagy’s film, Pauly (Jeremy Hollingworth), is seemingly
“hornier” than Moreton’s character, it is because Edge of Seventeen is
far more honest about portraying sex. Donagy’s cute, doe-eyed kid is ready for
everything (“I want some day to do everything” is his creed), for much of the
film he doesn’t have much opportunity to do anything. His confused and always
exhausted parents, Spryos (Stephen Lang) and Elaine (Julie Kavner)—who besides
their worrisome teenager have a young baby to care for—have permitted him to
change religions, from Greek Orthodox to Roman Catholic, without a clue that
his inexplicable switch has mostly to do with Pauly’s attraction to an Irish
altar boy, whom he soon discovers through his masturbatory voyeurism, is
interested only in girls.
When Pauly’s “pretend” girlfriend—always a necessary accessory in films
about budding gay boys—suggests he change back to public school for his senior
year, he demands his folks allow him yet another alteration in his life.
Troubled by what they can only describe as his “weird” behavior, they argue
instead he try basketball, playing the age-old parental game of “wait and see”
regarding his newest reversion. Showing absolutely no interest in throwing a
ball into hoops, Pauly assures his expulsion from Catholic School by kissing a
nun. As an aside: Story of a Bad Boy may be the first film to show a gay
teenager kiss more girls than boys in the process of coming out.
At
the new school he immediately is befriended by a popular black girl, Carla
(Cherelle Cargill), a wacky clarinetist, Ludmilla (Lauren Ward), and a male
punk-like audio-visual technician and school wrestler—all who try to convince
him, along with his friend Colin, to seek out extra credits by engaging in
anything but the “faggety” drama club.
Ludmilla would have him try-out as the band’s drum major, a position
overseen by a closeted older gay man, Mr. Fontaine (Gerry Becker). Carla and
Colin argue for any sports activity, particularly track. The AV tech wrestler
prefers to wrestle naked at home with Pauly in bed. Given his mantra of “try
everything,” Pauly passively attempts to balance all their demands—that is
until he gets a glimpse of this year’s drama teacher, Noel (Christian Camargo),
a student teacher who, as a sophomore in college is just a couple of years
older than the eager Pauly.
A is for adulteress
And archetype and
are
A is for Antigone
For anarchy, for
angst
A is agricol
And every day in
every way....
Even The Producers would not have been
so unlucky to save this turkey. But Pauly is so enamored of his new
teacher—whose bed he has now shared and to whom he has provided more
With parents as clueless as his are, Pauly like so many young people,
empathically declaims the empty truisms that every failed creator loves to
hear: “They think they know. They don’t get it.” But these obviously won’t
alter the fact that Noel has failed as a teacher and, soon after, told that he
must return to attend to his studies at school. He’s certainly not ready for
the big time of local high school yet,
nor is he able to sustain the magical relationship between him and Pauly the
younger boy’s imagination has cooked up. They will not be moving, as Noel
suggested they might, into a teacher dorm, nor even a “dorm-dorm” which Noel
had promised—particularly after he quite literally disappears from Pauly’s
life.
On
a previous date, Pauly and Noel, dining at an Interstate highway
restaurant—presumably a safe haven Noel has chosen so that they might not be
recognized—they run into a former friend of Noel, Guy, a rather flamboyant gay
man living presumably in New York, who leaves Noel his telephone number, which
when left behind, Pauly pockets.
Without Noel and seemingly anyone else with whom he can commiserate, the
would-be bad boy calls Guy and invites himself to a wild party. Meeting the
young boy without memory of the context, Guy calls up his fashionista friends
to remake Pauly up for a weekend of endless drinking, drugs, and sex—although
by the time they get to the latter it seems more like an orgy out of Jack
Smith, the in-drag and drugged out participants mostly rolling around in the
skivvies as they hug and kiss one another—that inevitably lands Pauly in a
hospital, tended to by friends, his now awakened and forgiving parents, and a
spacey therapist that makes Ken Kesey’s Nurse Ratched look like Florence
Nightingale. Handing him a sequined arrangement of plastic flowers and what looks
to be a swan, she asks, like it were a Rorschach test, what it reminds him of.
He quietly answers, he likes it, he likes its shape. “Yes?” she leans forward
as hoping to glean some profound insight into his attraction to gay beauty. It
gives me pleasure, he admits. “Pleasure is rare. Pleasure is complicated. But
pleasure is good.”
By the time he’s freed from lockup, he’s too late to claim a graduation
gown, that is until the popular Carla decides to break away from her normative
crowd (“The next time you see me, I could be less popular”), handing over her
white robe (the males are dressed in dark blue) which Pauly proudly wears to
the graduation ceremony which finally brings his parents out from their
homelife hibernation. As it begins to rain, the camera pans away from the small
crowd gathered after the ceremonies to capture Marta exiting from the back of
the building to join Noel in his car as they speed off into the future. Noel
opts obviously to attempt to live out his life as an unhappy closeted man,
restating what we long ago perceived even while the innocent hero of this tale,
Pauly, could not: Noel is a fraud.
Pauly’s father has provided him with money to buy tickets to the Poconos
where, he suggests, his son might be able to pursue his painterly activities
with other family members who plan to retire for the summer to Water Mountain.
Although he purchases the tickets to Water Mountain, his eyes catch the
departure of another bus to New York.
A
few minutes later when the bus pulls away, we see his white robe laying on the
concrete as that bus to New York moves out of the frame, a bus which evidently
the boy who wanted to experience everything has embarked.
Donagy’s alternatively loud and quiet film, with equal parts of farce
and wit, may not be a profound film, but it’s certainly not worth having been
entirely ignored as it seems to have been. If nothing else, it certainly
represents an entertaining hour and a half. View it, I argue, for what it is.
Los Angeles, November 30, 2020
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog and
World Cinema Review (November 2020).
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