the gay gaze
by Douglas Messerli
Tomas Lagermand Lundme and Søren Green
(screenplay), Søren Green (director), Oktober Dreng (October Boy)
/ 2018 [29 minutes]
14-year-old Thomas (Elias Buddde Christensen)
begins his first days in his new Copenhagen school, having just moved to the
city with his mother. He soon meets up with Emma (Esther Marie Boisen Berg),
who notices he likes to draw and suggests they might spend some time together
sketching—a clever way to meet the new boy.
When they meet up to share drawings, Emma wants an arm drawing as well,
but Thomas claims he doesn’t have his proper pens, she asking him to visit her
again when he can do the tattoo.
But it’s when Thomas meets up with Emma’s older brother Mikkel (Jacob
August Ottensten), a young artist whose drawings Emma has borrowed to show them
as her own to Thomas, that things truly begin to change for the 14-year-old.
Danish director Søren Green’s camera makes it clear that the younger boy is
immediately attracted to his crotch and the hair around Mikkel’s navel. And
when the older boy invites him to the Academy, after praising Thomas’ drawings,
Thomas is drawn into new possibilities without him perhaps even being aware of
it.
Even a trip to the bathroom, after which he spots the naked Mikkel
pulling on his pants, clearly sends his head reeling, although actor
Christensen deadpans the entire situation, only his eyes widening with the
wonders he observes.
Surely, she recognizes it is a lost cause when he asks, “Can’t we just
lie her for a bit?”
Meanwhile, however, word has gotten out that he’s “been with Emma,”
presumably suggesting that he’s had sex with her, making him somewhat popular,
at least with Boas. Conflicted as he is, Thomas says nothing to deny it, which
gets him an automatic invitation to the party of Boas’ house when his parents
are out of town.
While having a reputation of having slept with Emma makes Thomas popular
with the boys, however, Emma is described as being “slutty” by her girlfriends
and finally confronts Thomas believing he was the one who spread the rumor.
Soon after, Thomas quickly leaves the party.
The several images that Green flashes of a train in motion convey not
only Thomas’ own trip from the party to his home, but the sense of changes he
is inwardly undergoing, the blur and confusion of his own emotions.
Mads finds him sitting in the subway station drunk, and helps him home.
For some years now, Green has been making small, quiet movies (An
Afternoon in 2014 and An Evening in 2016) which deal with young
adolescents trying to come to terms with and, more importantly, verbalize the
queer feelings they suddenly encounter, fearful of expressing their new
emotions to their closest friends, let alone sharing them with their peers in
which might end in abuse. October Boy is the best of these to date.
Los Angeles, November 20, 2023
Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog (November
2023).