QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 306 - November 21, 2019

Page 27

NOVEMBER 21, 2019  |

HOLIDAY SHOPPING GUIDE   |  QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE  |  27

ISSUE 306  |  Qsaltlake.com

screen queens The Johns BY CHRIS AZZOPARDI

Polyester John Waters staged a live chicken decapitation for his 1969 debut feature Mondo Trasho. In the following year’s Multiple Maniacs, he made anal sex with rosary beads a thing. And in Pink Flamingos, Divine, his drag muse, committed fully to her art by eating real dog crap for a scene. So by the time 1981 rolled around, the King of Filth was over it, ready to move away from the filth and find some fresh inspiration via the 1950s. He looked to bygone moms, specifically the classic trope of the overburdened middle-class housewife. With a beefed-up budget of $300,000, he rounded up his motley crew of John Waters regulars, including Divine as Christian mother-of-two Francine Fishpaw, for Polyester, released in 1981. A hysterically melodramatic spoofing of the American suburbs, the film holds up as one of Waters’ finest comedies — due in large part to the game cast, including Edith Massey as Francine’s debutante friend Cuddles, who regularly dispenses basic-mom-type inspirational bromides to soothe Francine. And with Tab Hunter playing opposite Divine as, naturally, the hunk who swoops in to save her from domestic agony — his

name, Todd Tomorrow, is overthe-top perfection — Polyester nudged Waters closer to mainstream notoriety and would eventually give him enough household-name clout to make Hairspray and Serial Mom. Among the supplemental features on Criterion Collection’s new Waters-approved Blu-ray edition is a feature where Hunter, in an interview shot several years before his death in 2018, appears on-camera to discuss playing Todd despite his agent’s advice to pass. In a separate interview conducted by out film critic Michael Musto specifically for this special edition, Waters discusses various aspects of the film, including the movie’s wide-ranging smells (the Criterion edition includes an “Odorama” scratchand-sniff card), Tab Hunter’s kiss with Divine, and Divine’s evolution from monster to heralded sympathetic housewife.

Rocketman Elton John’s on-the-surface glitzy, larger-than-life story can’t be contained to a mere biopic. The shiny gay costumes, the shiny gay glasses. The drugs, the overdose. The parental rejection. But then, of course, the story’s greatest turn of events: how Elton John rose above it all to become, well, Elton John. So Rocketman, fortunately, is a razzle-dazzle, Broadway-big musical with an apt surrealist flair that arranges the elements — the dark, the decadent — of Elton’s life and career into a wild, oth-

erworldly fever dream (it even leans proudly into its subject’s innate queerness, unlike last year’s Bohemian Rhapsody). In the film, directed by Dexter Fletcher, we meet Elton as he makes a very Elton entrance, storming into the scene with fully bedazzled devil horns, feathered wings and gem-encrusted heart specs to go to … rehab. Amid parental pushback on his passion for music and his homosexuality, a critical career moment occurs at one of L.A.’s historically famous music venues, the Troubadour, where Elton jams on the piano, playing his hit “Crocodile Rock.” When he hilariously levitates, the crowd joining him in mid-air as he hovers over his piano bench, Elton’s life is no longer a match for reality. Only a supernatural flourish can truly register his emerging stardom. Capturing the essence of Elton with precision, charm and his own singing voice — and the heartbreak of having your parents reject you — is Welsh actor Taron Egerton. His magnetic presence is such a staggering revelation it’s impossible to imagine what Rocketman would be like without him carrying it on his sequined shoulders. Included among the supplemental features is “Becoming Elton

John,” where Egerton talks about transforming into John; during the short feature, John, executive producer, discusses watching the film, calling it simultaneously “eerie” and “satisfying.” Clips on staging the musical numbers and the costumes, as well as Egerton’s studio session (where John gives Egerton free rein), are also among the loaded special features.

Booksmart Nerd-friends Amy (Kaitlyn Dever) and Molly (Beanie Feldstein) have a bright future ahead of them. Amy is going to Columbia, and Molly is off to Yale. They worked hard to get into those Ivy League schools and have been rewarded accordingly… and, wait, the kids who drank and smoked and partied also got accepted to those schools?  Q


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Articles inside

A tale of a locomotion

3min
page 46

4 (seemingly) money-savings habits that can bleed you dry

3min
page 44

Matrons of Mayhem raise $10,500 for Camp Hobé Summer Camp for Kids with Cancer

1min
pages 42-43

Fun in the Sun awaits LGBTQ travelers in Puerto Vallarta

5min
pages 40-41

Toil & Trouble

2min
page 39

Local restaurants are the best certificate gifts

1min
page 32

‘Hedwig’s’ John Cameron Mitchell: Love me little, love me long

7min
pages 30-31

Utah Rep’s ‘American Psycho’ is bloody sexy

2min
page 29

Tony's Gay Agenda

2min
page 28

The Johns

3min
page 27

Stuff your own stocking

3min
page 26

Season's Readings

5min
pages 24-25

Holiday Markets

2min
page 23

Herbs

1min
page 22

Vegan gift guide for non-vegans

2min
page 22

Mikey Rox’s Ultimate Guide to Gay Gift Giving 2019

5min
pages 20-21

40 years of KRCL

4min
pages 18-19

Civility

3min
page 17

Give and receive

2min
page 16

Hallmark, Lifetime, the gay question

2min
page 15

Holiday savings

2min
page 13

Qmmunity

2min
page 12

Trans woman forced to remove makeup at Utah DMV against department policy

1min
page 12

World AIDS Day events in Utah

1min
page 11

Grindr/Scruff scam targets gay men in Salt Lake City

1min
page 11

Project Rainbow places 283 flags ahead of Transgender Day of Remembrance

1min
page 11

Unity Fest: 9 sports, 4 days, 1 city

3min
page 10

The top national and world news

5min
pages 7, 9
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