- A Very Natural Thing
Infobox Film | name = A Very Natural Thing
caption =
director =Christopher Larkin
producer =Christopher Larkin
writer =Joseph Coencas Christopher Larkin
starring =Robert McLane Curt Gareth Bo White Anthony McKay Marilyn Meyers
music =Gordon Gottlieb Bert Lucarelli Samuel Barber
cinematography =C.H. Douglass
editing = Terry Manning
distributor =New Line Cinema
released = 1974 (USA)
runtime = 80 min.
language = English
budget =
amg_id = 1:115536
imdb_id = 0072362"A Very Natural Thing" is a 1974 film about a
gay man named David who leaves amonastery to become apublic school teacher by day, whilst looking for true love in agay bar by night. It was one of the first films about gay relationships intended for mainstream, commercial distribution. The original title of the film was "For As Long as Possible". It was directed by Christopher Larkin and was released to lukewarm reviews in 1973 and given an "R (rating) " rating by theMotion Picture Association of America .Plot
The film begins as a mini-documentary of New York City's 1973
Gay Pride parade and rally, with a young lesbian unabashedly declaring that being gay is "a very natural thing." The action cuts to the protagonist, David (Robert Joel ), going through the ritual of being released from his vocation as amonk in amonastery . He then is seen as a public school teacher ofEnglish Literature in theNew York City area, who spends his time off driving into the city to meet up at agay bar with his "oldest friend from Schenectady," NY, Alan, played by Jay Pierce. In the course of the evening, David is singled out to dance by Mark (Curt Gareth), who portrays a businessman. They end up spending the night together, which at first seems like a one-night stand, until David says he'd like to see Mark again, and Mark agrees. Not long after, the pair begin a monogamous relationship, and David moves in with Mark. But when Mark wants to have sex with other men, the relationship starts to break down. He rejects the idea of modeling a gay relationship onheterosexual marriage , and he is irritated that David wants to "keep pushing this romantic thing." Mark would rather have an understanding that either of them can have sex with other men when they feel like it, but David isn't interested. Mark refuses to say, "I love you" until David playfully wrestles with him and tells him, "Say it...again...once more for good measure." After a year, though, David realizes that the two of them are just marking time. The two go toFire Island for a weekend in an attempt to spice up their relationship, and although David tries to please Mark by entering an orgy, he can't go through with it. After a fight, David temporarily moves in with his friend Alan, who gives David an objective perspective on what happened. In a later encounter with Mark atConey Island , David finally realizes that there can't be a reconciliation, as Mark is more interested in sex than a romantic relationship.After a season of loneliness, David meets a
divorce d photographer named Jason (Bo White ) at the 1973 Gay Pride rally which began the film. David and Jason go to Jason's apartment and talk. In Jason, a divorced dad, we meet another member of the gay community, one who was living a heterosexual life prior tocoming out , and has an ex-wife and toddler in his life. Jason tells his ex-wife that he is now seeing someone with whom he would be spending the upcoming holiday. It appears that in Jason, David has found someone willing to pursue a romantic, committed relationship with him. Jason takes pictures of David while telling him things to say other than "cheese', and the film ends by showing the two men together splashing naked in the surf on Cape Cod. The film was seen as thegay response to "Love Story" (1970), the movie famous for the phrase, "Love means never having to say you're sorry." Similarly, Mark tells David, "Love means never having to say you're in love," and a montage of the two men rolling down a leaf-covered hill, quietly lying together at home, and being in love mimics a montage of the heterosexual couple in "Love Story". Both movies argued for an unconventional alternative to traditional marriage, despite a commitment. David tells Jason that he is committed to him, but that this commitment is based on wanting to be together, not "having" to be together. The ending is very optimistic, which was out of the ordinary for gay relationships films until then. Earlier films were dominated by tales of gays and lesbians being outcasts of society, mentally disturbed or committing suicide; later films were sadly dominated by the emergence ofAIDS ." A Very Natural Thing" thus represents a short period in time where gay liberation flourished, and filmmakers could explore relationships in much the same way that films with heterosexual characters did.Critical reaction
The film was one of the first mainstream films to show homosexuality as a valid and normal act of love, i.e. "a very natural thing," as it attempted to explore the options for gay couples in 1973, including footage of an actual
Gay Pride celebration. Manyheterosexual film critics felt that the film's depiction of love between two men as romantic made the film automatically "an argument rather than an entertainment" ("New York Post "). The film showed a young gay couple going through many of the same rituals and facing many of the same challenges as a straight couple; and, for manyheterosexual Americans.Some gay film critics felt that film was not political enough: that the characters were too apolitical, too
middle class and that, by rejecting the philosophy offree love or sexual liberation, the film was rejecting what some gay activists felt was a necessary value of the new gay liberation movement.Larkin responded to the criticism by saying, "I wanted to say that same-sex relationships are no more problematic but no easier than any other human relationships. They are in may ways the same and in several ways different from heterosexual relationships but in themselves are no less possible or worthwhile". ("
The Celluloid Closet " pg. 208, 1987). Incidentally, Vito Russo, who wrote "The Celluloid Closet" appears in "A Very Natural Thing."Availability
The film was released in
VHS in 1996, it has recently been released onDVD : a 25th Anniversary edition in 1999 by Waterbearer Films, Inc.References
External links
*imdb title|title=A Very Natural Thing|id=0072362
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