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Title: “Stonewall”
Author: Chris Hobson
Date: December 9, 2015
Language: en
Topics: film review, Queer, The Utopian
Source: Retrieved on 10th August 2021 from http://utopianmag.com/archives/tag-The%20Utopian%20Vol.%2014%20-%202015/stonewall-the-movie/
Notes: Published in The Utopian Vol. 14.

Chris Hobson

“Stonewall”

There were fewer than a dozen people at the movie “Stonewall” (2015)

when two friends and I saw it on an October Sunday. This implied

judgment by potential audiences seems general. The movie earned a modest

$113,000 in the week of its release, $61,000 the second week, $12,000

the third, and then fell off the online charts. So what’s the reason for

commenting on a movie that is already dead in the water? I think

“Stonewall” has important lessons to teach us. Unfortunately, despite

some good acting and stirring scenes of the June 1969 Stonewall

rebellion and the first Gay Liberation march a year later, most of the

lessons point to the wretched choices good people make because of lack

of artistic vision and their own inferable ideologies.

“Stonewall” is a pro-gay movie. (There’s a reason I don’t use the more

current term LGBTQ, and not only because it is anachronistic.) The

producer-director, Roland Emmerich, and screenwriter, Jon Robin Baitz,

are open about being gay and are among the top talent in their fields

(though Emmerich is mainly known for invasion/disaster films like

“Independence Day” and “The Day After Tomorrow,” as well as for an

unintended disaster, “Anonymous,” about who really wrote Shakespeare).

The movie is structured so that it climaxes with the first night of the

four-day Stonewall rebellion and, after more plot business, the first

Gay Liberation march up New York’s Fifth Avenue on the rebellion’s first

anniversary in 1970. The message of gay pride is loud and clear, and

it’s good to be reminded that protest violence is justifiable, can get

results, and can lead to, rather than interfere with, organized protest.

All this is positive. The movie was criticized before release for

centering on a white character when the rebellion was multiracial, and

for not using any trans actors, but while both points have some merit,

the first is too narrow and the second doesn’t relate to “Stonewall’s”

artistic vision.

The movie’s real problems begin with point of view, and do involve the

central character, who is not only white but conventionally masculine

and middle class. He is Danny Winter (Jeremy Irvine), a well-built,

handsome boy from Indiana, who arrives in Greenwich Village a couple of

months before the rebellion and falls in with a group of street queens

and hustlers, several Black or Puerto Rican. The largest support role is

for Ray/Ramona, a Puerto Rican queen expertly acted by Jonny Beauchamp.

Flashbacks show Danny, in Indiana, being discovered sucking off his high

school love and being ordered by his father to get “help” or move out;

in New York, he discovers that his dad has refused to put through the

papers for his Columbia scholarship, prolonging his time on the street.

While there, he turns tricks for money and is also strongarmed into

performing as a highly paid rent boy (that is, his Mafioso boss is

highly paid) for a grotesque aging transvestite. Rage at successive

police raids on the Stonewall Inn and at its owner, the Mafioso just

mentioned, build up to the rebellion, a roughly twenty-minute sequence.

In these scenes, while all the members of Danny’s crew mix it up with

the cops, it is Danny who first yells out “Gay Power” and who throws the

first brick through the Stonewall’s window, making the rebellion’s

course seem to turn on his acts. In the aftermath, Danny revisits

Indiana, where we learn that his mother, having broken up with his

homophobic dad, has belatedly sent in the scholarship papers, so it’s as

a Columbia student living uptown that Danny visits his old street

acquaintances and joins the march a year later.

“Stonewall” and the Middle Class

As I hope this summary makes clear, the film is told from the viewpoint

of a middle class gay youth on a temporarily-interrupted upward academic

trajectory, who has inadvertently put in some time with working class

and street youth before returning to his studies and, we guess, future

academic or professional success as a more open and proud homosexual.

The movie’s positive vision appears to be one of middle class existence

expanded through the gay empowerment that Danny’s working class comrades

fought for along with him. This is a thoroughly corrupt viewpoint: the

audience is confronted with an act of violent street protest, but led to

view it not from the standpoint of those who were most prominent in it,

but that of a youth assumedly more like their own demographic. These

emphases are the artistic team’s choices. Of course, middle class gay

youths—and many more working class gay youths—did come to the Village in

the Sixties. Many stayed there, lives transformed. (More on the working

class youths below.) But it’s Emmerich and Baitz’s choice to sanitize

this life for a presumed middle class audience by focusing on a

protagonist this audience can easily identify with—so handsome! so

masculine! and...a Columbia boy.

This choice, I’m guessing, is partly one of artistic corruptness, that

is, a conscious adjustment of the realities of a situation to fit the

preconceptions of one’s audience on the assumption that the direct

viewpoint of working class and street youth would be of little interest

or appeal to that audience. Further, though this is only speculation, I

am also guessing that the choice also represents the limitations of the

creators’ artistic vision, that is, their own ability to identify most

closely with someone most like themselves. After all, if we project

Danny at Columbia some decades into the future, we can imagine him as a

successful, gayidentified film producer or writer like his creators. The

result is a flattening of the richness of the homosexual cultures of the

1960s—that mix of middle class and professional males, street youth,

Black and Latino youth, lesbians, working class patrons of neighborhood

gay bars in Queens and the Bronx—and an impoverished view of why

Stonewall was important.

