What's with Netflix and the nondescript one-word titles. According to Wikipedia, "The Club" is the title of 4 movies, 4 tv series, 2 video games, and a radio show
This one, originally entitled El Club (2019), is the writing/directing debut of Mexican actress Camila Ibarra, otherwise known as Ruth Martin in the prison drama Capadocia (2008-2012). It's every telenovela you've ever seen: impossibly beautiful people arguing in impossibly elegant houses (every room must have at least five chandeliers), then stomping out in anger and driving off their impossibly fancy cars. Forbidden romance, generational conflict, blackmail, betrayal, murder. And, in this case, drogas.
Trust fund baby Pablo (Alejandro Speitzer, top photo) is trying to distance himself from his domineering, bigoted, ultra-wealthy Dad (Omar Germenos, left).
So, along with sometime girlfriend Sofia and computer whiz Matias, he starts a business selling Ecstasy. Of course, plot complications ensue: a drug cartel has already cornered the Ecstasy trade, and its jefe, El Monkey, doesn't like the competition.
Ok, Mexican drug cartels produce heroin and some marijuana, and transport cocaine. They don't handle Ecstasy because it's a party drug, easily substitutable and not very expensive. But whatever.
In a gay plotline,younger brother Santiago (Alejandro Puente) goes off to Stanford and finds a boyfriend. The evil Nico sends a film of the two going at it to all of Dad's friends, resulting in a conflagration at Christmastime. "In my family there are no queers!" Dad yells. Santiago decks him. "I'm not queer, I'm gay!"
Rather an old-fashioned storyline, considering that same-sex marriage has been legal in Mexico City and many Mexican states since 2010. It reminds me of Dynasty, 30 years ago.
But the cast is super-gay positive.
1. Alejandro Speiser as Pablo. In June 2019, Alejandro and fellow actor Erik Elias celebrated Gay Pride by kissing. "I'm not gay, but love is love," he told the startled tabloid reporters.
2. Omar Germenos as the family patriarch. Omar played a gay character in Donde está Elisa?
3. Jorge Caballero (left), seen here with his boyfriend, Colombian singer Esteman, as Matias, the computer whiz.
4. Axel Arenas, who starred in the gay-themed Tremulo, as Jonás. In non-gay news, in 2018, Arenas was arrested for the murder of a female escort, but released after he proved that he was not in the country at the time.
5. Martin Saracho as Max. Martin starred in Estupida historia de amor en Winnipeg, about a gay couple trying to find a new life in a small town in Canada.
6. Nacho Tahhan, who starred in the Spanish version of the gay-themed Angels in America, as Gonzalo Cisneros
7. Marco Tostado as Diego, Sofia's anti-drug boyfriend. He played a gay character in a telenovela. And he has a chest.
Showing posts with label telenovela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label telenovela. Show all posts
Nov 17, 2019
Aug 9, 2019
"Vida": Queer Characters, Female Empowerment. What's Not to Like?
In Vida (2019-), two estranged Mexican-American sisters, party girl Lynn and responsible Emma, reunite at their estranged mother's funeral in Boyle Heights (a Hispanic neighborhood just east of downtown Los Angeles).
They discover that Mom has willed them each a third of her financially unsuccessful bar and apartment building, so they have no choice but to drop whatever they were doing and move to Boyle Heights to become bartenders and apartment managers. They rename the bar Vida, after Mom (and, of course, it's also Spanish for "this is life, the one you get, so go and have a ball").
The other third of the bar and apartment building goes to Mom's extremely butch roommate, who has the extremely butch name Eddy. Are we surprised to discover that Mom was a lesbian, and Eddy her wife? The girls are.
Are we surprised to discover that Emma was estranged from her Mom because she is bisexual? Turns out that Vida was gay and homophobic at the same time. It happens.
After the initial sexual identities are established, Eddy, Lynn, and Emma, along with their friend Mari, settle down to their various crises: keeping the bar afloat, cleansing the apartment building of evil spirits, suffering from homophobic and anti-Hispanic discrimination, and especially fighting gentrification: they want to keep Boyle Heights the way they remember from their childhoods.
Meanwhile, they start telenovela-style romances, with lots of sex, lies, and videotape.
1. Mari has a troubled on-off romance with Tlaloc (Ramses Jiminez).
2, Lynn has a troubled on-off romance with Johnny, Mari's brother (Carlos Miranda; this might not be the right one, but who cares?).
3. Later she moves on to city councilman Rudy (Adrian Gonzalez).
4. Emma has a troubled on-off romance with Cruz, a woke lesbian bartender, but she also hooks up with Baco (Raul Castillo) the building's handyman.
5. Eddy hooks up with Nico (a woman, of course). Do all Hispanic lesbians have masculine names?
Two of the four central characters are queer, which is groundbreaking, and the Hispanic culture is pleasant (they even speak Spanglish, switching back and forth between English and Spanish as the mood strikes).
But this is definitely a woman-oriented, women-centric series, with men definitely in the background. Not that there's anything wrong with that -- Goddess knows there are plenty of series with women in background roles. But it makes the beefcake options sorely limited. And would it kill them to have a few gay men wandering around?
They discover that Mom has willed them each a third of her financially unsuccessful bar and apartment building, so they have no choice but to drop whatever they were doing and move to Boyle Heights to become bartenders and apartment managers. They rename the bar Vida, after Mom (and, of course, it's also Spanish for "this is life, the one you get, so go and have a ball").
The other third of the bar and apartment building goes to Mom's extremely butch roommate, who has the extremely butch name Eddy. Are we surprised to discover that Mom was a lesbian, and Eddy her wife? The girls are.
Are we surprised to discover that Emma was estranged from her Mom because she is bisexual? Turns out that Vida was gay and homophobic at the same time. It happens.
After the initial sexual identities are established, Eddy, Lynn, and Emma, along with their friend Mari, settle down to their various crises: keeping the bar afloat, cleansing the apartment building of evil spirits, suffering from homophobic and anti-Hispanic discrimination, and especially fighting gentrification: they want to keep Boyle Heights the way they remember from their childhoods.
Meanwhile, they start telenovela-style romances, with lots of sex, lies, and videotape.
1. Mari has a troubled on-off romance with Tlaloc (Ramses Jiminez).2, Lynn has a troubled on-off romance with Johnny, Mari's brother (Carlos Miranda; this might not be the right one, but who cares?).
3. Later she moves on to city councilman Rudy (Adrian Gonzalez).
4. Emma has a troubled on-off romance with Cruz, a woke lesbian bartender, but she also hooks up with Baco (Raul Castillo) the building's handyman.
5. Eddy hooks up with Nico (a woman, of course). Do all Hispanic lesbians have masculine names?
Two of the four central characters are queer, which is groundbreaking, and the Hispanic culture is pleasant (they even speak Spanglish, switching back and forth between English and Spanish as the mood strikes).
But this is definitely a woman-oriented, women-centric series, with men definitely in the background. Not that there's anything wrong with that -- Goddess knows there are plenty of series with women in background roles. But it makes the beefcake options sorely limited. And would it kill them to have a few gay men wandering around?
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