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Now, as someone who's literally leading a "Pride And Prejudice" pilgrimage in three weeks. There's my, like, I like rom-coms as a genre hat.
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WILLISON: Well, so this is what I would say, is that this movie engages me with two, like, very different hats. But you have policed them based on how good they are. And I've never known you to police Austen adaptations based on the fact that they're happening. Now, Margaret, you are the wild card here. And they are down to make fun of the rich, you know, snobs of Fire Island, which is also very Jane Austen. So I feel like this seems like the kind of critical look at it that I think is also really welcome in the new kind of era that we live in. And the specific way that they - I mean, I've always wanted to say that - but they sort of are able to, I think, problematize this place that I have never been to and I'm also a little scared of. I think the thing that I also think is most amazing and exciting about it, which is stating the obvious, is the group that's going to Fire Island in this film and the gays, gays, gays that they bring on to this island. QURESHI: And I think that wistful quality in it wrapped in the sort of - you know, the parties and the Speeds and all of that was great. But also, it has kind of some, I think, drama in its screenplay as well and some, I think, sadnesses and kind of regrets. QURESHI: I would say that the other thing that I was struck by is it's great, obviously so funny and so young. It has a sense that money has been spent on it, which is also really nice to see because this is, I think, a film that originally was going to be on Quibi, and then it was going to. And as I think Mallory, you said, it looks really great. I've also decided that I want to be Margaret Cho's character, Erin, when I grow up, because, you know, living in a beautiful home, tattooed and beloved by beautiful young gay men - like, come on give me that life.
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I think it dragged a little in the beginning and, at times, in the middle for me, but I was hooting and hollering through 90% of the movie. I will say it was refreshing to see "Pride And Prejudice" adapted into a specifically adult gay movie, where it makes sense that the drama is heightened and there are all kinds of racial and class dynamics happening. I am kind of a sucker for modern adaptations of classics because I grew up on stuff like "She's The Man," "She's All That," "10 Things I Hate About "You." But, you know, they do tend to be kind of teen college movies, which makes sense because everything is dramatic when you're a teen, right? Like, aside from how it's a visual feast of aesthetically sweaty, muscled bods, it's raunchy. YU: I was thoroughly charmed by this movie. It features an entirely queer main cast and was directed by queer, Asian American director Andrew Ahn. There's jealousy, resentment, drugs, hookups, casual bigotry and a lot of very good jokes. It doesn't help that Charlie's grumpy friend Will, played by Conrad Ricamora, thinks Noah and his friends are taking advantage of Charlie's openhearted nature. And together they represent the kind of gays that are historically shunned by the most toxic corners of the white masc gay community on and off Fire Island - fats, femmes and Asians.īut then Howie finds a friendly, attractive doctor, Charlie, played by James Scully, among one group of sneering, insufferable Bradens and Coopers. So Noah is looking to reconnect with him and with other friends, played by Matt Rogers, Tomas Matos and Torian Miller. Who else? In "Fire Island," Joel Kim Booster stars as Noah, a nurse who gathers his friend for one week every summer at the Fire Island home - the beautiful Fire Island home - of Erin, played by Margaret Cho. She is one-half of the Two Bossy Dames newsletter and one-third of the "Appointment Television" podcast. Also rounding out the panel, this all-queer Pride panel, is Margaret H. WELDON: Also joining us is frequent NPR contributor and culture writer Bilal Qureshi. Joining me today is NPR producer Mallory Yu. And today we're talking about "Fire Island" on POP CULTURE HAPPY HOUR from NPR. And when love - or something like it - comes along, it places their friendship in jeopardy. But he and his best friend, played by Bowen Yang, are outsiders among the cliquish community of white, wealthy gay privilege. Comedian Joel Kim Booster wrote the script and also stars in the film as a queer Asian man who lives for the one week every summer when he and his friends decamp to the fabulous gay resort near Long Island. The new rom-com "Fire Island" puts a queer spin on Jane Austen's "Pride And Prejudice," replacing the bustles and fancy balls with Speedos and tea dances.