“Stonewall” flattens that time’s culture in another way as well, by

leaving out the boiling radical political scene of 1969 New York that

helped fuel the rebellion. Danny’s abrupt “Gay Power” shout sounds

incongruous if one doesn’t bear in mind the popularization of “Black

Power” from 1966 on; the rebellion itself is harder to understand

without the heroization of Black urban rebellions and the Black Panther

Party so characteristic of radical youth then; the words “Gay Liberation

Front” on a banner in the 1970 march seem just words without including

the popularization of “Women’s Liberation” from 1968 on and that

generation’s identification with the National Liberation Front in

Vietnam. A movie that showed the Village cross-cut by winds from all

these events, as it was, would be a very different film.

The irony is that these choices are not only corrupt but also

unnecessary—the movie failed totally to reach the mainstream demographic

it so clearly aimed at—and that it could have been made better and more

honestly. To take just one example, but a central one: nobody really

knows who did what at Stonewall. (I wasn’t there; I was living in

Chicago at the time.) Various memoirs and historians have credited drag

queens with the initiating role (an earlier “Stonewall” with this

premise was made in 1995), have stressed the roles of women, have

focused on people of color and on male identified hustlers as central to

the fightback against the police. Since no one knows for sure, why not

focus on different individuals from varied groups and leave it

unclear—as in reality—who threw that brick? Such an approach, truer,

more experimental, more “indy,” might have made a more interesting film.

Homophobia

Though pro-gay, “Stonewall” is also significantly homophobic. Not as

paradoxical as it may sound—some homosexuals have always looked down on

others—this homophobia shows in two ways. First, Danny is masculine in

affect, a high school athlete with no effeminate mannerisms (though he

has a little trouble with pushups). His cohort of street friends does

include flamboyant queens, and the film values them, but doesn’t see the

world from their side. The most significant of them, Ray/Ramona, is

played as a somewhat pathetic fantasist, imagining a middle class life

that is beyond his/her competence as a disadvantaged youth and a love

with Danny that will never materialize. In real life, most queens would

make a play for Danny—who just might say yes—and, if he didn’t, would

say, “Tough shit, girl doesn’t know what she’s missing.” In the film, in

their most significant moment together, Danny answers Ray’s overtures,

in a heartfelt tone, “I can’t love you, Ray.” The most telling point is

that in the film’s context the reply needs no explanation—someone like

Danny can never love someone like Ray/Ramona. Of course some gay men did

have such limited self-conceptions. But the film nowhere suggests that

it’s the narrowness of Danny’s sense of himself that keeps him from

opening out to a possible love.

The second type of homophobia involves Danny as hustler and rent boy. He

is shown with two customers, one on the street and the other in a

garishly luxurious apartment. Both are shown negatively—one is a

conventionally unattractive, uptight businessman who goes down on Danny

in a vacant lot, the other is conventionally ugly as well as massively

fat and middle aged (stereotypical negatives), and during both sex acts

we focus on Danny’s face, looking soulfully upward, appearing tormented

and close to tears. (We never get a crotch shot—too bad.) Sex for money,

in other words, is degrading and sad for decent people like Danny. That

this presentation is homophobic is less obvious than with Danny’s

rejection of Ray/Ramona, but it is. In reality, many gay men have had

sex with hustlers and many have been hustlers. I myself have had friends

who were or had been hustlers and have paid hustlers for sex. Most

customers are pretty ordinary people who for one reason or another don’t

find it easy to form relationships, or who do but also like working “the

trade” at times. Most hustlers are working class youths, white, Latino,

or Black, streetwise and pretty toughminded. In the film’s period, they

often lived not in the Village but at the Sloane Y (34^(th) Street,

close to Times Square, where much hustling took place). Though the sex

could take place anywhere, most often the hustler would go to the

customer’s place or bring him to the hustler’s own, and in either place

would have sex in a bed, just like he knew what a bed was. The idea of a

hustler being brought to the verge of tears by the degradation of his

act is pretty laughable and only plausible at all because Danny is so

new to “the trade.” In other words, this response in the film is

connected to Danny’s status as a middle class newcomer to the street,

who will not be there for any length of time. How can this be happening,

the film seems to ask, to someone as nice as Danny? And so “Stonewall”

substitutes an outside view of hustlers and their customers, which

ultimately devalues both, for an honest look at either.

I wish I could write a “happy ending” for this review, find a way in

which “Stonewall” fulfills an important social or artistic purpose. But

beyond the obvious—it’s socially important that these events can be

treated as a celebration of praiseworthy heroism—there are no real

virtues to reveal. The film’s viewpoint is one in which, as in The

Threepenny Opera, “Victoria’s messenger riding comes” for the

protagonist but not for the ones in “darkness” who made Stonewall

happen. And the film can’t be called pro-LGBTQ—Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,

Transvestite-Transsexual, Queer—because it celebrates a much narrower

conception of gayness, one that values other groups than Danny’s but

keeps them at a distance. “Stonewall” remains a basically flawed

representation of major events, mainly as a result of weak artistry and

a narrow world view.