a world somewhere else
by Douglas Messerli
Joey Kuhn and Grainne O'Hara Belluomo (screenplay),
Joey Kuhn (director) Those People /
2015
Unfortunately, what Kuhn replaces the sexual element with is a focus on
wealth. The young Charlie (Jonathan Gordon), a not-very-convincing artist, who
mostly paints portraits, pines for his fellow boarding-school rich boyfriend
Sebastian (Jason Ralph), a character who quickly comes to be perceived as a
kind of stand-in for the scandalous Bernie Madoff, whose son, Mark, committed
suicide two years after his father’s arrest for defrauding thousands of
Americans.
I
do wish Kuhn’s film had more fully explored these vast distances between the
obviously privileged Charlie, his friend Sebastian, and the far more talented
pianist, but the director seems locked into his pattern of outsider desire. For
Charlie, even if he has found his way into the world of wealth, is still an
outsider; and so too is Sebastian, now detested by everyone around him for his
father’s sins. Strangely, the true outsider, Tim, seems more at home in his
chosen world, having obviously made his way from a bar-room pianist to a
concert-one. The privileged are, at least in Kuhn’s terms, the truly
disadvantaged, without realizing it.
Even
if Charlie is somehow, rather unconvincingly able to talk this version of
Madoff’s son out of committing suicide, we finally realize if the young man is
to survive, he must leave his desires for wealth, beauty, and grandiose
comforts for something else, something foreign even to his life. He does toast
goodbye to Sebastian, but we can’t yet be sure, at film’s end, whether he can
reconnoiter with Tim, who has now moved on to a position as the pianist for the
San Francisco Symphony.
Only the film’s title suggests that he might be able to now join the
human race against “those people.” Yet we can never know certainly who those
people are, the ones on the outside or the ones within, for Tim has now also
entered the world of privilege, and if Charlie rejoins his friend, he will also
enter that world. It appears that in Kuhn’s vision the people of whom he speaks
are always somewhere else from where he or we are.
Los Angeles, January 13, 2019
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (January 2019).




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