GAY PEOPLE'S CHRONICLE October 28, 2005
10
ATTILA DORY (2)
In odd blood
ever
Philip Seymour Hoffman as Truman Capote and below, Catherine Keener as Harper Lee.
A film of Truman Capote's days researching his murder masterpiece gives due attention to a complex, flawed man
by Kaizaad Kotwal
Truman Capote is one of the more polarizing figures in the world of literature and journalism. While he revolutionized the literary establishment with his book In Cold Blood, his tactics and demeanor with his subjects
5
was manipulative and often less than completely honest.
His 1965 nonfiction novel explores the murder of four members of the Clutter family in Holcomb, Kansas, six years earlier.
Capote, with his high-pitched voice and fey mannerisms, was as much a trendsetter as he was despised for being open and flamboyant in an age when gays were still closeted and hush-hush.
Dykes Towatch Out For by Alison Bechdel
FIXED
©2005 BY ALISON BECHDEL
YOU'RE THE ONE WHO HAD
THE AFFAIR.
11/2
476
MAN. TALK ABOUT CHICKENS COMING HOME TO ROOST. THIS BIRD FLU THING IS PERFECT. OUR MONEY AND SUV'S AND MISSILE DEFENSE FANTASIES CAN'T SAVE US. HOGGING ALL THE ANTIVIRALS CAN'T SAVE US. ONCE A POOR COUNTRY GETS SICK, WE'RE ALL GOING DOWN!
The Daily Distress
ANOTHER, PANDEMIC BIGGER
HURRICANE CHENEY-RUMS
FELD CABAL
I DID CALL ONE GUY.
HE'S GAY. CARLOS
HE WASN'T ON YOUR LIST. I GOT HIS NAME
A
MAN?
FROM CARLOS.
SAID HE REALLY HELPED HIM AND DANIEL.
NOW THAT'S
GLOBALIZATION!
BUSH WITHDRAWS
MIERS, NOMINATES
FETUS TO HIGH COURT
YEAH, RIGHT.
HELPED
DANIEL ACCEPT THE FACT
HA!
DID YOU SEE "DILBERT"?
Comics
WE DIDN'T GET INTO THAT CARLOS WILL NEVER PARTICULARS.
BE MONOGAMOUS.
A new film, simply titled Capote, is a vivid retelling of his time in Kansas as he looked into the grisly world of the bloody murders and the bizarre relationships he struck up, especially with the killers, Perry Smith and Dick Hickock. He is accompanied on this journey by fellow literary genius Harper Lee,
who went on to win her own fame with To Kill a Mockingbird.
The film is told with meticulous characterizations and detailed plot twists. Written by Dan Futterman (who played the straight son of gay parents in The Birdcage) and based on a book by Gerald Clarke, the script is as strong as its performances, especially by Philip Seymour Hoffman as Capote and Catherine Keener as Lee.
Hoffman's performance is stellar at every level. He has captured the essence of Capote brilliantly without turning him into a caricature, something that would have been easy given Capote's unique persona and mannerisms. Hoffman inhabits the title character with every breath registering as utterly real. The Oscar buzz is deservedly building around his virtuoso performance.
Hoffman is no stranger to gay characters and queer films. He played a closeted film hand in Boogie Nights, falling in love with Mark Wahlberg's Dirk Diggler. In Flawless he played a tragic drag queen across from Robert DeNiro. Other notable roles in queer
MINDLESS ENTERTAINMENT IS THE HANDMAIDEN OF FASCISM. HOW CAN YOU READ THE FUNNIES AT A TIME LIKE THIS?
BUSH DOESN'T RULE OUT ATTACK
SEE OUR
NEW GOD
ON SYRIA
INDICT
MENT
SECTION
GOD! YOU ARE SO INTELLECTUALLY DISHONEST! YOU'RE LIKE THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION, FIXING THE INTELLIGENCE TO SUPPORT YOUR SELFSERVING POLICY.
A TIME LIKE WHAT? THE WORLD'S NOT GOING TO HELL ANY FASTER THAN IT EVER WAS.
flicks include The Talented Mr. Ripley and Happiness.
Keener, who is always strong, is a wonderful foil here for the flamboyant Capote. Her more restrained and balanced persona creates a beautiful contrast in the film, making for one of the more interesting relationships recently portrayed in film.
Clifton Collins Jr. as Perry Smith is strong as well, creating a complex monster who still tugs at the audience's sympathies.
Bennett Miller's directorial debut is strong and measured as he tackles difficult material with grace and ease. Miller lets Capote be the focus, but never allows that larger-than-life persona to overtake the film and detract from the other characters and the larger story being examined here.
Capote is a strong film in a year that is turning out some solid films, examining the idea of journalistic ethics much like George Clooney's current film Good Night, and Good Luck, also opening to rave reviews. It is interesting to have these two films in the current atmosphere, when journalistic ethics and values seem to be at an all-time low. Clooney's cautionary tale is different from Capote in that the former is an homage to the heroic Edward R. Murrow, while Capote seems more a part of the problem than the solution to the issue of getting a story at all
costs.
Capote died in 1984, just shy of his 60th birthday. He never quite matched the success of In Cold Blood again, but his shadow looms large even today in the world of literature.
It also says a lot about a maturing Hollywood when a complex and flawed gay protagonist is given due attention in a film that is well made and intelligent.
SPEAKING OF HELL, HAVE YOU CALLED ANY OF THOSE COUPLES THERAPISTS YET?
TSUNAMI
REPORT
WELL THEN, SINCE YOU LET ME GET AWAY WITH MY OBVIOUS BULLST FOR SO LONG, THAT MAKES YOU LIKE THE, DEMOCRATS--COMPLICIT.
BUSH DOESN'T IRAQ
RULE OUT
DEATHS
ATTACK ON HIT 2K VENEZUELA
I DON'T
KNOW WHY YOU STAY WITH ME.
WHY DO I HAVE TO CALL THEM?
FAILURE OF LEADERSHIP, I
GUESS.
ETHNIC
www.DykesToWatchOutfor.com