in the murk
by Douglas Messerli
Bradley Rust Gray (screenwriter and director) Hitch / 1999
Presumably, Porp, with green fingernail polish, is gay, while Jason is
straight; at least that’s what we can surmise by Jason’s accusation of Porp
having fucked a guy they previously picked up, citing as evidence a condom he
found in the back of the car. Porp, on the other hand, asks Jason if he fucked
a woman, evidently at a truck stop, “in the ass,” claiming that he fucked a
girl named Jackie anally, while denying having sex with their hitchhiker. In
another words, even if he’s gay, Porp is evidently not comfortable talking
about it. He even buys a copy of Playboy for his friend so that he won’t
have to think so much when jacking off.
There are two nighttime scenes at the center of this film in which we
can barely see given the purposely poor lighting of the flick. But presumably
in the first Porp is jacking off alone, rather enjoying it, while the second
time around, Porp’s green painted fingernails seem to have found their way into
Jason’s pants giving him a great deal of nighttime pleasure.
The presumption is that we might be interested in this encounter simply
because it is unlikely, although, as I wrote long ago in my review of Brokeback
Mountain we know that lonely men, no matter what their sexual inclinations
generally enjoy the company of whoever they’re with if there is none else
around with whom to do it. In that movie at least we knew for certain that Enis
Del Mar and Jack Twist definitely “liked it.” In Hitch we can’t even be
sure of that! If Jason did in fact enjoy the fit of Porp’s hand around his
cock, can we be sure that it was satisfying in any way to Porp? Not knowing
anything about anyone in this film seems to be its object.
I
suppose one might say that this is what being incurably Q is all about. But
even those who are intent upon constantly questioning sexual boundaries do it
with more energy and determination, I hope, that these two drifters.
Los Angeles, January 6, 2021
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog and
World Cinema Review (January 2021).



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