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Trailer Trash Dumpster Diving with Jenni Olson The idea that bigger is better may play better in the lexicon of size queens than in le cinema contemporaire. Hollywood's insistence on the Big Long Movie has made filmgoing something of a chore: who can sit still for a three-hour war movie, or a 150-minute melodrama? Happily, movies have always had their own version of the chill pill in the form of the humble trailer. These tasty two- or three-minute samplers are like sex without foreplay, and who doesn't love a quick orgasm? In the mid-1990s, noted San Francisco-based curator Jenni Olson created a subgenre of shows devoted to these miniature movies that played at various repertory venues. Queers and African Americans were the subject of two of these sociological clip shows. Two of her most amusing efforts were "Trailer Camp" and "Bride of Trailer Camp," which jump unapologetically into that homo sacred space Susan Sontag identified in her famous essay, "Notes on Camp."
There are other, stranger kinds of tensions evident too in a show like this. The notorious disco tribute Can't Stop the Music presents the startling image of the Village People as quasi-heterosexuals. Of course, the producers may have edited out images of the boys having seizures and weeping after kissing a woman. On the other hand, the film has so little hetero credibility that it puts the VP's leather daddy into a snappy white leather ensemble that might have come from Carol Channing's closet. Some of these trailers are practically featurettes, breaking the unspoken rule of the three-minute slam-bang tease. Lillian Roth, star of early sound movies and notorious best-selling drunken author in the 1950s, interminably praises I'll Cry Tomorrow, her autobiography made into a Susan Hayward vehicle. Others are so cheap they apparently defy the idea of moving pictures. The obscure 1955 British feature Cross-Up (aka Tiger by the Tail) is summarized in just a pitiful string of still pictures.
Speaking of things queer, out gay director Randal Kleiser of Blue Lagoon fame appeared with the little-known Summer Lovers, starring a very young Peter Gallagher. Kleiser's trademark worship of half-nekkid boyz in the sun in this case Gallagher slipping in and out of speedos and getting more close-ups than costar Darryl Hannah makes this one worth watching. Of related interest is the trailer for Reflections in a Golden Eye. Anyone not familiar with the Carson McCullers novel might have been puzzled indeed by the trailer's coy approach to the queer theme. Brando gives it his gay all, shrieking "You disgust me!" at Elizabeth Taylor and then drooling, from ground level, over what seems to be the naked leg of the young soldier he's hot for. "These are the stars who have never done what they do now!" shrieks the voice-over. Of course, queer viewers knew what that meant.
One of the highlights of the show was Bonjour Tristesse snippet, a bizarre transcontinental interview with Francoise Sagan by Drew Pearson. This fractured masterpiece has Pearson saying things like "I hope you ‘drive' your life carefully," while a seemingly disembodied Sagan, beamed in by satellite, stares and offers an insane laugh. Curator Olson cleverly leavened these shows which would make a dandy backdrop for that Tupperware party or dungeon orgy you've been planning with period commercials and public service announcements, including a sweet sequence with Rock Hudson, dizzyingly handsome and robust in his too-brief prime, touting the virtues of Christmas Seals. November 2006 | Issue 54 ALSO: Jenni Olson's The Joy of Life and Afro Promo |