Link to the n*de dudes
So I'm going to watch the new movie In the Hands of Dante, about the discovery of an original Divine Comedy manuscript. Maybe there will be gay characters, probably not, but I'll still get to hear that beginning phrase again: Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita, mi ritrovai per una selva oscura (at the midpoint of life's journey, I found myself lost in a dark forest).
We've all been there.
Scene 1: Dante climbs a rocky cliff. Meanwhile, sometime in the 1940s or 1950s, an obnoxious novelist (Oscar Isaacs) complains to his friend that his books can't be edited. "I'd rather the stableboy f*ck my wife than see my work edited." Heterosexual identity established immediately after his obnoxiousness.
"So, what's your book about?"
"It's a translation of Dante's Divine Comedy. I've been working on it for ten years."
Friend squeezes his shoulder. "You're still hot after ten years." Wait -- are you flirting with him?
" By the way, who is Dante?" Say what? Who doesn't know Dante?
"An old dead guy. But he got trapped in the cage of rhyme and meter. I'm breaking out, so my translation will be far superior to the original." The greatest work in Italian literature? You planning to improve on "Hamlet" next?
Scene 2: Newark, 1969. A young boy enters a middle-class house and tells his Uncle, "I just killed some kid." He explains that the boy (Gavin Weingarten) had a big knife, and asked if he wanted to die. He tried to defend himself, they struggled, and he managed to stab Knife Boy.
Scene 3: Bora Bora, seaside, 2001. Our Hero on a hammock, writing in his notebook about "creamy white gardenia blossoms" and "faded petroglyphs." So you must be the Boy who killed someone, now middle aged, but it's a parallel world with the look and feel of the 1950s: no computers or cell phones, men wear hats and smoke constantly, writers use pencils.
Cut to the Young Dante sitting under a tree, looking at the Illimitible Sky.
Scene 4: New York, 2001, "That time when the daylight sky was an oppressive, low-lying glare of white, and the dark of night was..." So, summer. Is this one of your stories, or really happening in-universe? A greasy-haired guy named Louie (Gerard Butler, but blond and greasy) saunters into a closed bar and orders a Dewars and water. He criticizes the bartender's moustache: "You see a guy with a moustache, he's either a cop or a (homophobic slur)."
I expected L'amor che move il sole e l'altre stelle, the love that moves the sun and the stars, and I'm getting Charles Bukowski, homophobia, and a parallel world where the 1950s never ended.
"By the way, you ever take it up the *ss?" Louie asks. "Might make a man out of you." But then he calls him a c*cksucker. Twice. Are you homophobic or not, buddy?
He criticizes the Bartender and his wife for being excessively ugly, and threatens his nine-year old daughter.
Next topic of conversation: the Bartender's Uncle, "a real fuckup," who opened the bar, but pissed his money away gambling. Wait, is that the Uncle from 1969? So the Bartender is Our Hero? But he's supposed to be in Bora Bora, writing pretentious crap. And the Uncle was elderly in 1969. No way he's alive in 2001.
Unc owes the gang a lot of money, so his nephew the Bartender is going to provide it. Louie takes tonight's proceeds, $1,200, then orders the Bartender to go downtown. But he shoots him as soon as he gets on his knees.
What does this have to do with Dante?
Scene 4: Our Hero crying as he looks at the picture of a little girl. Is this the Bartender's daughter, who was just threatened?
He tells us that a young adult lady called him Nick, and then "Daddy." So you were dating the Bartender's daughter -- but she was nine years old in 2001. Have we jumped ahead to 2026? Or is she a different person, and you were looking at a photo of the bartender's daughter to confuse viewers? He kisses her goodbye as she is crying. I'm crying, too, in frustration over this nonsensical plot.
Cut to the EMTs taking her body away.
Cut to Our Hero, drunk and injured (a bloody bandage on his leg), climbing the rocks of Bora Bora. He falls into the water, delighted: "I feel nothing of these open rocks."
More after the break. Caution: It gets even more confusing, but there are d*cks




















